Tears as Syria families welcome relatives freed from Daesh

A Syrian man from the recently retaken desert town of Al-Qaryatain is greeted by relatives on Oct. 29, 2017, after the Syrian army reportedly freed him from Daesh detention. (AFP/Louai Beshara)
Updated 30 October 2017
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Tears as Syria families welcome relatives freed from Daesh

ALl-QARYATAIN, Syria: Two weeks ago, Manaf thought his days were numbered. But this weekend he and other former Daesh group hostages were given a hero’s welcome in the recaptured Syrian town of Al-Qaryatain.
“I was dead and I have come back to life,” he told AFP in the central Syrian town, which the jihadists overran in early October before being driven out by Syrian troops on Oct. 21.
In the 20 days before they were ousted from the town, Daesh executed at least 116 civilians they accused of collaborating with the regime, according to the SyrDaeshian Observatory for Human Rights monitor.
And they kidnapped at least 38 people, according to the government, among them Manaf and his brother.
But 25 of the hostages were able to escape last week and make their way to a Syrian army checkpoint, according to the hostages’ accounts and Syrian military sources.
From there, they were returned to Al-Qaryatain by army forces on Sunday, as a group of media was brought into the town for an army-led tour.
Hundreds of residents of the town turned out to greet the returning hostages, with the mothers of the kidnapped scrambling to push their way through the crowds in a bid to spot their sons.
The arrivals were hoisted on the shoulders of residents, as women ululated and threw rice into the air in celebration.
Suddenly, Manaf spotted his parents and young sister among the crowd, and ran toward them, collapsing into his mother’s arms and bursting into tears.
“My joy is indescribable... I don’t want anything else in life, I have returned to my parents,” the 20-year-old said.
His mother struggled to contain her emotions as she embraced Manaf and his brother Mohammed.
“The two have returned, thanks to God almighty,” the 50-year-old said, her face framed by a brown patterned veil.

Hugging Manaf tight, she repeated over and over: “my love, my life,” taking his face in her hands and examining it with joy.
His little sister, her pigtails decorated with pink ribbons, rushed toward Manaf, who lifted her up and laughed.
His father Haitham, with tears in his eyes, repeated over and over with pride: “You are heroes.”
“I had lost all hope of seeing them again. I thought they (the jihadists) would kill them, because they are devoid of humanity,” he said.
Al-Qaryatain, in the central province of Homs, has twice changed hands, being first captured by Daesh in 2015.
Russian-backed Syrian forces recaptured the town the following year, but in early October the jihadists overran the town again in a surprise attack before losing it to a regime offensive a few days ago.
At the city’s entrance, graffiti left behind by the jihadists was still visible: “The (Islamic) State will endure” and “Caliph Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi,” in reference to the group’s chief.
But with the city’s recapture, duelling graffiti has appeared: “Assad or no one,” reads one scrawl just opposite, referring to President Bashar Assad.
The jihadists’ arrival into town was a terrifying moment, Manaf recalled.
“We heard intense gunfire and we stayed inside,” he said.

From the minarets of local mosques, Daesh fighters told residents to stay indoors, and then they burst into homes and took people away by force.
“We thought death was waiting for us,” Manaf said.
Last Monday, after being taken by the group to an unknown location, he and 24 others managed to escape and reach an army checkpoint.
But while Manaf’s family and others were celebrating, some were mourning loved ones executed by the jihadists.
Mohammed Kheir’s brother was abducted by Daesh just two days before the army arrived.
“The jihadists entered the shelter where I was hiding with other residents of my neighborhood,” said Kheir, 45.
They took his brother and three other men, and Kheir later watched in horror from a window and saw the jihadists carrying out executions.
“They were shooting at passers-by in the square,” he told AFP, dressed in a brown robe, with a grey scarf draped over his head.
When Daesh withdrew from the city, he went straight to a building known to have been transformed by the jihadists into a prison.
“Near the entrance, I saw my brother lying on the ground in a pool of blood, a bullet in his head,” said Kheir, adding that he saw other bodies at the site.
“I want to take up arms to avenge my brother.”
 


