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Syrian rebels deny Russian deal to leave Douma

March 30, 2018

Rebels refute a Russian claim that Jaysh al-Islam, or Army of Islam, will leave Douma in eastern Ghouta. The retaking of Douma would remove the final rebel stronghold in Damascus.

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Smoke rises following an airtrike by the Assad regime in Douma, eastern Ghouta, on March 20
Image: picture-alliance/AA/M. Abu Taim

The last armed rebel group in the main town of Douma in Syria's eastern Ghouta outside of Damascus has denied the Russian Defense Ministry's claim it had made a deal that would see them follow the footsteps of other rebels and leave the area.

"Today an agreement has been reached with the leaders of illegal armed formations of fighters and their family members to leave the town of Douma shortly," said Sergei Rudskoi, a senior Defense Ministry official, at a briefing quoted on the ministry's website. Syrian state television broadcast a similar report.

Read more: Opinion: Hell on Earth rages in Syria's eastern Ghouta, while the world watches

The announcement came after the Syrian government, which is backed by the Russian military, on Wednesday issued a three-day ultimatum to the Jaysh al-Islam, or Army of Islam, group to leave Douma or face an all-out offensive.

Rebels say no deal

But Jaysh al-Islam said no deal had been made.

"Our position is still clear and firm and it is rejecting forced displacement and demographic change in what remains of eastern Ghouta," Jaysh al-Islam military spokesman Hamza Birqdar said in a message posted on his Telegram feed.

Read more: Opinion: Where the West has gone wrong in Syria's civil war

The last rebel stronghold

Taking back Douma would be a major victory for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and would remove the final rebel stronghold near Damascus after seven years of conflict.

Douma is surrounded by Syrian government forces and there are tens of thousands of civilians in the town.

Read more: Opinion: The twisted logic of the war in Syria

Rudskoi said so far "28,495 peaceful civilians have left via a humanitarian corridor opened in the area of the Al-Wafideen settlement."

Syrian troops and their allies launched an all-out assault on eastern Ghouta on February 18, seeking to remove the armed opposition from its strategic perch on the edge of the capital.

The government offensive in eastern Ghouta has resulted in the death of more than 1,600 civilians, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

law/sms (AFP, AP, Reuters)