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Syrian air defence responds to 'Israeli missiles' — state media

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

DAMASCUS — Syrian air defence responded to Israeli missiles targeting the south and centre of the country, state media said early Thursday.

"Our air defence confronted an Israeli missile attack in the southwest of Quneitra province" in the south and also in a central region, SANA news agency said.

The short statement released after midnight did not provide details on the targets. Quneitra province is near the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the strikes targeted two military airports in central Homs province and two areas in Quneitra province where pro-Damascus allies of Hizbollah are present.

But the Britain-based war monitor said there were no immediate reports of a death or any material damage.

Since the start of the Syrian conflict in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria. 

SANA quoted a military source saying that at 12.30 am on Thursday (2230 GMT Wednesday) "our air defence observed Israeli warplane movement... Several missiles were fired towards the central region.

“The hostile missiles were immediately dealt with, and were successfully confronted, none was able to reach its target.”

In mid-February, Israeli strikes on Damascus Airport killed seven Syrian and Iranian fighters, according to the observatory.

Yemen cafes shut, women harassed as Houthis impose morals campaign

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

Yemeni women walk in the old city market of the capital Sanaa on Monday. In recent months, a series of incidents in the rebel-held north illustrates the Houthis' determination to impose their own moral order on Yemenis who have already endured five years of grinding conflict (AFP photo)

DUBAI — The Houthi rebels arrived without warning, heavily armed and in a furious mood, as they barged into Ophelia, the only cafe for women in the Yemeni capital Sanaa, and demanded it be shut down immediately.

When owner Shaima Mohammed asked for a little time to allow her customers to gather their things, one of the Houthis snapped at her: "Women should be in their homes. Why are they going out in public?"

"Armed men filled the street, directing obscenities at the women as they left," Shaima recounted in a Facebook post as she announced the cafe's closure.

The tense incident, one of a series in the rebel-held north, illustrates the Houthis' determination to impose their own moral order on Yemenis who have already endured five years of grinding conflict.

In recent months, restaurants where men and women mingle have been shut down, scissor-wielding militia have policed men's hairstyles, and rebel forces have patrolled college campuses to enforce dress codes.

Much of the crackdown has been rolled out without any official decree or documentation, but AFP saw a copy of a Houthi letter sent to non-government groups, illustrating the new mood as it laid out rules for workshops.

"Exclude all activities that aim to stir laughter, joy or entertainment among the trainees, and that lead to the lowering of barriers and modesty between women and men," it read.

"This is something that completely contradicts the teachings of Islam and the ethics of our Yemeni society."

 

Oppressed to oppressor 

 

Yemen's long war has pitted the Houthis, who are backed by Iran and control large swathes of the north, against the internationally recognised government which has the support of a Saudi-led military coalition.

The conflict in what was already the Arab world’s poorest nation has killed tens of thousands and triggered what the United Nations calls the worst humanitarian crisis on Earth, with millions displaced and in need of aid.

“The situation in Houthi-controlled areas is getting tighter and tighter. People are scared,” said Nadwa Al Dawsari, a Yemeni conflict analyst.

She confirmed accounts of women being harassed for wearing belts around their traditional abaya robes, with rebels tearing them off, saying the silhouette they create is too “exciting”.

“This is shocking for Yemeni society because it’s one thing to denounce certain behaviour and what people are wearing, and it’s another thing to go and abuse these women like Houthis are doing,” Dawsari said.

“It goes against our tribal values, it goes against our Islamic values... The difference now is that Houthis can force it down the throats of people living under their control.”

The Houthi campaign collides with a society which, although conservative, traditionally allowed space for individual freedoms and cultivated an appreciation of music and leisure, said Adel Al Ahmadi, a Yemeni academic.

The rebels, who hail from the mountainous north, have proved themselves to be a formidable fighting force since they swept into Sanaa in 2014, rallying behind their slogan: “Death to America! Death to Israel! Curse on the Jews! Victory to Islam”.

The militia, which rose up in the 1990s over alleged sectarian discrimination, hail from the minority Zaidi Shiite sect of Islam which makes up about one-third of the population.

“It is an ideological movement... which has evolved from the status of oppressed to that of oppressor,” Ahmadi said.

