In the basements of eastern Ghouta, Syrians wait in fear as bombs fall - Action News
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In the basements of eastern Ghouta, Syrians wait in fear as bombs fall

As the battles creep closer, thousands of families have fled their homes and moved deeper into the enclave that is eastern Ghouta, where cellars were already packed with civilians sheltering from the fighting.

Moscow, Damascus say their military forces only target armed militants but residents say otherwise

A Syrian woman bakes bread in a shelter with her family as they seek protection from airstrikes and shelling by Syrian government forces, in Ghouta, a suburb of Damascus, in a photo released on Feb. 21. (Syrian Damascus Media Center via Associated Press)

Abu Almahas holed up in a basement for two weeks with his wife and babydaughter. Ten other families stay with them, hiding from thebombs that fall on Syria's eastern Ghouta.

They only venture out to find medicine or bring food theyhad stored at home months earlier, he said.

"We are living in the basement always," said Abu Alma, 30,an engineer and local aid worker. "We're trying to make it work.What can we do?"

Warplanes and artillery have battered the rebel enclave nearthe capital of Damascus for over two weeks in one of the bloodiestassaults of the seven-year war. The bombing has killed hundredsand pushed people into makeshift underground shelters.

It's harsh in the basements, but it will be much harder in the camps.- Abu Alma, local resident

Syrian government forces have chewed off bits of farmlandand marched into towns, squeezing the pocket in the easternsuburbs of Damascus.

As the battles creep closer, thousands of families fledtheir homes and moved deeper into the enclave, residents say. The cellars were already packed before that.

Russia, the Syrian government's key ally, has offeredinsurgents safe passage out. The proposal echoes evacuations in other parts of Syria, where fighters and civilians withdrew torebel territory near the Turkish border. Such deals accept state rule or leave have helpedPresident Bashar al-Assad's military claw back control of majorcities, with support from Russia and Iran.

Some in eastern Ghouta said they dreaded a similar fate.

"There's a lot of fear that the regime will enter, and onthe other hand people don't want to leave. They want to stay in their homes," Abu Alma said in the town of Douma. "It's harsh inthe basements, but it will be much harder in the camps."

'We ran in the night'

Since 2013, troops have encircled eastern Ghouta, where theUnited Nations estimates 400,000 people live without enoughfood, water, or medicine. It remains the only big rebel enclavenear Damascus, the seat of Assad's power.

Khalil Aybour, a member of the local opposition council,said more than 16,000 people arrived in Douma alone in two weeks. He has prepared an emergency kit in case he has tosuddenly run.

"There are families displaced five times, like my parents,"he said. "People are having to open up their shelters.

Abu Firas, a farmer from the village of Shifouniyeh, escapedto Douma last week when the front lines reached his house.

"The forces advanced into the farms.... We lifted the kids andran in the night...We don't even have clothes," he said. "Thewarplanes and rocket launchers pounced. The bullets werereaching our building."

With their three children, he and his wife also live in abasement.

"It's disgusting," Abu Firas added. "We want to return home.... We have our lands. We abandoned them, our cows, oursheep." The army now controls the village.

Moscow and Damascus say their forces only target armedmilitants and seek to stop mortar salvoes by Islamist insurgentsthat have killed dozens of people in the capital.

Syrian government soldiers ride in an armoured vehicle during a battle against Syrian rebels in eastern Ghouta, Syria, in a photo released on Wednesday. (SANA via Associated Press)

Russian and Syrian forces have opened corridors forcivilians to exit the suburbs. But there are no signs that anyone has, and they accuse the Ghouta insurgents of preventingresidents from leaving. The two main factions deny this.

Abu Alma said people do not trust the route and worry aboutan uncertain fate if they go to government territory.

"Becausethere are no guarantees except from the Russians and the regime,and they are the same ones bombing Ghouta."

To pass the time in the cellar, they read the news or try tocheck on the status of relatives, he said.

'A million deaths'

Some people said they did not doubt that a small part of thepopulation wanted to get out, at least for survival.

One resident in Douma said many now wanted the bombs tostop falling at any price. Their despair has grown and thegovernment onslaught has intensified so much that they nowresent the insurgents, the resident said.

Ahmad al-Meshrif, an ex-rebel, left his town of Nashabiyehwith 14 relatives including his mother, wife and son. Airstrikes followed them as they moved across towns over the courseof two weeks, he said.

"This latest attack... has not spared anything. If only yousee the sheep and the cows in the streets, how the shrapnel torethem to pieces."

A boy walks down a street in the besieged town of Douma, eastern Ghouta, on Thursday. (Bassam Khabieh/Reuters)

When his family stayed in a shelter in Mesraba, he said,they could barely step out to the water pump because of the shelling. "That's aside from the psychological state they put usin. I cannot find the words to describe it."

Meshrif, 35, has taken care of his nephews and nieces sincetwo of his brothers died fighting against the army in recent years. His third brother was in a government prison.

"We can no longer bear it. We put our hope in God," he said."I would rather die a million deaths than live under [the state's]control and stop battling it impossible."