A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, February 2, 2016
'No place to go': Refugees risk freezing to death to flee from Syrian army
Refugees in Latakia say they will pitch tents in countryside amid fears advancing government forces will show 'no mercy' to those who stay

Refugees load firewood and bedding onto a truck as they prepare to leave Yamadi (Bilal Abdul Kareem)
Refugees in Latakia say they will pitch tents in countryside amid fears advancing government forces will show 'no mercy' to those who stay

Refugees load firewood and bedding onto a truck as they prepare to leave Yamadi (Bilal Abdul Kareem)
YAMADI, Syria - Refugees
fleeing a Syrian government offensive in Latakia province say they
would rather pitch tents in the freezing countryside than risk being
caught by advancing soldiers or endure further shelling or Russian air
strikes.
Hundreds of people at the refugee camp at Yamadi, close to the border
with Turkey, are loading their belongings onto trucks and heading deeper
into rebel-held territory after pro-government forces regained control
of a series of strategically placed towns. Army commanders said they
expected the entire province of Latakia to be back under government
control within weeks.
But among refugees already facing a constant threat of Russian air
strikes there are few prepared to sit and wait for the arrival of
pro-government forces, some of whom are now less than 20km away
following the capture earlier this month of the previously rebel-held
towns of Salma and Rabia.
“We don’t want to live under the rule of the government for a minute.
They have no mercy on us. If they catch you then it’s the end for you,”
Umm Asim told Middle East Eye as she prepared to flee with her family
amid fears that one or two more nights of heavy fighting could bring
Syrian army tanks rolling down the road.
“We are trying to leave because the government is getting closer and the
Russians have done nothing good. We get shelled from one side and
bombed on the other side and we are afraid. My little son doesn’t eat
and he doesn't move because he is so afraid.”
“I’m afraid for my children,” added Umm Marwan. “We are leaving because
of the planes and because the children are so afraid. The army is
getting closer and the planes are constantly shelling us. We want to
leave and find a new place to stay.”
Russia is accused of killing hundreds of civilians since intervening in
Syria last September on the side of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad by
launching air strikes in rebel-held territory.
In November, Russian jets bombed camps including Yamadi in the Turkmen
Mountain region of northern Latakia that had become refuges for Syrians
fleeing from war-shattered cities, including long-besieged Homs and
Aleppo, and Ariha in Idlib province.
The bombardment came after a Russian jet crashed in the area after being
shot down by Turkey for reportedly violating Turkish air space, with
local rebels accusing Moscow of taking revenge.
“The
Russians came to kill the Syrian people. It’s a massacre, they use
planes, tanks and missiles,” said Umm Asim. “Where do we go? If we go to
the villages they bomb us, if we go elsewhere… where do we go?”

Images and video footage published by activists following MEE's visit to
Yamadi showed burnt-out tents and smoke rising from a similar camp in
the same area which they said had been shelled by pro-government forces.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says that Russia
carried out more than 500 air strikes in northeastern Latakia during a
two-week period of January and says that Russian military officers are
directing the offensive there.
Until last year the nearby Turkish border had been accessible to
refugees, with thousands of members of the local Turkmen community
crossing eastwards to camps in Turkey’s neighbouring Hatay province.
But the border is now considered too dangerous for many to risk the
crossing, amid reports of Turkish border guards shooting at refugees
trying to reach the country.
“All countries are against us. None of them have stood with us. If they
want to help us then let them help us with the planes, not with food and
drink but help us with the planes,” said Umm Asim
Just weeks ago, the camp at Yamadi was a desperate but bustling and
sprawling place that had become a temporary home to thousands of people.
Now many of the tents stand empty and abandoned, with trucks laden with
bedding and firewood, a highly valued commodity, setting off regularly
inland in the direction of rebel-held territory in neighbouring Idlib
province.
Some hope to reach other refugee camps, rather than returning to homes
already destroyed. But with nearby camps already overflowing, most
expect to set up tents in the countryside, where freezing night-time
temperatures pose a further threat to life.
Others, with children who are too sick or who lack the resources to pack
up and leave, have no choice but to stay put and take their chances.
Few of the children left have adequate clothing for the harsh mountain
conditions, with some wearing just slippers on their bare feet.
“They have no place to go,” Abu Ali told MEE. “If they can find a place
in another camp that’s good, but if not they will pitch a tent in the
middle of nowhere and do the best they can.”

