UN envoy warns Aleppo could be 'destroyed' this year
Envoy asks rebel fighters to leave city in exchange for peace
The United Nations envoy for Syria called on al-Qaeda-linked militants to leave the embattled city of Aleppo in exchange for an end to government and Russian bombardment, warning Thursday that thousands of civilians could be killed and the historic city "destroyed" by year end if conditions do not soon change.
- Aleppo pounded by Syrian, Russian airstrikes since ceasefire broke down
- Major hospital in rebel-held Syria taken out by airstrikes
Special envoy Staffan de Mistura urged fighters from Fatah al-Sham Front to leave the city in exchange for peace. The group was previously known as Nusra Front and changed its name after announcing it had split from al-Qaeda earlier this year. The UN considers it a terrorist organization.
De Mistura entreated both sides to "look at my eyes" before offering to "personally" escort the fighters to a refuge of their choosing, provided they agree to lay down their arms.
The combined Syrian government and Russian bombardment of the city's rebel-held east has killed 376 people over the last two weeks, the envoy said. While far fewer have been killed in the western side, which has a population of over a million, presumed rebel shelling killed at least eight people on Thursday, Syrian state media and observers said. It marked one of the bloodiest days in recent memory for government-held neighbourhoods of the city.
De Mistura acknowledged that the fighters would "need some guarantees" before an evacuation to another rebel-held part of the country, but said these would have to come from the government. He also called for the local administration in opposition-held eastern neighbourhoods to remain in place after Fatah al-Sham leaves, with the UN establishing a presence there to bring humanitarian supplies to the besieged population.
Diplomatic push
His proposals marked the first major initiative by the UN to help find a way out of the Syria crisis after the United States, citing in part the Aleppo onslaught, suspended its joint effort with Russia to stop the fighting. Those two powers had been leading the diplomatic push. Russia, which currently holds the presidency of the UN Security Council, called for de Mistura to brief members on Friday morning.
Yet rebel fighters in Aleppo expressed deep skepticism over the terms of de Mistura's proposal. They say the Fatah al-Sham Front has been instrumental to the east's defence, having led an August counter-offensive that briefly broke the government's siege. The UN estimates 275,000 people are trapped in eastern Aleppo.
Ammar Sakkar, a military spokesman for Fastiqum rebel group, said the evacuation plan was "a form of trickery" that would allow pro-government forces to carry out a "longer period of killing and crime." He accused the UN of holding a "double standard," arguing that before calling for fighters to leave it must "first stop the head of terrorism and stop his own acts of terrorism and crime against the Syrian people," referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
"It would have been better if [de Mistura] spoke about protecting civilians and halting the criminal activities that target civilians in Aleppo," echoed Yasser Alyousef, a political spokesman for Nour el-Din el-Zinki insurgent group.
Assad denies hospitals were targeted
While Assad has not commented on de Mistura's proposals, his remarks during an interview with Denmark's D2 station Thursday indicated he would not be satisfied with the limited rebel evacuation. Insisting his military would retake the whole of Aleppo, the president rejected any distinctions between the array of nationalist to ultraconservative Islamic factions fighting against his authority.
"The moderate opposition is a myth," he told D2. "That's why you cannot separate something that doesn't exist from something that does exists. All of them have the same grassroots."