As fighting intensifies in Aleppo, UN mulls Canadian resolution to end conflict - Action News
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As fighting intensifies in Aleppo, UN mulls Canadian resolution to end conflict

The United Nations General Assembly began talks on Friday on a Canadian-drafted resolution that would demand an end to fighting in Syria.

No sign of ceasefire in sight as 31,500 residents displaced, thousands more trapped

People who fled areas of conflict ride in a pickup truck in Dahiyet al-Assad in western Aleppo. The UN has begun talks on a non-binding draft resolution to end the fighting and get aid to civilians. (Ammar Abdullah/Reuters)

The UN said Friday an estimated 31,500 residents have been displaced following Syrian government advances into the besieged eastern Aleppo enclave this weekend, as government media reported from those newly captured areas, demonstrating its restoration and resettlement efforts there.

The advance of government and allied troops was one of the most dramatic shifts in the conflict now in its sixth year, as their troops marched into areas controlled by the opposition since 2012.

Losing eastern Aleppo would cost the opposition its most significant urban presence.

As the government advances, airstrikes and shelling continue, rendering the situation in the besieged area even more direful.

The UN and rights groups have urged for a pause to allow humanitarian access to the enclave's estimated 275,000 people, but there's no ceasefire in sight.

The once-bustling city of Aleppo is pictured here on Friday, ravaged by years of civil war. (Omar Sanadik/Reuters)

Canadian-drafted UN motion

The United Nations General Assembly began talks on Friday on a draft resolution that would demand an end to fighting in Syria.

Diplomats said the meeting was likely to be held next week, when the Canadian-drafted resolution could be put to a vote.

General Assembly resolutions are non-binding, but can carry political weight.

The draft resolution would demand aid access, an end to indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks and an end to sieges.

Residents flee Aleppo

Fighting hascontinuedon the edge of the eastern Aleppo enclave, as allied government troops made progress in their advance on the southern and eastern fronts. Meanwhile, rebel rockets striking government controlled areas of Aleppo killed four Friday, according to state media.

Rebel fighters stand near a damaged bus used as a barricade in the rebel-held besieged Bab al-Hadid neighbourhood of Aleppo on Friday. The Syrian army is making significant advances in the city. (Abdalrhman Ismail/Reuters)

Over the weekend, allied government troops advanced from the northern side, capturing nearly half of the 45-square-kilometre enclave and sending the local population fleeing.

Most of those displaced fled to government and Kurdish-held areas in western Aleppo, separated only by roads and deserted buildings. Many were also displaced inside rebel-held parts of the city, cramming into already crowded and damaged areas in south and central eastern Aleppo.

Allegations of rebel abuses

Syrian state media reported from the government-controlled areas. State broadcaster al-Ikhabirya TV showed hundreds of displaced people sitting on rain-soaked streets and interviewed the newly displaced residents lodged in empty buildings pockmarked with bullets. Their fresh laundry hung on the walls overlooking the streets. The state-owned channel showed dozens of the displaced people waving Syrian flags from green government buses.

Syrians evacuated from eastern Aleppo get food aid from the Syrian Red Crescent inside a shelter in the government-controlled Jibreen area in Aleppo on Nov. 30. (Omar Sanadiki/Reuters)

The Syrian government has been keen to show it is restoring normalcy to the shell-shocked community following the swift restoration of government control to areas held by the opposition for four years. Syrian officials visited the newly captured areas as workers were filmed clearing debris.

'My sonBashardied hungry.'- Displaced woman in Aleppo

An Ikhbariya broadcaster said work is underway to soon reopen a road linking the eastern and western parts of the city, disused for years. He also interviewed newly resettled residents, who spoke of rebel abuses.

One displaced woman interviewed in the government-held Jibreen district said her son was shot dead as he fled rebel areas. The woman, who didn't give her name, said she would carry a gun to avenge her son's killing. She praised the Syrian army and said that while in rebel-held areas her family had no food or drink and was treated badly.

"My son Bashar died hungry," she said in tears.

Civilians allegedly detained while fleeing

Others interviewed in the newly captured Hanano district complained of being mistreated on suspicion of co-operating with the Syrian army, including one who said he was detained.

Opposition and activists had also accused the government of shelling displaced Syrians who were fleeing the government advances. At least 50 people were killed in artillery shelling of the rebel-held district to which they were fleeing.

The Office of Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs estimated that a total of 26,500 people had fled to government-held Jibreen, east of Aleppo, and Kurdish-held Sheik Massoud. Another 5,000 were displaced within eastern Aleppo.

Spokesman Jens Laerke on Friday cited reports that some men and boys trying to enter government-controlled western Aleppo had been detained by government troops.

Boys cling to a motorcycle with a man in rebel-held besieged Aleppo, where food is running short and hospitals are non-operational. (Abdalrhman Ismail/Reuters)

London-based rights group Amnesty International said it too had received reports of Syrian security forces detaining men in Aleppo areas recaptured by the government and warned of the potential for revenge attacks.

The reports could not be independently confirmed and a Syrian military official said screening measures were in place to prevent "terrorists" infiltrating the civilians.

UNofficials have expressed concern over the plight of civilians caught in the fighting in Aleppo, and called for more access to the eastern part of the city that has been besieged since July. There have been no operational hospitals in eastern Aleppo for nearly two weeks after they were bombed.

With files from Reuters