Witnesses in Sanaa told AFP of a rising number of disturbing incidents since late 2019, a period which has also seen the Houthis rack up battlefield victories and crank up a confrontation with UN agencies attempting to deliver humanitarian aid.

On February 13, on the eve of Valentine’s Day, young people were beaten in the street for failing to comply with the new notions of acceptable dress.

Unlike the days before the conflict, when people were free to celebrate with chocolates and flowers, one young man had his red shirt torn off by assailants who saw it as a symbol of an event that runs counter to Yemeni values.

In January, men’s hair salons were told fashionable styles were banned. Young men who fell foul of the rule with longer styles have been hauled onto major intersections where their locks were publicly chopped back with large scissors.

Another cafe owner in Sanaa told AFP his establishment had been shut down twice in three months by armed rebels.

“We are completely opposed to these abusive measures and the restrictions being imposed on people in the capital,” he said.

Houthis have also campaigned in schools and on college campuses against young people being “improperly dressed”, said Hemdane Al Ali, a journalist and human rights activist who lives in self-exile.

At Sanaa University, they have formed squads that “patrol the corridors to prevent any contact between students of different sexes”, he told AFP.

The war in Yemen is viewed by many as a front in the broader struggle between the Houthis’ backer Iran and the region’s other heavyweight — Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia.

“Young fighters go through months of training in the mountains, taught not only how to use weapons but also indoctrinated in a radical version of Shia Islam,” Dawsari told AFP.

“If you want to understand why Huthis behave in certain ways, you have to look at Iran... They’ve been trained by Iran, taught how to use disinformation, how to subjugate women. They’re developing a police state akin to Iran.”

Sudan crackdown may have killed up to 241 last June — rights group

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

A Sudanese protester chants slogans in the capital Khartoum's Green Square on July 18, 2019, during a rally to honour comrades killed in the months-long protest movement that has rocked the country (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Sudanese security forces deliberately killed scores of people, possibly as many as 241, in a crackdown on a pro-democracy protesters last June, an international rights group said Thursday.

It was the deadliest episode against a months-long protest movement that kicked off in late 2018 and led to the ouster of veteran president Omar Al Bashir in April 2019 and to civilian rule later that year.

Thousands of Sudanese protesters had camped outside the army headquarters in Khartoum demanding Bashir's ouster and kept up their sit-in even after his departure to protest against military rule.

On June 3, armed men in military fatigues moved in on the protest camp and dispersed thousands of demonstrators.

In the ensuing days-long crackdown, scores were killed and wounded.

Doctors linked to the protest movement have said at least 128 people died in the violence. Authorities gave a lower death toll of 87 and denied ordering the sit-in dispersal.

But in a scathing report titled “Chaos and Fire”, the US-based NGO Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said the crackdown was a “massacre” that could have claimed up to 241 lives, according to estimates.

“Sudanese security forces launched a series of planned, violent attacks against pro-democracy protesters that killed up to 241 people and injured hundreds more,” the report released on Thursday said.

The group said its findings were based on multiple witness testimonies, consultations with health workers and analysis of thousands of pieces of online footage and images of the dispersal.

 

 ‘Killings and torture’ -

 

“Sudanese security forces were responsible for perpetrating unconscionable acts of violence against pro-democracy demonstrators,” said the report.

Those acts included “extrajudicial killings and torture, excessive use of force, sexual and gender-based violence, and the forced disappearance of detained protesters”, it added.

The report said that in many cases, perpetrators identified themselves to their victims as belonging to the Rapid Support Forces, a then-paramilitary group now incorporated into the Sudan Armed Forces.

“Those forces were armed with weapons including tear gas, whips, batons, sticks, pieces of pipe and firearms, including Kalashnikov assault rifles,” it said.

Interviewees had described seeing security forces “shoot unarmed protesters in the head, chest and stomach from a distance” and that uniformed men “beat people with batons, whips and the butts of their rifles”.

The brutality described was supported by PHR’s clinical evaluations of wounds of survivors, the report said.

Phelim Kine, PHR’s research and investigation director, called the dispersal “an egregious violation of human rights”.

PHR called on UN member states to sanction Sudanese officials responsible for the violence.

In August, Sudan’s military leaders and others from the protest movement leaders formed a civilian-majority body to rule the country for a transitional period of three years.

The new authorities set up in October an independent commission to investigate the events of June 3.

The team has yet to release its findings.