Russian forces kill Daesh-linked hostage takers at detention center

Updated 17 June 2024
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Russian forces kill Daesh-linked hostage takers at detention center

  • “The criminals were eliminated,” Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service said in a statement, which said a “special operation” had taken place to free the hostages

MOSCOW: Russian special forces freed two prison guards and shot dead six inmates linked to the Daesh militant group who had taken them hostage at a detention center in the southern city of Rostov on Sunday, Russian media said.
State media said that some of the men had been convicted of terrorism offenses and were accused of affiliation with the Daesh militant group, which claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on a Moscow concert hall in March.
The six hostage takers, one of whom wore a headband with the flag used by the Daesh that bears an Arabic inscription, knocked out window bars and climbed down several floors by rope before taking the guards hostage with a knife and fire axe.
In video published by the 112 Telegram channel, one was shown brandishing a knife beside one of the bound guards in Rostov-on-Don. In negotiations with the authorities, they demanded free passage out of the prison.
But Russian special forces decided to storm the prison. Intense automatic gunfire could be heard in footage published on Russian Telegram channels. Video published by the 112 Telegram channel showed the six dead men in pools of blood.
“The criminals were eliminated,” Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service said in a statement, which said a “special operation” had taken place to free the hostages.
“The employees who were being held hostage were released. They are uninjured,” the prison service said.
Ambulances were seen entering the complex.
Daesh, a Sunni Muslim militant group, was defeated in Iraq and Syria by a combination of US-led forces, Kurdish fighters, and Russian, Iranian, Syrian soldiers. It splintered into different regional groups that have claimed a number of deadly attacks across the world.
Daesh, named after an old term for the region that included parts of Iran, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan, claimed responsibility for the March attack on the Crocus City Hall outside Moscow in which 145 people died.
According to Russian media, the hostage takers were from Russia’s southern republic of Ingushetia and three of them had been detained in 2022 for planning an attack on a court in another Russian republic, Karachay-Cherkessia.  

 


Israel warns of escalation from cross-border fire from Hezbollah

Updated 17 June 2024
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Israel warns of escalation from cross-border fire from Hezbollah

  • Hezbollah says it will not halt fire unless Israel stops its military offensive on Gaza

JERUSALEM: Intensified cross-border fire from Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement into Israel could trigger serious escalation, the Israeli military said on Sunday.
“Hezbollah’s increasing aggression is bringing us to the brink of what could be a wider escalation, one that could have devastating consequences for Lebanon and the entire region,” Israeli military spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said in a video statement in English.
Iran-backed Hezbollah last week launched the largest volleys of rockets and drones yet in the eight months it has been exchanging fire with the Israeli military, in parallel with the Gaza war.
After the relatively heavy exchanges over the past week, Sunday saw a marked drop in Hezbollah fire, while the Israeli military said that it had carried out several air strikes against the group in southern Lebanon.
The US and France are working on a negotiated settlement to the hostilities along Lebanon’s southern border. Hezbollah says it will not halt fire unless Israel stops its military offensive on Gaza.
“Israel will take the necessary measures to protect its civilians — until security along our border with Lebanon is restored,” Hagari said.


‘No joy’: Gazans mark somber Eid in shadow of war

Updated 17 June 2024
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‘No joy’: Gazans mark somber Eid in shadow of war

  • Many Palestinians forced to spend holiday without their loved ones
  • I hope the world will put pressure to end the war on us because we are truly dying, and our children are broken

GAZA STRIP: In tents in the stifling heat and bombed-out mosques, Gazans on Sunday marked the start of the Eid Al-Adha holiday, devoid of the usual cheer as the Israel-Hamas war raged on.

