Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Residents of Syria’s Douma breathe fresh air after weeks in hiding

-

After two months of hiding underground in Syria's Douma, Leena Karkura has finally dared to venture out into the sunshine and walk around her devastated hometown with her daughter.

Syria's army announced on Saturday it had retaken the town and surrounding region of Eastern Ghouta from rebels after a Russia-backed military offensive that lasted almost two months.

"I decided to take my daughter out for a stroll after she insisted and cried," the woman in her forties told AFP on a tour of the town organised by the Syrian army for foreign media.

She said her nine-year-old daughter was desperate to venture outdoors and breathe some fresh air after weeks hiding from air strikes and bombardments in a cellar with her family.

Syrian girls look out of the window of a damaged building in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on A...
Syrian girls look out of the window of a damaged building in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces have left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

"Children lived in terror, they didn't have a childhood," Karkura said, clutching the hand of her daughter dressed up for her walk in a red tracksuit.

"I told her it was safe again and nothing would happen to her," she said, as she looked at the rubble around her.

"We're breathing a sigh of relief."

Eastern Ghouta had been the last rebel bastion on the capital's doorstep before the army launched a blistering assault on the region in mid-February that, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, killed some 1,700 civilians.

Its main town of Douma was the final holdout in the offensive, and was retaken after thousands of rebels and civilians were bussed out under a Russia-brokered evacuation deal.

Syrian police sit in the back of a vehicle in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16  2018 d...
Syrian police sit in the back of a vehicle in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces have left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

The deal was reached after rescuers and medics said more than 40 people died in the town in an alleged chemical attack on April 7.

The United States, France and Britain carried out air strikes on Syria early Saturday in response to the purported toxic weapons attack.

The government and its Russian ally have rejected the accusations as "fabrications" and invited experts to the town to investigate the claims.

- Bread flung into a crowd -

But the team from Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has not yet entered Douma.

Syrians receive bread from the government in the devastated town of Douma near Damascus on April 16 ...
Syrians receive bread from the government in the devastated town of Douma near Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces left Eastern Ghouta following a blistering assault
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

Since Saturday, Russian and Syrian military police have been deployed across the town, where shops stand shuttered by the sides of a main road.

In the middle of the road, Haitham Badran, 40, chatted with friends, hand-in-hand with his 10-year-old son Omar.

Now the fighting had stopped, Badran said he dreamt of taking his son to see Damascus.

"I want to show him his country," he said.

"He hasn't seen anything of the world and was even prevented from learning" in school.

A general view shows destruction in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16  2018 during an o...
A general view shows destruction in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

Omar has known food shortages for a large part of his young life, after the government imposed a siege on Eastern Ghouta in 2013 a year after rebels seized control of the region.

In the town on Monday, men on the back of a truck flung bags of flat bread down into a crowd of men and boys, who stretched out their arms to receive some.

In front of a building where the roof had completely collapsed, a woman wearing a black face veil pushed a man in a wheelchair with a boy on his knees.

Syrians walk along a war-ravaged street in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16  2018 duri...
Syrians walk along a war-ravaged street in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces have left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

Not far off, 55-year-old Basma al-Sayyid walked slowly examining her battered surroundings.

"I was cooped up in a cellar for so long with my grandchildren," she told AFP, flipping up her black face veil to speak.

"There are no words to describe my happiness."

More than 350,000 people have been killed and more than half the population displaced since Syria's war started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.

On top of those who left Douma under an evacuation deal, thousands more fled the fighting into regime-held areas where they have been living in government-run shelters.

But Sayyid said she was never going to move away from Douma.

"I haven't left since I was born, and I've never considered it," she said.

After two months of hiding underground in Syria’s Douma, Leena Karkura has finally dared to venture out into the sunshine and walk around her devastated hometown with her daughter.

Syria’s army announced on Saturday it had retaken the town and surrounding region of Eastern Ghouta from rebels after a Russia-backed military offensive that lasted almost two months.