290 million students out of school as global virus battle intensifies

More than 95,000 infected, over 3,200 have died worldwide

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

Students, wearing face masks or scarves to protect the face, attend a class at a governement-run high school in Secunderabad, the twin city of Hyderabad, on Wednesday, as part of health measures taken against the COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak (AFP photo)

ROME — Almost 300 million students worldwide faced weeks at home with Italy and India the latest to shut schools over the deadly new coronavirus, as the IMF urged an all-out global offensive against the epidemic.

More than 95,000 people have been infected and over 3,200 have died worldwide from the virus, which by Thursday had reached more than 80 countries and territories.

The US state of California declared an emergency following its first coronavirus fatality — raising the US death toll to 11 — and a cruise ship was kept offshore after passengers and crew members developed symptoms.

Switzerland reported its first death from the outbreak on Thursday, while Bosnia and South Africa confirmed their first cases and Greece's cases surged after 21 travellers recently returned from a bus trip to Israel and Egypt tested positive for the virus.

Most deaths and infections are in China, where the virus first emerged late last year, prompting the country to quarantine entire cities, temporarily shut factories and close schools indefinitely.

But it has quickly spread beyond China's borders.

Several countries have implemented extraordinary measures, with UNESCO saying on Wednesday that school closures in more than a dozen countries have affected 290.5 million children.

India, the world’s second most populous country, later announced it was closing all primary schools in the capital New Delhi until the end of March to prevent the virus from spreading.

The orders came as an India-EU summit scheduled for March 13 was also postponed.

While temporary school closures during crises are not new, UNESCO chief Audrey Azoulay said “the global scale and speed of the current educational disruption is unparalleled and, if prolonged, could threaten the right to education.”

Italy on Wednesday ordered schools and universities shut until March 15, ramping up its response as national fatalities rose to 107.

South Korea — second to China in terms of infections with cases jumping past 6,000 on Thursday — has postponed the start of the next term until March 23.

In Japan, nearly all schools are closed after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called for classes to be cancelled until early April.

Schools have also shut in Iran, where 107 people have died from the disease — alongside Italy, the deadliest outbreak outside China.

 

Economic threat 

 

Infections are now rising faster abroad than they are in China, where 31 more deaths and 139 new cases were reported Thursday. China’s toll now stands at 3,012, with over 80,000 infections.

AFP reporters saw a handful of people trickling back into Wuhan, the quarantined city at the centre of the epidemic, at the train station this week.

Beijing is now concerned about importing cases, with 20 infections brought from abroad so far — prompting several cities to require people arriving from hard-hit countries to self-quarantine.

Japan announced on Thursday that a state visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping this spring had been postponed because containing the epidemic was “the biggest challenge” for the two countries.

China, the world’s second largest economy, has been badly hit by the outbreak, which has also rumbled global stock markets, with Europe’s major exchanges sinking again on Thursday.

The IMF said it was making $50 billion in aid available for low-income and emerging-market countries to fight the epidemic, which it sees as a “serious threat” that would slow global growth to below last year’s 2.9 per cent.

“At a time of uncertainty... it is better to do more than to do not enough,” IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva said.

In the United States, lawmakers reached a deal to provide more than $8 billion to fight the outbreak.

 

No kissing 

 

Thousands of people were stranded on the Grand Princess off the California coast Wednesday as officials delayed its return to carry out tests on people on board.

A 71-year-old man who had been aboard the same ship during its previous voyage to Mexico died after contracting COVID-19.

The vessel belongs to Princess Cruises, the same company which operated a coronavirus-stricken ship held off Japan last month on which more than 700 people on board tested positive, with six dying from the disease.

The US and other governments have taken extraordinary measures to contain the outbreak.

Japan will quarantine all arrivals from China and South Korea for two weeks, while the United Arab Emirates warned its citizens to “avoid travelling”.

Saudi Arabia has suspended the year-round Islamic “umrah” pilgrimage, an unprecedented move that raises fresh uncertainty over the annual hajj.

New measures in Italy — where 11 towns with 50,000 have been under quarantine — include a month-long nationwide ban on fan attendance at sports events, and advising people to avoid greetings like kissing on the cheek or shaking hands.

