Eastern Aleppo residents arrive in western rural part of the city

“It was the final time I saw Aleppo.” Among a sea of sobbing men and hungry children Friday, Mohammad mourned his evacuation from his hometown and Syria’s second city.
“It was catastrophic... I was kicked out of my homeland,” the university professor told AFP in English at a staging ground for evacuation operations 5 km west of Aleppo.
Mohammad was one of more than 8,000 people evacuated from the last opposition-controlled districts of Aleppo on Thursday, and transferred to opposition-held territory west of the city.
Buses and ambulances worked through the night to bring opposition fighters and civilians out to Khan Al-Assal, from where they would travel on to other parts of Aleppo and Idlib provinces.
Mohammad said he was heartbroken at having left his home behind — and terrified for family members still inside the city.
“I prayed this morning, it was the final prayer (in Aleppo), and I cried,” said the young man, who had wrapped a black scarf around his head as protection from the icy December wind.
“The only thing that I am thinking about is to see some of my relatives... A lot of people are there inside Aleppo waiting,” he added.
All around, hundreds of families poured from pick-up trucks and buses, carrying duffel bags stuffed with their belongings.
The sobs of middle-aged men were drowned out by the sirens of Red Crescent ambulances that had transported at least 250 wounded out of Aleppo.
One young boy, wearing an electric-blue jacket that reached down to his knees, carried a cage of several canaries as he wandered through the chaos.
Another child lay motionless on a stretcher, his hand wrapped in a bandage and his thin face barely visible under the mountain of brightly colored blankets keeping him warm.
Many children looked like skeletons, and repeatedly asked aid workers for more food.
Since July, government forces have besieged opposition-held eastern Aleppo, making access to food and medicine nearly impossible for tens of thousands of people.
Regime troops and allied militia captured more than 90 percent of the former opposition bastion in Aleppo’s east when the 11th-hour evacuation deal was announced.
They survived the siege and the government offensive, but the thousands of evacuees now faced new challenges.
Some went from the transit point near Khan Al-Assal to stay with relatives in Aleppo and Idlib provinces.
Others stayed in displacement centers or camps.
Those who needed medical attention were transferred to nearby hospitals or north to Turkey by a fast-acting team of medical professionals.
They used walkie-talkies and a patchy Internet connection at Khan Al-Assal to “immediately send the wounded to the hospital with a free bed or available operating room,” said Ahmad Dbis.
Dbis headed the coordination unit that organized Thursday’s evacuation of wounded from Aleppo.
Representatives from opposition factions also came to Khan Al-Assal to arrange treatment for their fighters.
“We left our land,” said Abu Ahmad Salah, an opposition fighter with a bushy white beard and a rifle slung over his shoulder.
“Everyone let us down,” he told AFP with a wan smile.
“If we don’t stand together, we’ll find ourselves in a situation worse than the Palestinians. We’ll wander from one house to another, one country to another,” he said.
Then his tone changed from one of resignation to determination: “But we will unite, and we will come back to Aleppo.”
“We hoped the siege would be broken,” said Abu Ahmad, sporting a gray beard and navy blue hat.
His leg was amputated after fighting in Aleppo, and he struggled to get out of the bus when he reached Khan Al-Assal.
“God willing, we will come back to Aleppo victorious,” he said.

Source: Arab News