"My family have gone and I need
somewhere safe to stay," he said.
At 90 years old, Mohammed Khalaf deserves
better. He has lived through many wars and more than one revolution.
Today he sits alone in his house in one of Aleppo's
poor sprawling suburbs, terrified by the gunfire and artillery shells exploding
nearby.
His family has fled the city. He claims
that they left him behind but - old, afraid and confused - his mind is perhaps
not as clear as it once was.
He says he remembers the struggle against
the French occupation but adds: "They didn't shoot at us during [the
Muslim holy month of] Ramadan.
"Things that are happening now never
happened during the fight for independence."
As he left to see if the bakery was open,
the terrifying sound of heavy gunfire erupted nearby.
He tried to run for cover, his weathered
body no match for his survival instincts and the best that he could manage was
an awkward shuffle.
The battle for Aleppo was raging all
around. The situation on the ground has completely changed from just a few days
ago. The fighting has intensified and the government has deployed thousands of
troops and tanks to try to recapture the neighbourhoods it ceded a week
earlier.
The commander of the Tawhid Brigade, one of
the largest groups of rebel fighters in Aleppo, called us in for a meeting.
Abdul Saleh is a businessman turned rebel
leader. He says his brigade has thousands of fighters who control more than 40%
of the city's neighbourhoods. It is a claim that is impossible to verify.
He wanted to talk to the tiny group of
foreign journalists who had entered the city and he began with a warning that
everyone should have their bags packed and their cars ready to leave at any
time.
He said the nearest tanks were now just 2km
away. With one eye fixed on an escape route I asked: "In which
direction?"
In a rare moment of candour about the
threat his men face, he replied: "In every direction."
'We die or win'
Despite the threat that grows by the day it
was an honest assessments from the armed opposition who often inflate their
strength and numbers, masking vulnerability with confidence and tough talk.
"We decided and we promised that we
would fight," he said. "We will die or we will win."
But the odds they face are daunting. A
conventional armed force with tanks, mortars, artillery, helicopter-gunships
and fighter jets is now lined up against rebel fighters armed with Kalashnikov
rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers.
However, the terrain of these heavily
populated areas works to their advantage.
Many of the fighters are battle hardened in
a way that the government's soldiers are not. The rebels are also making their
own improvised explosive devices and Molotov cocktails and are perhaps more
willing to make the ultimate sacrifice than an army of conscripts and career
soldiers.
Not far from their base the
hole-in-the-wall bakery that Mohammed had been seeking had just reopened its
doors after being closed for more than a day. Most food shops in the turbulent
districts are now closed.
Rebel fighters tried to marshal the crowds
as hundreds of hungry and increasingly desperate residents clamoured for the
thin round loaves.
Suriya had finally reached the front of the
queue and the middle-aged mother thrust her hand through the railings outside
the bakery, grasping for the bread. Like many poor Syrians she has a large
family to feed and with no fresh fruit or vegetables available this is her only
chance to get food.
"A lot of poor people are suffering
from a lack of food and water," she complained. "Many are going to
bed hungry."
Their suffering does not seem likely to end
soon. Food, water and power shortages have made life hard for residents. The
ever-present danger from bombs and bullets is making it intolerable.
Thousands of families have already fled the
city. Men, women and children are being killed every day, innocent victims of a
battle they did not choose and that no-one seems able to stop.
This is just the start of the battle for
Aleppo and it is impossible to predict the outcome.
But it will shape the destiny of President
Bashar al-Assad, the revolution he faces and the Syrian nation. And it will
leave countless numbers of its citizens bleeding and dying.
No comments:
Post a Comment