Homs evacuations resume as Syria peace talks falter

Homs evacuations resume as Syria peace talks falter
Updated 15 May 2014
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Homs evacuations resume as Syria peace talks falter

Homs evacuations resume as Syria peace talks falter

DAMASCUS: Operations to evacuate civilians and deliver aid in besieged parts of Syria’s Homs resumed Wednesday after being suspended a day earlier, as peace talks in Geneva appeared deadlocked.
But there was still no word on the fate of hundreds of boys and men detained for questioning by authorities after they were evacuated from the city.
“At 11:00 a.m. (0900 GMT), food aid was able to enter the Old City of Homs,” the provincial governor Talal Barazi told AFP.
“The vehicles that are taking in the aid will bring out a number of civilians, including 20 Christians from the Bustan Al-Diwan neighborhood,” he added.
The Syrian Red Crescent tweeted pictures of its staff loading sacks of aid onto flat-bed trucks for transport into besieged parts of the city.
More than 1,000 men, women and children have been evacuated from besieged rebel-held parts of Homs since Friday, many weak and malnourished after surviving for more than 18 months on dwindling food supplies.
“There are children there, and this is very heartbreaking, that this is the first time they see a banana,” Syrian Red Crescent head of operations Khaled Erksoussi told AFP.
“Our psychological support teams are there to try to deal with the cases as they come out, but eventually the teams themselves will need psychological care because the situation is very emotional.”
Red Crescent workers backed by UN agencies began evacuating some of the estimated 3,000 people trapped in besieged areas on Friday under a UN-mediated deal.
Despite the suspension of operations on Tuesday, more than 1,150 people have been evacuated since the operations began and the World Food Programme has delivered enough food for 1,550 families remaining inside.
Concern has grown, however, over the fate of 336 boys and men aged 15 to 55 who UN officials say were detained for questioning by authorities as they left Homs.
Just 42 have been released, according to UN figures, raising fears among activists that the regime is rounding up military-age men among those leaving.
Activists inside Homs said some men leaving had been prevented from going to areas of their choice, stripped of their ID cards and issued ID documents instead.
“There are some 60 activists in the besieged areas. Some of them want to leave, but will only do so if there are guarantees for their safety,” said Yazan, an activist who asked that his full name not be published for fear of retribution.
The evacuations have also been marred by violence, despite a tenuous cease-fire, with shelling killing 14 people and aid convoys coming under fire.