Yarmouk: Terrorists leave for Idlib

The Syrian Arab Army and allies have liberated the Yarmouk Camp. A total of five buses transported scores of terrorists from the Yarmouk Camp, on the outskirts of Damascus, to Idlib.

R. Jazaeri/Ghossoun
Source: SANA
Buses allocated for evacuating terrorists from al-Yarmouk Camp in the south of Damascus to Idleb started to gather on Sunday midnight, in implementation of the agreement which stipulates for evacuating terrorists and liberating the besieged people in the towns of Kefraya and al-Fouaa and those who are abducted from the village of Eshtabraq.

SANA reporter said that tens of buses arrived in al-Batikha Roundabout at the entrance of al-Yarmouk camp paving the way for evacuating terrorists from the Camp later.

Earlier, the reporter said that the government and the terrorist groups positioned in al-Yarmouk Camp reached an agreement on evacuating terrorists from al-Yarmouk Camp and liberating the besieged people from the towns of Kefraya and al-Fouaa and liberating the kidnapped people from Eshtabraq on two stages.

The reporter said that the agreement stipulates for evacuating terrorists from al-Yarmouk Camp and liberating the besieged people in the towns of Kefraya and al-Fouaa whose number is about 5,000 on two stages, in the first stage 1500 people from the besieged locals of Kefraya and al-Fouaa will be liberated.

The reporter added that the agreement also stipulates for liberating the abductees from the town of Eshtabraq whose number is 85 mostly women, children and elderly, on two stages.

All the provisions of the agreement are decided to be implemented before the beginning of Ramadan, the reporter concluded.




Rebels Promised To Bomb Buses Evacuating Shi’ite Civilians

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmkK0jXSJQs




Syria urges UN to hold responsible those behind deadly bus attack

Source: Press TV
Syria has strongly denounced a deadly Takfiri bomb attack on buses carrying people from two Shia-majority villages in the northwestern province of Idlib, calling on the United Nations to hold responsible the countries that fund terrorists and provide them with weapons and ammunition.

At least 126 people, including 68 children, were killed and dozens of others sustained injuries on Saturday, when a bomber blew up an explosive-laden car, ripping through several buses carrying evacuees from Kefraya and Foua villages in Idlib as they were waiting in al-Rashidin district to enter the city of Aleppo.

In two letters to United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres and the UN Security Council on Sunday, Syria’s Foreign Ministry said the barbaric attack clearly revealed that the terror groups, particularly Daesh and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham Takfiri terrorist groups, had been wearied by Syria’s repeated victories.

The ministry’s statement also stressed the need for coordinating international attempts aimed at battling terrorism in the Arab country and the necessity of full cooperation with Damascus in any counter-terrorism endeavor.

Elsewhere in the statement, the ministry said that some countries that claimed they supported human rights showed that their policies were aimed at more killings and destruction when they refused to condemn the deadly bus attack as a crime against humanity.

It added that the Saturday bombing complemented the US attack on the Shayrat Airfield in Homs Province with a barrage of 59 Tomahawk missiles on April 7, which caused some 15 fatalities, including civilians.

On Saturday, the UN condemned the bombing in al-Rashidin, calling on “the parties to ensure the safety and security of those waiting to be evacuated.”

The Syrian Foreign Ministry further called on the UN to pressure main supporters of terrorists operating inside the Middle Eastern country, namely Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, France, the UK and the US, to stop their support for terrorist groups.