Car bomb attack on Syria evacuees kills at least 126

Car bomb attack on Syria evacuees kills at least 126

RASHIDIN, Syria
Car bomb attack on Syria evacuees kills at least 126 A massive car bomb attack on a convoy carrying evacuees from besieged government-held towns in Syria killed at least 126 people, of them at least 68 chilren, and wounded hundreds, a monitor said on April 16.

The blast on April 15 tore through buses carrying residents from the northern towns of Fuaa and Kafraya as they waited at a transit point in rebel-held Rashidin, west of Aleppo.

At least 68 children were among the 126 people killed in the attack, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, updating a previous toll of 112 dead.

At least 109 of the dead were evacuees, the Britain-based monitoring group said, while the rest were aid workers and rebels guarding the convoy.

The evacuations were taking place under a deal between Syria’s regime and rebels that is also seeing residents and rebels transported out of Madaya and Zabadani, towns near Damascus which are surrounded by pro-government forces.

The agreement is the latest in a string of evacuation deals, which the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad says are the best way to end the violence after more than six years of civil war.  

Rebels say they amount to forced relocations after years of bombardment and crippling sieges.

Body parts and the belongings of evacuees were still strewn at the scene of the attack on April 16, an AFP correspondent said.  

The shattered buses were parked nearby as was the shell of the pick-up truck - with little left but its engine block - that was used to carry out the bombing.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombing, though the key Ahrar al-Sham rebel group denied any involvement. The government blamed “terrorists” - a catch-all term for its opponents.

Hundreds of people were wounded in the blast, said the Observatory, which relies on a network of sources inside Syria to monitor the conflict.

It said a petrol station at the transit point was caught up in the explosion, adding to the number of victims.
Maysa, a 30-year-old evacuee from Kafraya, said she was sitting on one of the buses with her six-month-old son Hadi and 10-year-old daughter Narjis when the blast shook the parked convoy.

“Hadi was on my lap and Narjis on a chair next to me. When the explosion happened I hugged them both and we fell to the floor,” she told AFP by telephone from near Aleppo.

“I didn’t know what was happening, all I could hear was people crying and shouting,” she said.

“All I can think about is how we survived all the death during the last few years and then could have died just after we finally escaped.” 

More than 5,000 people left Fuaa and Kafraya and about 2,200 left Madaya and Zabadani on April 14, the latest in a series of evacuations from the four towns under the agreement.

The evacuation process resumed after the bombing, the Observatory said, with the residents of Fuaa and Kafraya eventually arriving in Aleppo, Syria’s second city which the government gained full control of last year.

U.N. aid chief Stephen O’Brien condemned the bombing in a statement, saying: “The perpetrators of such a monstrous and cowardly attack displayed a shameless disregard for human life.” 

Pope Francis on April 16 also urged an end to the war in Syria as he presided over the traditional Easter mass in Rome.

The pontiff said he hoped that Jesus Christ’s sacrifice might help bring “comfort and relief to the civil population in Syria, prey to a war that continues to sow horror and death.” 

The residents and rebels from Madaya and Zabadani arrived late April 15 in rebel-held territory in Idlib province, where they were greeted with embraces and shots fired into the air.

Syria’s Assad is an ‘arch-terrorist’: British FM 


Meanwhile, British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said April 16 that al-Assad is an “arch-terrorist” and it is time Russia realized he is “literally and metaphorically toxic.” 

Johnson said al-Assad’s ally Moscow still had time to be on the “right side of the argument,” in a Sunday Telegraph newspaper article.

“Assad uses chemical weapons because they are not only horrible and indiscriminate. They are also terrifying,” Johnson wrote.

“In that sense he is himself an arch-terrorist, who has caused such an unquenchable thirst for revenge that he can never hope to govern his population again.

“He is literally and metaphorically toxic, and it is time Russia awoke to that fact. They still have time to be on the right side of the argument.”