“I decided to take my daughter out for a stroll after she insisted and cried,” the woman in her forties told AFP on a tour of the town organised by the Syrian army for foreign media.

She said her nine-year-old daughter was desperate to venture outdoors and breathe some fresh air after weeks hiding from air strikes and bombardments in a cellar with her family.

Syrian girls look out of the window of a damaged building in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on A...

Syrian girls look out of the window of a damaged building in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces have left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

“Children lived in terror, they didn’t have a childhood,” Karkura said, clutching the hand of her daughter dressed up for her walk in a red tracksuit.

“I told her it was safe again and nothing would happen to her,” she said, as she looked at the rubble around her.

“We’re breathing a sigh of relief.”

Eastern Ghouta had been the last rebel bastion on the capital’s doorstep before the army launched a blistering assault on the region in mid-February that, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, killed some 1,700 civilians.

Its main town of Douma was the final holdout in the offensive, and was retaken after thousands of rebels and civilians were bussed out under a Russia-brokered evacuation deal.

Syrian police sit in the back of a vehicle in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16  2018 d...

Syrian police sit in the back of a vehicle in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces have left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

The deal was reached after rescuers and medics said more than 40 people died in the town in an alleged chemical attack on April 7.

The United States, France and Britain carried out air strikes on Syria early Saturday in response to the purported toxic weapons attack.

The government and its Russian ally have rejected the accusations as “fabrications” and invited experts to the town to investigate the claims.

– Bread flung into a crowd –

But the team from Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has not yet entered Douma.

Syrians receive bread from the government in the devastated town of Douma near Damascus on April 16 ...

Syrians receive bread from the government in the devastated town of Douma near Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces left Eastern Ghouta following a blistering assault
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

Since Saturday, Russian and Syrian military police have been deployed across the town, where shops stand shuttered by the sides of a main road.

In the middle of the road, Haitham Badran, 40, chatted with friends, hand-in-hand with his 10-year-old son Omar.

Now the fighting had stopped, Badran said he dreamt of taking his son to see Damascus.

“I want to show him his country,” he said.

“He hasn’t seen anything of the world and was even prevented from learning” in school.

A general view shows destruction in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16  2018 during an o...

A general view shows destruction in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

Omar has known food shortages for a large part of his young life, after the government imposed a siege on Eastern Ghouta in 2013 a year after rebels seized control of the region.

In the town on Monday, men on the back of a truck flung bags of flat bread down into a crowd of men and boys, who stretched out their arms to receive some.

In front of a building where the roof had completely collapsed, a woman wearing a black face veil pushed a man in a wheelchair with a boy on his knees.

Syrians walk along a war-ravaged street in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16  2018 duri...

Syrians walk along a war-ravaged street in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus on April 16, 2018 during an organised media tour after the Syrian army declared that all anti-regime forces have left Eastern Ghouta
LOUAI BESHARA, AFP

Not far off, 55-year-old Basma al-Sayyid walked slowly examining her battered surroundings.

“I was cooped up in a cellar for so long with my grandchildren,” she told AFP, flipping up her black face veil to speak.

“There are no words to describe my happiness.”

More than 350,000 people have been killed and more than half the population displaced since Syria’s war started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.

On top of those who left Douma under an evacuation deal, thousands more fled the fighting into regime-held areas where they have been living in government-run shelters.

But Sayyid said she was never going to move away from Douma.

“I haven’t left since I was born, and I’ve never considered it,” she said.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Entertainment

Emmy-nominated actor Justin Hartley is chasing ghosts in the new episode titled "Aurora" on '"Tracker" on CBS.

Social Media

Do you really need laws to tell you to shut this mess down?

Business

The electric car maker, which enjoyed scorching growth for most of 2022 and 2023, has experienced setbacks.

World

The UK risks a major showdown with the Council of Europe - Copyright AFP Sam YehEurope’s highest rights body on Tuesday called on Britain...