“There is no joy. We have been robbed of it,” said Malakiya Salman, a 57-year-old displaced woman now living in a tent in Khan Younis City in the southern Gaza Strip.
Gazans, like Muslims the world over, would usually slaughter sheep for the holiday — whose Arabic name means “feast of the sacrifice” — and share the meat with the needy.
Parents would also give their children new clothes and money for the celebration.
But this year, after more than eight months of a devastating Israeli campaign that has flattened much of Gaza, displaced most of the besieged territory’s 2.4 million people, and sparked repeated warnings of famine, the Eid is a day of misery for many.
“I hope the world will put pressure to end the war on us because we are truly dying, and our children are broken,” said Salman.
Her family was displaced from the far-southern city of Rafah, a recent focus of the fighting which began after Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel.
The military on Sunday morning announced a “tactical pause of military activity” around a Rafah-area route to facilitate the delivery of desperately needed humanitarian aid to Gazans.
AFP correspondents said there were no reports of strikes or shelling since dawn, though the Israeli military stressed there was “no cessation of hostilities in the southern Gaza Strip.”
The brief respite in fighting allowed worshippers a rare moment of calm on holiday.
Many gathered for the Eid Al-Adha morning prayer in the courtyard of Gaza City’s historic Omari Mosque, which was heavily damaged in Israeli bombardment, placing down their frayed prayer mats next to mounds of rubble.
The sound of prayers traveled down some of the city’s destroyed and abandoned streets.
“Since this morning, we’ve felt a sudden calm with no gunfire or bombings ... It’s strange,” said 30-year-old Haitham Al-Ghura from Gaza City.
He hoped the pause meant a permanent ceasefire was near, though truce mediation efforts have stalled for months.
In several areas of the war-battered territory, especially in Gaza City, young boys were seen manning roadside shops selling perfumes, lotions, and other items against the backdrop of piles of rubble from destroyed buildings and homes.
Many vendors used umbrellas to protect themselves from the scorching sun as they sold household items on Gaza City’s main market street. But there were few buyers.
Food and other goods can reach four or five times their usual price, but those who cling to the holiday traditions can still afford them.
In Khan Younis, displaced man Majdi Abdul Raouf spent 4,500 shekels ($1,200) — a small fortune for most Gazans — on a sheep to sacrifice.
“I was determined to buy it despite the high prices, to perform these rituals and bring some joy and happiness to the children in the displacement camp,” said the 60-year-old, who fled his home in Rafah.
“There is sadness, severe pain, and suffering, but I insisted on having a different kind of day.”
The deadliest-ever Gaza war began after Hamas’s unprecedented Oct. 7 attack.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 37,337 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the Health Ministry in the territory.
For many, a halt in fighting can never bring back what has been lost.
“We’ve lost many people, there’s a lot of destruction,” said Umm Mohammed Al-Katri from Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza.
“This Eid is completely different,” she said, with many Gazans forced to spend the holiday without their loved ones killed or displaced during the war.
Grieving families on Sunday flocked to cemeteries and other makeshift burial sites, where wooden planks marked the graves.
“I feel comfort here,” said Khalil Diab Essbiah at the cemetery where his two children are buried.
Even with the constant buzzing of Israeli drones overhead, visitors at the cemetery “can feel relieved of the genocide we are in and the death and destruction,” he said.
Hanaa Abu Jazar, 11, also displaced from Rafah to the tent city in Khan Yunis, said: “We see the (Israeli) occupation killing children, women and the elderly.”
“How can we celebrate?” asked the girl.

 


Jordan conducts three airdrops in southern Gaza

Updated 17 June 2024
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Jordan conducts three airdrops in southern Gaza

  • Aid packages containing food, clothing, and sweets were delivered to various locations in the southern Gaza

AMMAN: Jordan’s armed forces conducted three airdrops to the southern part of Gaza on Sunday, in collaboration with Egypt, to mark the first day of Eid Al-Adha, Jordan News Agency reported.
Aid packages containing food, clothing, and sweets were delivered to various locations in the southern Gaza Strip by two planes from the Royal Jordanian Air Force and an aircraft from Egypt.
Earlier on Saturday, a 45-truck humanitarian aid convoy arrived in Gaza, sent by the JAF and the Jordan Hashemite Charity Organization (JHCO).
In cooperation with its regional and international allies, the Jordanian armed forces have carried out 261 airdrops and delivered 1,970 trucks of aid since the beginning of Israel’s onslaught on Gaza.
WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that “a significant proportion of Gaza’s population is now facing catastrophic hunger and famine-like conditions,” as Israel continues to impose severe restrictions on the supply of food, water, medicine, and fuel to the Strip.
 


Kuwait Red Crescent distributes meat to Lebanese families, Syrian, Palestinian refugees

Updated 16 June 2024
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Kuwait Red Crescent distributes meat to Lebanese families, Syrian, Palestinian refugees

  • Initiative follows last week's distribution of Eid Al-Adha packages by the KRCS

LONDON: The Kuwait Red Crescent Society (KRCS) has launched an initiative to distribute meat to around 1,500 Lebanese families, as well as Syrian and Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, in celebration of Eid Al-Adha, Kuwait News Agency reported on Sunday.
Youssef Boutros, relief coordinator of the Lebanese Red Cross (LRC), announced that the distribution process had begun on Sunday.
This initiative follows last week's distribution of Eid Al-Adha packages by the KRCS, which included clothes and other essentials for around 2,000 families, covering Lebanese families and Syrian and Palestinian refugees.
In addition to these efforts, the KRCS is continuing its humanitarian aid to 6,000 Lebanese families in southern Lebanon, who have been affected by military confrontations between Hezbollah and Israel since October.
This aid, which includes food and staple supplies, is being distributed with the assistance of the LRC.