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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Bethan McKernan

Syria: 45,000 people displaced by fighting in Deraa as trapped civilians plead for halt to government assault

A man carries a child rescued from rubble after Syrian regime and Russian air strikes in the rebel-held town of Nawa, about 20 miles north of Deraa on 26 June ( AFP/Getty Images )

Three hospitals have been bombed out of action and more than 45,000 people have fled their homes in Syria’s southern Deraa province as intense government airstrikes clear the way for a major assault on the opposition-held area. 

The medical facilities in three towns east of Deraa were hit in what were believed to be strikes carried out by Syrian President Bashar al Assad’s Russian allies overnight on Tuesday, said UOSSM, a medical charity operating in opposition-held Syria.

Five hospitals have been targeted since the operation began on 19 June, according to UK-based war monitor the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Both Damascus and Moscow have repeatedly denied targeting civilian infrastructure.

A media activist in Deraa city told The Independent that Syrian helicopters and Russian fighter jets have flown over the area without stopping since.

“It scares me to think about what will happen next,” the activist said. “We are begging for Assad to stick with the [de-escalation deal]. There’s nowhere to go. The government of Jordan has closed the border and does not want anyone to enter.” 

The operation has led to the deaths of at least 47 civilians and forced thousands of people to leave their homes in search of safety, according to the UN. 

Most of the displaced have headed south to the nearby Jordanian border, although Amman has reiterated it will not open the border to refugees.

All crossings between the two countries have been closed since a bomb at a checkpoint killed seven Jordanian soldiers in 2016, and Jordan already hosts at least 630,000 Syrians. 

On Wednesday rights groups called on the Jordanian government to honour its international obligations to people “in need of protection”. 

"Jordan has done so much over the years to accommodate hundreds of thousands of refugees from Syria, but unfortunately the international community must rely on it to be generous once more,” Youri Saadallah, the Norwegian Refugee Council's acting Regional Director, said in a statement.

"The fighting in Syria is squeezing people further and further south. They will eventually be left with nowhere else to turn,” he said.

"Jordan cannot be expected to take on the responsibility of accepting more refugees alone, however, and we call on the international community to urgently step up and provide significant additional support.”

While the area is part of a de-escalation deal between the government and rebels brokered by international powers last year, the recent violence mirrors several other government campaigns in recent months to retake rebel strongholds, such as eastern Ghouta. 

The US, which supports the opposition groups in the area, has reportedly backed away from previous commitments to the rebel side, warning them not to expect an American intervention to defend them from the army offensive. 

Deraa is the last remaining rebel stronghold in the country apart from Idlib in the northwest.

Syria’s seven-year-old civil war has seen more than 500,000 people killed and driven half the pre-war population of 22 million from their homes.

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