Zürcher Nachrichten - Syrians aid Ukrainians in ties forged by war

EUR -
AED 3.9678
AFN 70.759795
ALL 98.583276
AMD 418.284505
ANG 1.947106
AOA 982.003951
ARS 1062.702575
AUD 1.615511
AWG 1.944453
AZN 1.83956
BAM 1.951296
BBD 2.181365
BDT 129.102027
BGN 1.955179
BHD 0.407263
BIF 3127.328755
BMD 1.080252
BND 1.421419
BOB 7.465803
BRL 6.168018
BSD 1.080406
BTN 90.833352
BWP 14.423709
BYN 3.53564
BYR 21172.933882
BZD 2.177684
CAD 1.49293
CDF 3078.717618
CHF 0.934612
CLF 0.037157
CLP 1025.2452
CNY 7.695065
CNH 7.690631
COP 4607.813749
CRC 556.704792
CUC 1.080252
CUP 28.626671
CVE 110.672114
CZK 25.212021
DJF 191.982052
DKK 7.457718
DOP 65.337871
DZD 144.005566
EGP 52.613983
ERN 16.203776
ETB 128.114749
FJD 2.412962
FKP 0.826575
GBP 0.832102
GEL 2.938045
GGP 0.826575
GHS 17.445603
GIP 0.826575
GMD 75.617552
GNF 9322.572667
GTQ 8.354717
GYD 226.02936
HKD 8.395311
HNL 27.059965
HRK 7.441887
HTG 142.231723
HUF 400.265136
IDR 16810.337276
ILS 4.070886
IMP 0.826575
INR 90.83005
IQD 1415.129765
IRR 45481.30021
ISK 149.290336
JEP 0.826575
JMD 171.463461
JOD 0.765916
JPY 163.075341
KES 139.352731
KGS 92.353209
KHR 4385.822506
KMF 491.676733
KPW 972.226312
KRW 1490.536701
KWD 0.331044
KYD 0.900322
KZT 524.160214
LAK 23692.617677
LBP 96736.542294
LKR 316.818768
LRD 207.678501
LSL 19.034093
LTL 3.189703
LVL 0.653433
LYD 5.196618
MAD 10.695035
MDL 19.392242
MGA 4963.757041
MKD 61.530542
MMK 3508.615477
MNT 3670.695404
MOP 8.651173
MRU 42.939991
MUR 49.767034
MVR 16.593009
MWK 1874.774573
MXN 21.537043
MYR 4.675319
MZN 68.974377
NAD 19.034318
NGN 1775.220812
NIO 39.699108
NOK 11.791844
NPR 145.333563
NZD 1.785203
OMR 0.41585
PAB 1.080411
PEN 4.069274
PGK 4.29567
PHP 62.434772
PKR 300.040146
PLN 4.320522
PYG 8548.230719
QAR 3.932653
RON 4.973368
RSD 117.03652
RUB 103.434084
RWF 1458.339834
SAR 4.057052
SBD 8.965362
SCR 14.466684
SDG 649.775957
SEK 11.384778
SGD 1.421444
SHP 0.826575
SLE 24.564638
SLL 22652.33517
SOS 616.823767
SRD 35.676941
STD 22359.029764
SVC 9.453182
SYP 2714.165166
SZL 19.034203
THB 36.158725
TJS 11.473572
TMT 3.780881
TND 3.359047
TOP 2.530058
TRY 36.984098
TTD 7.339923
TWD 34.621853
TZS 2943.685939
UAH 44.650544
UGX 3959.860458
USD 1.080252
UYU 44.906354
UZS 13851.522456
VEF 3913268.637567
VES 42.26957
VND 27443.795167
VUV 128.249688
WST 3.025984
XAF 654.446507
XAG 0.032025
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.919435
XDR 0.810529
XOF 653.552438
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.468055
ZAR 18.940073
ZMK 9723.564024
ZMW 28.710867
ZWL 347.840616
  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    62

