Wednesday, 25 August 2021

Civilians bear the brunt of escalating violence in Syria’s Idlib

 

 'Maryam Barakat’s marriage last month was quiet due to a recent escalation in bombings by Syrian and Russian forces in the rebel stronghold of Idlib, northwest Syria. Few people came – those who did were careful not to sound their car horns in celebration.

 Despite the war, Maryam, 20, had managed to continue her studies and graduated this year as a midwife. It was while studying midwifery at university that Maryam met her future husband, 25-year-old Taha Taqa, who was training to become an anaesthetist.

 “I told Taha one day that I had never seen two people this close to one another. They could not live apart from one another. Taha’s life was Maryam and Maryam’s life was Taha,” Mohamed Taqa, Taha’s father, told Al Jazeera. They married on July 10.

 But their marriage was brutally curtailed – it lasted just a week.



 On July 18, they prepared to celebrate the Eid al-Adha holiday with family in the village of Jabal al-Zawiya.

 “All the men were sitting in front of the house when we heard a sound,” Mohamed Taqa said.

 “Moments later, a big explosion happened and I was thrown on the ground. I could no longer move and I was breathing very heavily. We were screaming for the paramedics.”

 The family home was hit by what witnesses said was most likely a laser-guided artillery shell fired by Assad régime forces. Remnants of Russian-made artillery shells were found on the ground.

 Taha was badly injured in the attack. He is now conscious and being treated in a hospital across the border in Turkey.

 Maryam was killed.

 “Words cannot describe her,” Maryam’s eldest brother Bashar says. “I did not see anything but good from her.”



 The shelling that killed Maryam is the latest in a series escalation in attacks over the last two months in Idlib, the last rebel-held bastion in Syria.

 The latest violence comes despite a ceasefire signed in March 2020 between Turkey, which backs opposition armed groups in control of much of Idlib province, and Russia, the Assad régime’s closest ally.

 Assad’s forces want to take control of Jabal al-Zawiya, as it is close to the strategically vital M4 highway south of Idlib linking régime-controlled cities of Aleppo and Latakia.

 But Omer Ozkizilcik, a Syria analyst at the Turkey-based SETA Foundation, said the recent escalation in violence may also be about sending a message to Turkey.

 “Whilst the Assad regime and Russia always want to maintain a certain amount of escalation in Idlib to not lose their ability to launch a new military operation, the recent escalation is mainly motivated by international developments rather than Syrian dynamics,” he said.

 “Russia is trying to exploit the millions of civilians in Idlib as a pressure tool against Turkey to limit its support and cooperation with anti-Russian [forces].”



 Amid the renewed violence in Idlib, humanitarian workers have also paid with their lives.

 On July 17, White Helmets rescue workers, also known as the Syria Civil Defence, lost their 291st team member in Idlib. Paramedic Hammam al-Asi, a 30-year-old father of three, died in an attack.

 The White Helmets said they have been “deliberately targeted with laser-guided Krasnopol shells” by the régime forces and Russia at least six times in two months, with two volunteers killed and 13 others injured.

 Al-Asi had dreamed of becoming a chemistry teacher, his father Muhammad Saeed said.

 “But due to the revolution, he was unable to achieve this. He loved working in the Civil Defence since it was humanitarian work,” he said.



 Kamel Zureik, the White Helmet’s team leader in Bzabur Centre in Southern Idlib, was with al-Asi and other colleagues as they worked to free people trapped under the rubble in a home that had been hit by shelling from the Syrian regime in Idlib’s Sarjah.

 Civilians had saved two children before they arrived and the White Helmets freed one more, and were working to save another when an incoming shell exploded and fatally wounded al-Asi.

 They were targeted what is known as a double-tap attack, a brutal tactic used by the Syrian and Russian forces to target a location and then, when first responders are on the scene trying to save the civilians injured or trapped as a result of the first attack, hit the same location again.

 Al-Asi died en route to the hospital, too badly wounded to drink the water he was pleading for, Zureik said.

 “We say to the international community: Look at what is [still] happening on the ground. Look at how the rescue teams are becoming victims,” Zureik said.

 Since then the attacks have continued – at least nine children were killed last week in a series of attacks by Russian and régime forces in Idlib.



 Meanwhile, amid the ongoing violence, civilians face severe challenges such as access to healthcare and education, fewer work opportunities, and scarcity of food and water.

 “I, like all people in Idlib, fear for my children and try to provide them security, safety, and food,” Maryam’s father Muhammad said. “But I feel that we have no future; where are we going?”

 Maryam and Taha’s families say their love and marriage, as war raged around them, was a quiet but heroic act of defiance and courage and hope, in the face of loss, displacement and suffering.

 But in Syria, there are endless ways to break a heart.

 “Here in Idlib, all dreams are bombarded. Dreams here have a limit but they are eventually destroyed,” Maryam’s father Muhammad said.

 Now, Maryam’s father goes to stand at her grave, where her and Taha’s initials are written on the front of her headstone.

 “I wish the whole world to know the story of Maryam, of her pure and tender heart. I know Maryam’s wish would be that this does not happen to other civilians, husbands, and children,” he said.

 “When they broke Maryam’s dream, they broke all of our dreams.” '

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