Governor Suspends Homs Evacuation for Day over 'Logistics' as U.N. Says Evacuees Detained, Questioned

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An operation to evacuate civilians from besieged rebel-held areas of Syria's third city Homs was suspended for a day on Tuesday because of "logistical problems," the provincial governor told Agence France Presse.

"Today, operations didn't take place for logistical and technical reasons," Homs governor Talal Barazi said, without elaborating.

"The evacuation of civilians and delivery of food aid will continue tomorrow (Wednesday) morning," he added.

Under a deal brokered by the United Nations, the Syrian Red Crescent and U.N. agencies launched an operation on Friday to evacuate civilians from the besieged Old City of Homs and deliver food and medicines.

An initial three-day truce was extended on Monday for another 72 hours, but deliveries and evacuations never got underway on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, the U.N.'s refugee agency said that several hundred men evacuated from Homs have been detained for interrogation by government forces.

Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the UNHCR, told reporters in Geneva that 336 male evacuees aged between 15 and 55 had been taken in for questioning.

A total of 42 were released, but the remainder were still in the hands of the authorities, she said.

They were being held at a school near Homs. UNHCR staff were at the building but not present during the interrogation sessions, Fleming said.

After the questioning, however, the aid workers were able to speak to the men, who said they wanted to be allowed to join the women and children who have already been evacuated.

Opposition-held districts of Homs have been under siege for 600 days, facing daily bombardment and dwindling supplies of food and medicine.

The city was a hub of Arab Spring-inspired protests in March 2011 which were met with a crackdown by the regime of President Bashar Assad, sending Syria tumbling into civil war.

Its symbolism as a birthplace of the revolt against Assad put it sharply in focus during a first round of peace talks in Geneva between the regime and rebels last month.

An agreement that the civilians could be evacuated and aid brought in was the only tangible result of the talks, a second round of which began Monday.

But the evacuation only got under way last week, after the government and opposition trade blame for the delays and then over violations of a U.N.-brokered truce in place to facilitate the operation.

The regime has said it was essential to interrogate men in order to weed out "terrorists" -- it says the revolt is fueled by foreign jihadists and Gulf money.

But the opposition raised fears that separating the men of Homs from women and children could be a tactic to detain them.

The U.N.'s humanitarian coordination office said Tuesday that a total of 1,132 people had so far been evacuated from Homs, but did not say how many people were thought to remain in the besieged districts.

And U.N. children's agency UNICEF said that 400 young evacuees had been vaccinated against polio -- the crippling disease has reared its head in Syria due to a collapse of the health system.

In addition, there were 20 pregnant women among the evacuees.

UNICEF said that people emerging from the besieged areas spoke of a daily ordeal of cold, hunger, filthy drinking water and bombardment.

Comments 1
Thumb .Mehdi 11 February 2014, 16:17

The old stalling tactic, a true classic. No one does it better that the Syrian regime.