Aid workers have begun evacuating emergency medical cases from Syria’s besieged rebel bastion of Eastern Ghouta, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said yesterday, after months of waiting during which the UN said at least 16 people died.
“Tonight the @SYRedCrescent with @ICRC team started the evacuation of critical medical cases from #EasternGhouta to #Damascus,” the ICRC said on Twitter.
Photographs posted with the tweets appeared to show a convoy of ambulances ready to move the critically ill patients.
Photo: AFP
The Syrian American Medical Society, another medical relief organization, said the evacuations covered “29 critical cases, approved for medical evacuation to Damascus. Four patients were evacuated today.”
It said the remainder would be evacuated in the coming days.
Eastern Ghouta is one of the last remaining rebel strongholds in Syria and has been under a tight government siege since 2013, causing severe food and medical shortages for about 400,000 residents.
While some food is still grown locally, or smuggled in, humanitarian access to the region has been limited despite regular appeals from aid agencies.
The Syrian Red Crescent said in a tweet that its volunteers “just started to transfer cases in need of medical care from east Ghouta to hospitals in Damascus after long negotiations.”
Further details were not immediately available.
Last week, Norwegian Refugee Council Secretary-General Jan Egeland, who is head of the UN’s humanitarian taskforce for Syria, warned that at least 16 people had died while waiting for evacuation from Eastern Ghouta.
A list put together several months ago of about 500 civilians in desperate need of evacuation was rapidly shrinking, he said.
“That number is going down, not because we are evacuating people, but because they are dying,” Egeland told reporters.
“We have confirmation of 16 having died on these lists since they were resubmitted in November, and it is probably higher,” he said, highlighting the case of a baby who died on Dec. 14, as the latest round of Syria peace talks in Geneva, Switzerland, ended in failure.
“I fear there will be many more. During this Christmas and holiday season, there will be more deaths unless we get evacuation going,” he said.
Evacuations and efforts to bring aid into the region had been blocked by a lack of authorizations from the Syrian authorities, Egeland said.
The Eastern Ghouta region, near the capital Damascus, is one of the last strongholds of rebels fighting the forces of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Eastern Ghouta is one of four “de-escalation” zones agreed to in May in a bid to reduce fighting in some parts of the war-ravaged country, but the regime has ramped up bombing since the middle of last month.
More than 340,000 people have been killed and millions have been driven from their homes since Syria’s conflict erupted with protests against the government in 2011.
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