Unions criticise Norwegian fund over UN settlement blacklist

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

Foreign tourists visit the Church of the Nativity, revered as the birthplace of Jesus Christ, in the West Bank city of Bethlehem on Thursday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Two international trade unions have used a UN list of companies working in Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories to attempt to press the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund to disinvest.

The United Nations last month released a list of 112 companies that allegedly operate in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The publication of the list sparked Israeli fury, while the Palestinians welcomed it, with settlements considered illegal under international law.

The UNI Global Union and the International Trade Union Confederation wrote a joint letter this week to an ethics committee overseeing the huge Government Pension Fund of Norway, accusing it of investing in 28 of the firms listed.

TripAdviser and Motorola Solutions, as well as Israeli banks and other companies, are among the firms on the UN list.

The letter, a copy of which has been seen by AFP, is believed to be the first time the UN list has been used in such a fashion.

Christy Hoffman, general secretary of the UNI Global Union, told AFP the UN list prompted the letter.

“We want to make the fund change its ethical rules to ban investment in any company that works in the settlements,” she said.

“I believe we are the first to use the UN list in this way.”

The sovereign wealth fund, the largest in the world, invests Norway’s oil revenues across the globe and has more than $1 trillion in assets.

It was invested in 9,200 companies at the end of 2019, according to its annual report.

Documents on its website confirmed it had millions invested in companies on the UN list, including $33 million in TripAdviser and $257 million in Motorola.

In Israel it invested $91 million in Bank Leumi and $73 million in telecoms firm Bezeq, among others.

The fund did not comment on the specific allegations but said it has ethical safeguards in place regarding all investments.

“We expect companies to respect human rights and take this into account in their operations,” spokeswoman Marthe Skaar told AFP.

In 2014 the fund blacklisted two companies involved in construction of settlements in Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem.

Omar Shakir, Israel-Palestine director of Human Rights Watch, told AFP that the publication of the UN database should be used by institutional investors “to insist on getting answers about the activities their money is funding”.

 

Egypt reopens ancient step pyramid after renovations

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

A tourist walks inside the step pyramid of Djoser in Egypt’s Saqqara necropolis, south of the capital Cairo, on Thursday (AFP photo)

CAIRO — Egyptian authorities reopened the 4,700-year-old step pyramid of Djoser to the public on Thursday, after years of renovation.

The roughly 60-metre-high pyramid dominates the vast Saqqara necropolis south of Cairo, and is part of the ancient capital of Memphis, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

"We completed the restoration ... of the first and oldest pyramid in Egypt, that of King Djoser, the founder of the Old Kingdom," Antiquities and Tourism Minister Khaled El Enany said on Thursday at the site.

It is "the first building in the world made entirely of stone", Enany added.

The Old Kingdom is known as the age of pyramid builders.

Dating to 2,680 BC, the Djoser pyramid was built under the direction of architect Imhotep.

A 1992 earthquake caused considerable damage to the monument's interior.

Renovations started in 2006 but were interrupted in 2011 and 2012 for "security reasons", before resuming in 2013, said Ayman Gamal Eddine, project manager at the antiquities ministry.

A popular uprising in Egypt in 2011 toppled longtime dictator Hosni Mubarak, with tourism one of the sectors that took a hit in the turmoil that followed.

Thursday's reopening was attended by Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouli as well as foreign ambassadors.

The premier said the renovation cost more than 104 million Egyptian pounds ($6.66 million).

"We are working hard to build a new Egypt ... and the restoration of our heritage is at the top of our priorities,” Madbouli said.

The gigantic Grand Egyptian Museum, overlooking the Giza pyramids, is set to open at the end of this year, five years later than originally planned.

Controversy erupted in 2014 when Egyptian media reported that the Djoser pyramid had been damaged during restoration work, with several Egyptian NGOs saying the monument's original facade had been altered.

Enany said on Thursday that after criticism from UNESCO experts, works were undertaken in conformity with the UN body's norms and "in 2018, UNESCO gave us positive reports".

Egypt has touted a flurry of archaeological finds in recent years, in the hope of boosting its vital tourism sector, which has suffered multiple shocks since the 2011 uprising.

Last year, authorities unveiled a 4,500-year-old burial ground near the Giza pyramids replete with colourful wooden coffins and limestone statues.

In November 2018, the ministry announced the discovery of seven sarcophagi, some dating back more than 6,000 years, at a site on the edge of the pyramid complex in Saqqara. Dozens of mummified cats were also found.

