Contact Us

1,000 people flee Syria's Idlib fearing regime attack, monitor says

Around 1,000 people have fled Syria's province of Idlib, the last major opposition stronghold in the war-devastated country, in anticipation of a regime offensive, a monitoring group said on Thursday.

Published September 06,2018
Subscribe
AFP Photo

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights added that the people started leaving their homes in the rural part of Idlib in north-western Syria on Wednesday night for the neighboring western countryside of Aleppo, the northern region of Afrin and areas close to the Turkish border.

Idlib's inhabitants are worried that talks between Iran, Turkey and Russia due to start in Tehran on Friday, may fail to bring a political solution to Idlib, the watchdog's head, Rami Abdul-Rahman, said.

Turkey, a main backer of the Syrian opposition, has for weeks been engaged in diplomatic efforts to prevent a regime attack on Idlib along its border.

Russian and Iran are key allies of Syria's Bashar al-Assad whose forces have made territorial gains against Western-backed opposition fighters in recent months.

Idlib is largely controlled by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a network led by an al-Qaeda-affiliated group.

Last week, the U.N. special envoy to Syria, Staffan de Mistura, warned that the presence of 10,000 al-Qaeda-linked fighters in Idlib does not justify an attack that could endanger the lives of 2.9 million civilians there.

During the last three years, thousands of rebels and their families have been evacuated from different parts of Syria to Idlib under agreements with the government.