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Evacuation of jihadist fighters delayed

The death of rebel leader Zahran Alloush has delayed the evacuation of more than 2000 Islamic State and other militants from parts of Damascus.

A UN-sponsored deal to evacuate more than 2000 Islamic State group fighters and other militants from rebel-held parts of south Damascus has been delayed, a body that monitors the war says, a day after a rebel leader was killed.

Buses were due to transport the fighters to Raqqa, the de facto capital of Islamic State in northern Syria, Lebanese Hezbollah's Manar TV station said on Saturday.

But the deal fell through after the Jaysh al Islam rebel group's leader Zahran Alloush, through whose territory the convoy had been granted safe passage, was killed in an air strike on Friday, the broadcaster said.

The arrangement was the first of its kind between the Syrian authorities and Islamic State.

It would have marked a significant show of strength by the government of President Bashar al-Assad, increasing its chances of reasserting control over a strategic area 4km south of the centre of the capital.

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The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an independent British-based monitoring group that tracks violence across Syria, said the evacuation had been expected to take place early on Saturday but was delayed as there was now no secure territory for the militants to pass through.

Manar TV said buses arrived on Friday to pick up the fighters and at least 1500 family members but had turned back.

The broadcaster is the official mouthpiece of Hezbollah, a Lebanese Shi'ite group which is a major ally of Assad and has sent its forces to fight alongside government troops.

Islamic State has a large presence in several southern neighbourhoods of Damascus, including the Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk.

Local hostility towards the jihadist group - which controls large swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq - has grown.

A years-long government siege of parts of Damascus controlled by a patchwork of rebel groups - of which Jaysh al Islam is the largest - has impeded the flow of food and humanitarian aid, starving many people to death in what rights group Amnesty International has described as a war crime.

The United Nations and foreign governments have stepped up efforts to broker local ceasefires and safe-passage agreements towards a wider goal of ending Syria's civil war, in which more than 250,000 people have been killed in nearly five years of fighting.


3 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP



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