Egypt's tourist arrivals reached 11.3 million in 2018, up from 5.3 million in 2016.

 

Over a month of escalation between Turkey, Syria

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

BEIRUT — Tensions have soared between Syria and Turkey since early February, but an agreement on Thursday to call a ceasefire may reduce violence in Syria’s last rebel-held province of Idlib.

Here is a snapshot:

 

Worst clash since 2016 

 

Tit-for-tat shelling between Turkey and Russian-backed Syrian forces on February 3 is the deadliest since Ankara deployed troops to Syria in 2016.

A Syrian strike kills five soldiers and three Turkish civilians. Retaliatory rocket attacks kill at least 13 government troops.

The regime shelling comes after a Turkish military convoy of at least 240 vehicles enters the northwest of the country, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor.

The troops were sent to reinforce 12 Turkish observation posts in the region.

The clashes come after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accuses Syria’s main foreign ally, Moscow, of “not honouring” agreements to prevent a regime offensive on Idlib.

 

Turkish ultimatum 

 

On February 5, Erdogan gives Syria an ultimatum to pull its forces back from Turkey’s observation posts by the end of the month.

Two days later, Turkish media report that Turkey has sent reinforcements to the observation posts.

On February 10, five Turkish soldiers are killed by regime fire on their positions in Idlib. Ankara says it has responded with heavy bombing.

 

Russia-Turkey tensions 

 

Erdogan threatens on February 12 to strike Syrian regime forces “everywhere” if his soldiers are harmed.

He accuses Russia of being complicit in “massacres” perpetrated by the Syrian government. The Kremlin accuses Turkey of failing to “neutralise terrorists” in Idlib.

 

Heavy losses 

 

On February 27, more than 30 Turkish soldiers are killed in air strikes blamed by Ankara on the Syrian regime. The observatory says Turkish reprisals the next day kill around 30 Syrian soldiers.

Turkey announces on February 29 it has opened its border to refugees who want to go to Europe. The country hosts about 4 million refugees, most of whom are Syrian.

On March 1, Ankara announces it has launched a fourth offensive against Syrian forces in Idlib dubbed ‘Spring Shield’. Over the coming days it says it has shot down three Syrian warplanes.

According to the observatory, 119 Syrian soldiers and 20 pro-regime fighters have been killed in Turkish bombing since February 27.

 

Ceasefire accord 

 

At a Moscow summit on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Erdogan agree on a ceasefire in Idlib province to take effect at midnight.

Erdogan says Turkey reserves the right to “retaliate with all its strength against any attack” by Damascus.

The two agree to launch joint army patrols along the key M4 highway in Idlib from March 15, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says.

 

Algeria prosecutor seeks longer sentences in ex-PMs' graft appeal

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

ALGERIA — An Algerian prosecutor demanded on Thursday an appeal court stiffen sentences against former political leaders, including two ex-prime ministers, who were convicted on corruption charges last year.

The prosecutor urged the court to impose 20-year prison terms on Ahmed Ouyahia and Abdelmalek Sellal, who were respectively sentenced to 15 years and 12 years in December.

The two premiers had served under president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was forced to resign in April last year by enormous street protests against his bid for a fifth term in office.

Scandals within Algeria's auto industry — including its murky funding of Bouteflika's aborted re-election bid — stood at the heart of the case, which also resulted in prison terms for other former ministers and businessmen close to the ex-president's regime.

Two former industry ministers, Mahdjoub Bedda and Youcef Yousfi, were in December handed 10-year terms, but the prosecutor on Thursday demanded those sentences be upped to 15 years each.

The prosecutor also demanded 10-year terms for two owners of vehicle assembly plants, Ahmed Mazouz and Mohamed Bairi, who were originally sentenced to seven years and three years respectively.

Businessman Ali Haddad, founder and CEO of private construction firm ETRHB and former head of Algeria's main employers' organisation, was sentenced to seven years in December, but the prosector likewise wants his sentence upped to 10 years.

It was the first time since Algeria's independence from France in 1962 that former prime ministers have been put on trial.

The appeal opened on Sunday and the prosector is also demanding the confiscation of goods from all the accused.

The principal accused reject the charges against them.

Many observers see the corruption cases against former regime heavyweights as score settling within the ruling elite.

