An upsurge of
intense fighting around Aleppo has killed scores of Syrians in the past
weeks, displaced thousands and cut water and power to up to two million
people on both sides of the front line, worsening the already dire
conditions faced by hundreds of thousands in the city. In
a war already marked by humanitarian crisis, the United Nations says
the fighting threatens to replicate deprivation recently suffered by
those in rebel-held eastern districts of Aleppo among civilians living
in the government-held west. Residents
and aid groups contacted by Reuters spoke of acute water shortages and
power cuts, and concerns over food supplies and hygiene in a stark
assessment of life in the city of Aleppo. Advances
by warring sides in the last month, which resulted in a siege of
rebel-held neighborhoods and the severing of a major route into
government areas of control, have choked off supplies and raised fears
of the encirclement of the entire civilian population. Syria's
largest city pre-war has been divided into government and rebel areas
of control for much of the conflict, and has been the focus of
escalating violence since a ceasefire brokered by Washington and Moscow
in February crumbled. Its capture would be a major prize for President
Bashar al-Assad. Russia's
intervention last year helped turn the war in Assad's favor. His forces
with the help of Lebanese Hezbollah and Iranian fighters surrounded the
eastern, opposition-held neighborhoods in Aleppo in July. The
latest major gains were made by rebels, however, who broke the
month-long government siege in an attack last week on a Syrian military
complex and also cut the main supply route to the western,
government-held areas of the city. "When
the attack began ... rockets and shells were fired toward Hamdaniya,"
said Abu George, a resident who fled that neighborhood, close to the
military complex in the southwest of the city. "There
were people who had already been displaced sheltering in nearby areas,
they had to leave," the 61-year-old agricultural engineer said via
telephone. Rebel bombardments of
Hamdaniya on Wednesday killed more than a dozen people, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said. Syrian and Russian
warplanes have heavily raided the areas taken by insurgents. The British-based group said bombardments by both sides have killed more than 120 people in the city since the start of August. Abu
George is among thousands who fled areas in southwest Aleppo in recent
days, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross. "Thousands
of families have been displaced from southwestern Aleppo, including
already displaced families who've had to move for a second time,"
spokeswoman Ingy Sedky said. Residents
of western Aleppo said cutting the main supply route to the government
side had slowed the entry of goods and fuel and driven up food prices,
but a delivery by government forces via an alternative route this week
provided some relief. "There were
some problems with petrol and fuel, but supplies came in and the petrol
stations are open and working," Tony Ishaq, 26, said via internet
messenger. The alternative route
used was until last month the only road into Aleppo's opposition held
sector. After intense bombardment, government forces captured the
Castello Road in an advance that put eastern Aleppo under siege. HOSPITALS HIT, WATER AND POWER CUT The siege worsened an already dire humanitarian situation in eastern Aleppo, residents and doctors said. The
rebel advance which broke through the siege on Saturday has not yet
secured a safe enough passage to make more than one food delivery to the
east, or for civilians to move through, with government bombardments
hitting that rebel corridor on the city's southwestern outskirts. "Fuel, vegetables
and other essentials are not entering because the regime is bombing
areas it lost like crazy," said Hossam Abu Ghayth, a 29-year-old east
Aleppo resident. "There are
warplanes and helicopters hovering in the skies, they're bombing both
civilian areas and the major front lines," he said via internet
messenger. International medical
charity Medecins Sans Frontieres, which supports a number of medical
facilities in the opposition held sector, said the casualty toll had
risen sharply. "Because of the
bombings and the fighting in Aleppo city there are more and more people
coming to the hospitals," Middle East Operations Manager Pablo Marco
told Reuters. Hospitals were having
to cope with dozens of wounded arriving at the same time, he said, with
only 35 doctors for the whole of east Aleppo's population at least
250,000 people. All eight hospitals
supported by MSF have been affected by bombardments in recent months,
Marco said. A U.S.-based rights group says several hospitals were hit in
July. East Aleppo residents have long experienced a lack of both. "There's
no electricity - there are generators which provide a small amount,
enough to work a fridge or lighting," Abu Ghayth said. "We wash once every Friday. We've got used to living this way," he said. "We economize water so it lasts." Entire
families often survive on 50 liters of water per day, transported from
tanks or drawn from wells, he added. The World Health Organization says
20 liters are needed per person for basic hygiene. The
United Nations said on Tuesday the main power facility that allowed
water to be pumped to both sides of the city had been hit, leaving the
entire population of nearly 2 million without running water and putting
children at risk of disease. Sedky of the ICRC said residents were relying on underground water sources. "The
water pumping stations are not working anymore, on both sides. So the
whole population has been relying on boreholes for water," she said. Fetching
water from those boreholes in some areas was dangerous, with movement
restricted because of bombardments and fighting, Sedky added. Wells and tanks would not provide enough water for very long, she said. The
United Nations has called for an urgent humanitarian ceasefire in
Aleppo, and is pushing for a resumption of peace talks that have failed
to end the five-year conflict in which more than 250,000 people have
been killed and some 11 million displaced.
Intensifying fight for Aleppo chokes civilian population

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