
Russia's Lavrov says radical groups engaged in 'ethnic cleansing' in Syria
MOSCOW/DAMASCUS May 20 (Reuters) - Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday that Moscow is deeply concerned by what he said was ethnic cleansing being carried out by "radical militant groups" in Syria.
The comments came as Syrian sources and Russian social media channels reported an apparent attack on one of the two military bases Moscow maintains in Syria.
"Radical militant groups are carrying out real ethnic cleansing, mass killings of people based on their nationality and religion," Lavrov said, according to a transcript of his comments published on the Foreign Ministry website.
There was no indication as to what groups he was referring to in his speech to a reception to mark the last day of the Easter period for Orthodox Christians.
Russia, which maintains two military bases in Syria, was a key backer of the government of ousted President Bashar al-Assad, who is now in Russia, where he was given asylum.
A March outbreak of sectarian violence in Syria's coastal northwest, which was an Assad stronghold, left hundreds of members of the former leader's Alawite sect dead.
Russia has attempted to maintain ties with Syria's new authorities, who have said that they may yet allow Moscow to retain use of the Hmeimim airbase and Tartus naval base.
Two sources in Syria familiar with the matter said that the Hmeimim airbase had come under attack earlier on Tuesday.
Military Informer, a pro-Russian Telegram channel that focuses on military matters, published what it said was video of a firefight between Russian troops and Syrian fighters at the base.
Reuters could not verify the footage.
The Syrian sources said that the motive for the attack on the airbase, which has sheltered Alawite refugees since the March attacks, was unclear. One, a Syrian security official based in the coastal city of Latakia, said an investigation was underway.
U.S. President Donald Trump this month ordered sanctions on Syria imposed during Assad's rule removed, in a major policy shift for Washington.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
Russia downed three drones targeting Moscow, mayor says
MOSCOW, June 6 (Reuters) - Russian air defence forces shot down three drones attempting to attack Moscow, Sergei Sobyanin, the Russian capital's mayor, said on Friday. He did not provide further details about the incident but said emergency services were working at the sites where debris from the downed drones had fallen. Separately, Russia's aviation watchdog said that the Domodedovo and Zhukovsky airports in the Moscow region had temporarily suspended operations to ensure flight safety. It announced soon afterwards that flights had resumed.


Reuters
6 hours ago
- Reuters
Russia asks UN agency to help solve question of US fuel at Ukraine nuclear plant
MOSCOW, June 6 (Reuters) - Russia asked the U.N. nuclear watchdog on Friday to mediate between Moscow and Washington to resolve the question of what to do with U.S. nuclear fuel stored at a Ukrainian power plant controlled by Russian forces. Russia wants to restart the idled Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, which lies near one of the front lines of the war in Ukraine and once generated a fifth of Ukraine's electricity. The fuel question is one of numerous issues standing in the way. Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told Reuters this week that restarting it was currently impossible because of the lack of a stable power supply and water for cooling. Russian nuclear energy chief Alexei Likhachev said after meeting Grossi on Friday that Russia was willing either to use the fuel, supplied by U.S. company Westinghouse, or to remove it entirely and return it to the United States. Westinghouse and U.S. energy officials had previously raised intellectual property concerns with Russia in connection with the fuel issue, he said in televised comments. State news agency RIA quoted Grossi as saying the IAEA was willing to mediate. Russia and Ukraine have each accused the other of shelling the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, Europe's largest, raising the risk of a grave accident. Likhachev said Russia had prepared a "comprehensive plan" for the phased commissioning of the plant but it could only be implemented if all military threats were removed. The facility was occupied by Russia in March 2022, shortly its troops entered Ukraine at the start of the war. It has six reactors, the last of which stopped generating electricity in September 2022.


