Syria civil war: Government's indiscriminate bombing of the Yarmouk refugee camp is the latest threat to its 18,000 residents
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Salim Salamah spent 22 years in Yarmouk, man and boy. He was
one of the thousands who fled when, three years ago, the Syrian bombs started
landing on the refugee camp five miles from the centre of Damascus. Today,
the bombs are again landing in the camp. “The sky of Yarmouk has barrel bombs
instead of stars,” said one activist this week.
A little over a year ago, surrounded by the raging Syrian
civil war, food was so scarce that some of Yarmouk’s 18,000 residents were
forced to eat roots and herbs. Now, however, the situation is worse. Bombed, starved
and slaughtered, the refugees living on the outskirts of Damascus face another
threat to their survival: Isis and its guerrilla war with Palestinian
militants.
Beheadings, the gruesome calling card of the self-proclaimed
“Islamic State”, are now carried out on the rubble-filled streets of Yarmouk.
By night, the residents of a camp built for Palestinians fleeing the 1948
Arab-Israeli war, watch bombs fall from the sky. “With the fall of the barrel
bomb, the angel of death arrives,” one refugee said. On the ground,
fighting continues between Isis and other groups, most notably Aknaf Beit
al-Maqdis, a militia formed of Syrians and Palestinians within Yarmouk’s
boundaries. Isis is now said to control 90 per cent of Yarmouk.
Furthermore, it is Yarmouk that has reportedly seen the
previously thought impossible alliance between Syria’s al-Qaeda-affiliated
Jabhat al-Nusra and Isis. The 25-year-old Mr Salamah fled to Malmo in Sweden,
via Lebanon, in 2012. “I spent almost all of my life in Yarmouk. It was very
well integrated within Damascus and was a hub of the city – Palestinians
flourished and debate on many levels was taking place,” Mr Salamah told The
Independent. “The bombing of the Syrian regime on 16 December 2012 was a
turning point. It triggered a lot of anti-regime fighters.”
He said the Isis incursion into Yarmouk began overnight on 1
April. “The Islamic State raided the camp suddenly. This operation was al-Nusra
working with Isis. It is a very different dynamic.”
He describes the barrel bombing by the Syrian regime as
“indiscriminate and stupid”, claiming one bomb hit a cemetery today. He added:
“People are trapped because of the clashes and the continuous and
indiscriminate bombing. It’s hard to go out at all. But they can expect where
the guerilla war will take place, but they can never predict where the barrel
bombs will come. There is no water. People are running out of food.”.. read
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