Protests against cronyism have continued in Algeria despite Bouteflika's resignation and the election of a new president in December.

The new head of state, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, himself served briefly as a prime minister under Bouteflika.

Iran says 'no obligation' to let UN nuclear watchdog into certain sites

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

VIENNA — Tehran has no obligation to grant the UN's nuclear watchdog access to sites in Iran when it deems the requests are based on "fabricated information", Iran's UN ambassador in Vienna said Wednesday.

"Intelligence services fabricated information... creates no obligation for Iran to consider such requests," said a statement from Iran's ambassador to the UN in Vienna, Kazem Gharib Abadi.

It comes a day after a report from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reprimanded Iran for refusing access to two sites which diplomats believe could be connected to the country's historic nuclear activity.

Gharib Abadi also accused the US and Israel of trying to "exert pressure on the Agency... in order to distort the proactive and constructive cooperation" between the IAEA and Iran.

Israel has claimed that a trove of information obtained by its intelligence services contains new information on a previous nuclear weapons programme in Iran.

The two sites that the IAEA was denied access to were among three locations that the agency had been raising questions over since the middle of last year.

The IAEA said in Tuesday's report that it had been sent a letter by Iran saying Tehran did "not recognize any allegation on past activities and does not consider itself obliged to respond to such allegations".

The three sites the IAEA reported on are in addition to another location in Tehran where the agency found uranium particles late last year.

IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi told AFP on Tuesday during a visit to Paris that he was "worried" by the possibility that there had been undeclared nuclear activity at that site and called on Iran to provide answers.

While the IAEA has not identified the site in question, diplomatic sources told AFP the agency asked Iran about a site in the Turquzabad district of Tehran, where Israel has alleged secret atomic activity in the past.

The renewed focus on Iran's historic programme could add to the tension over its current nuclear activities.

A second IAEA report on Tuesday outlined Iran's continued breaches of the terms of the 2015 nuclear accord with world powers but did not report any restrictions in access to nuclear facilities.

The 2015 deal has been hanging by a thread since the US withdrew from it and re-imposed swingeing sanctions on Iran, prompting Tehran to progressively abandon the accord's restrictions on its nuclear activities.

 

Displaced Syrians set up camp at Idlib football stadium

By - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

IDLIB, Syria — In the car park and under the stands of a football field in Idlib city, northwestern Syria, families with nowhere to go after fleeing war live in tents.

"This is a football stadium. It's unfit for people to live in," says 32-year-old Abu Fawz, wearing a bomber jacket and red baseball cap flipped backwards.

"There's no electricity, no water and no bathrooms" apart from portable toilets, the father of three says.

"People keep coming and going," and there's no privacy.

Since December, Russia-backed government forces have been waging a deadly offensive to retake the last major opposition bastion of Idlib in northwestern Syria.

They have clawed back dozens of towns and villages from the extremists and allied Turkey-backed rebels, sparking one of the worst humanitarian disasters of the almost nine-year-old civil war.

The assault has forced nearly one million people, mostly women and children, to flee their homes and shelters in the region.

Abu Fawz and his family fled bombardment on his hometown of Maaret Al Numan late last year.

"Thank God I managed to save my wife and children," he says.

After grabbing the bare necessities as the town emptied, they sped north to the provincial capital of Idlib city, but struggled to find a home there.

“We were stuck in the streets until we were told there was a camp at the football stadium,” Abu Fawz says.

 

‘Tragedy’ 

 

Unable to find a spot in overcrowded camps or pay for rent in town, many of those displaced in recent months have slept in fields or sought shelter in schools, mosques and unfinished buildings.

In the middle of winter, AFP correspondents have seen families forced to sleep in their cars, in underground shelters, in a cemetery hall and even an abandoned prison.

On the wet grounds of the Idlib football stadium, fresh laundry hangs out to dry outside neat rows of white tents and along the edges of the field.

A motorbike darts up to park in the shade of the bleachers, while children hurry along the pathways between their canvas homes.

Standing between the tents, 65-year-old gynaecologist Umm Sanaa says she also hails from Maaret Al Numan.

After her home was bombarded four months ago, she was pulled from under the rubble and taken to hospital. When she recovered, she came to live in the camp.

“It’s a tragedy,” she says.

“We want a peaceful solution so everyone can go home — even if only to eat bread.”

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