The Independent
6 hours ago
- The Independent
Syrian families return home in time for Eid al-Adha after years in notorious displacement camp
Yasmine al-Saleh has two occasions to celebrate this year: the Eid al-Adha holiday and her family's return home after nine years in a notorious displacement camp in the Syrian desert. True, the home they returned to, in the town of al-Qaryatayn in the eastern part of Syria's Homs province, was damaged during the nearly 14 years of civil war. Al-Saleh fears that even a small earthquake will bring it down on their heads. Many of the surrounding buildings have collapsed. 'When I first entered my house — what can I say? It was a happiness that cannot be described,' al-Saleh said tearfully. 'Even though our house is destroyed, and we have no money, and we are hungry, and we have debts, and my husband is old and can't work, and I have kids — still, it's a castle in my eyes.' Last month, the last families left Rukban, a camp on the borders with Jordan and Iraq that once housed tens of thousands of families who lived under a crippling siege for years. People started gathering in Rukban in 2015, fleeing Islamic State militants and airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition, Russia and the forces of then-Syrian President Bashar Assad. Displacement camps became widespread in Syria during the war, but the situation in Rukban was particularly dire. While the bulk of the camps sprung up in opposition-controlled areas in the country's northwest, Rukban was hemmed in on all sides by areas controlled by Assad's forces and by the border. Jordan sealed its border and stopped regular aid deliveries in 2016 after a cross-border IS attack that killed seven Jordanian soldiers. For years, the U.N. and other humanitarian organizations were largely unable to bring aid in. Food, water and other essentials were only available via smuggling at exorbitant prices, and there was almost no access to medical care. Al-Saleh recalled that when she gave birth to her two daughters, she feared that she would die in childbirth as other women in the camp had. In recent years, some aid got in via the U.S. Army. The camp was located in a 55-km (34-mile) 'deconfliction zone' surrounding the base. Many of the camp's residents were families of fighters with the U.S.-backed Syrian Free Army. 'Conditions were horrid,' said Lt. Col. Ryan Harty, who was stationed at the nearby al-Tanf garrison as squadron commander in 2024 and assisted with the aid shipments. 'They lacked medical care, medical supplies, food, basic food supplies, water — anything you could think of that you would need to sustain life, they lacked.' The U.S.-based NGO Syrian Emergency Task Force worked with military officials to implement a provision that allows American aid groups to send humanitarian goods on military cargo planes if the planes are not fully loaded with military supplies. Eventually they were also able to secure seats on the planes to bring doctors to the camp. Maj. Bo Daniels, who was chief of the civil affairs team al-Tanf in 2023, was the first to realize that doctors could be classified as 'humanitarian aid.' 'I've been in the Army now for 24 years. I'm an Afghanistan and Iraq veteran,' Daniels said. He has mixed feelings about those deployments. But in Syria, he said, he felt that 'every day my missions really, truly mattered.' Working in Rukban, he said, was "was probably the proudest thing I've ever done in my military career." Still, the situation remained dire. A few months before Assad's fall, Amnesty International issued a statement condemning the Syrian government's tightening siege of the camp and criticizing Jordanian authorities for continuing to 'unlawfully deport Syrians to Rukban despite the camp's unlivable conditions' and the U.S. government for making 'little visible effort to improve the desperate conditions despite its ability to do so.' Many former residents were desperate enough to leave the camp and head to government-held territory, risking arrest and forcible conscription to the Syrian army. Before Assad's fall, about 8,000 people remained. After Assad fell, there was an immediate exodus from the camp. But a few hundred people — including al-Saleh's family — remained, unable to scrape together the funds to make the move. Islamic Relief USA paid for trucks and buses to move some 564 people and their belongings back to their homes last month. The Syrian Emergency Task Force said in a statement that the repatriation of those families brings 'an end to one of the worst humanitarian crises in Syria' and 'marks the end of the tragedy of Rukban.' For some, their return was bittersweet. Bakir al-Najim, another recent returnee to al-Qaryatayn, said, 'After 10 years of displacement, we will celebrate Eid al-Adha back in our hometown.' But, he said, 'we are poor, we have no jobs, we have no food or drinks to offer our (Eid) guests.' Ahmed Shehata, chief executive officer of Islamic Relief USA, said the UN agencies and other humanitarian organizations that would normally provide aid to returning refugees and internally displaced people are scrambling to find the funding after the Trump administration's recent major cuts to U.S. foreign aid. He said his organization is in talks with the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR about allocating a significant amount of funding to provide aid to those returning to their homes. Al-Saleh said however difficult her family's circumstances are now, they are nothing compared to the time they spent in Rukban. 'Rukban was a death camp,' she said. 'All I can say about it is that it was a death camp.' ——