(Zaman Al Wasl)- In tandem with the planned evacuation of Daraya town and the displacement of its residents, a group of families from Iraq fleeing Islamic State arrived in the capital Damascus where Syrian regime sought to provide them with place to live and whatever needs they had from food products and medicine, according to major pro-regime networks.
The news stirred mockery of a large section of those who commented on it or engaged with the news to the degree that the step was described as open hypocrisy in the right of a government that suffers from crowds of displaced persons and migrants before it but which has provided them with nothing, so how is it able to provide for the displaced Iraqi families?
Some regime commentators mentioned that in the center of Damascus, and not far from the regime’s institutions and palaces, there are parks and streets where displaced Syrian people take shelter in the streets, and perhaps they too have fled from ISIS without anyone caring for them. Others were suspicious of the news, and they considered the move a preparation to settle the sectarian mercenaries from Iraq in the Damascus belt which the regime is struggling to purify from its people and change its demographics wondering about the secret of the arrival of the Iraqi families in tandem with the emptying of Daraya, and the big secret which has enabled these families to cross long distance filled with danger some of them governed by ISIS, which they fled from, to arrive in Damascus specifically whereas there are Iraqi cities closer to them, and even some Syrian cities are closer.
Those arrived at the conclusion that the issue of the Iraqi families fleeing ISIS that emerged suddenly is merely a cover to the settlement of sectarian mercenaries as part of executing a plan placed by the Iranians and which Bashar al-Assad and his staff of his reign have pledged to execute.
Syrian rebels and their families began evacuating a long-besieged Damascus suburb Friday as part of an agreement reached with the government following four years of grueling airstrikes and siege that left the suburb in ruins.
The surrender of Daraya, which became an early symbol of the nascent uprising against Bashar Assad, marks a success for his government, removing a persistent threat only a kilometers miles from his seat of power. It provides a further boost for the Syrian army as it fights opposition forces for control over Aleppo, Syria’s largest city.
Daraya’s rebels agreed to evacuate in a deal late Thursday. Under the terms of the deal, around 700 gunmen will be allowed safe exit to the opposition-held northern province of Idlib, while some 4,000 civilians will be taken temporarily to a shelter south of Daraya.
The news stirred mockery of a large section of those who commented on it or engaged with the news to the degree that the step was described as open hypocrisy in the right of a government that suffers from crowds of displaced persons and migrants before it but which has provided them with nothing, so how is it able to provide for the displaced Iraqi families?
Some regime commentators mentioned that in the center of Damascus, and not far from the regime’s institutions and palaces, there are parks and streets where displaced Syrian people take shelter in the streets, and perhaps they too have fled from ISIS without anyone caring for them. Others were suspicious of the news, and they considered the move a preparation to settle the sectarian mercenaries from Iraq in the Damascus belt which the regime is struggling to purify from its people and change its demographics wondering about the secret of the arrival of the Iraqi families in tandem with the emptying of Daraya, and the big secret which has enabled these families to cross long distance filled with danger some of them governed by ISIS, which they fled from, to arrive in Damascus specifically whereas there are Iraqi cities closer to them, and even some Syrian cities are closer.
Those arrived at the conclusion that the issue of the Iraqi families fleeing ISIS that emerged suddenly is merely a cover to the settlement of sectarian mercenaries as part of executing a plan placed by the Iranians and which Bashar al-Assad and his staff of his reign have pledged to execute.
Syrian rebels and their families began evacuating a long-besieged Damascus suburb Friday as part of an agreement reached with the government following four years of grueling airstrikes and siege that left the suburb in ruins.
The surrender of Daraya, which became an early symbol of the nascent uprising against Bashar Assad, marks a success for his government, removing a persistent threat only a kilometers miles from his seat of power. It provides a further boost for the Syrian army as it fights opposition forces for control over Aleppo, Syria’s largest city.
Daraya’s rebels agreed to evacuate in a deal late Thursday. Under the terms of the deal, around 700 gunmen will be allowed safe exit to the opposition-held northern province of Idlib, while some 4,000 civilians will be taken temporarily to a shelter south of Daraya.
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