    +2.42%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    7.36

    -0.54%

  • CMSC

    0.0850

    24.735

    +0.34%

  • SCS

    -0.0800

    12.81

    -0.62%

  • RIO

    0.5300

    65.48

    +0.81%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    38

    -0.42%

  • NGG

    -0.7400

    66.29

    -1.12%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    9.55

    -0.84%

  • RELX

    -0.6100

    47.02

    -1.3%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    24.93

    +0.24%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.07

    -0.61%

  • BTI

    0.6400

    34.89

    +1.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    77.32

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -4.2500

    133.65

    -3.18%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    33.32

    -0.21%

  • BP

    0.1100

    31.58

    +0.35%

Syrians aid Ukrainians in ties forged by war
Syrians aid Ukrainians in ties forged by war

Syrians aid Ukrainians in ties forged by war

Syrians are mobilising to support Ukrainians, sharing hard-earned knowledge gleaned from years of war involving Russian forces, such as surviving shelling, helping refugees and responding to chemical attacks.

Text size:

With both Ukrainians and Syrians seeking accountability for the ravages inflicted by Russian forces in their countries, they feel a unique bond is growing between them.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's grip on power had appeared to be hanging by a thread after the civil war erupted in 2011, until Russian forces stepped in four years later turning the conflict in the regime's favour.

"From our experiences in Syria, we might be among those most able of understanding the pain of the people of Ukraine," said Raed al-Saleh, head of the Syria Civil Defence force, known as the White Helmets.

"Syrians have lived the shelling, killing, and displacement brought on them by Russian forces.

"The time and place have changed, but the victim is the same -- civilians -- and the killer is the same -- the Russian regime," he told AFP.

During the fighting in Syria, which has claimed over 500,000 lives, the White Helmets have worked as first responders, rescuing thousands from under the rubble of homes shelled by Russian and regime forces in rebel-held areas of Syria.

The fate of Ukraine's besieged southeastern port of Mariupol, the scene of some of Moscow's fiercest assaults, has drawn comparisons with the eastern districts of Syria's northwestern city of Aleppo.

The former rebel stronghold was levelled by air strikes in 2016, during a months-long siege.

"Look at the city of Mariupol. This is exactly what we've seen in the city of Aleppo in Syria," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told an international forum last month.

He wanted to convey a message that "'Russia was always a bad actor, Aleppo is proof of that and now it is our turn to suffer'," Emile Hokayem, analyst at the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, told AFP.

- 'We warned you' -

This shared suffering has prompted a series of initiatives.

A coalition of groups has launched the Syria Ukraine Network (SUN) that has helped Syrian doctors travel to Ukraine, said coordinator Olga Lautman, a Ukrainian living in Washington.

"We will be coordinating (with) Syrian experts on war crimes documentation and chemical attacks," Lautman told AFP.

It came from "the desire of Syrians to use their expertise to help", she said, describing the "bond" forming between the two peoples.

In northwestern Idlib, one of the last remaining rebel areas in Syria, doctors at the Academy of Health Sciences are training Ukrainian doctors and nurses online, its president Abdullah Abdulaziz Alhaji said.

Ukrainians are mainly asking to learn about chemical attacks, he said. "They want to benefit from our experience."

Although no chemical weapons use has been confirmed in Ukraine, chlorine or sulphur gas attacks were recorded during the Syrian conflict, according to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.

White Helmets rescuers are also filming tutorial videos for Ukrainians on treating casualties.

On the Ukrainian-Romanian border, Syrian Omar Alshakal, founder of Refugee4Refugees association, has been assisting Ukrainians fleeing war.

And Ukrainian and Syrian activists will Wednesday launch a "Freedom and Justice Convoy" from Paris to the Ukrainian-Polish border to show the "Syrian people's solidarity".

"Syrians are keen to embrace the cause of Ukraine because it helps revive fading international attention to their own tragedy and to tell Westerners: 'We warned you but you preferred to look away'," said Hokayem.

- 'Accountability' -

Charles Lister, from the Middle East Institute, noted Syrian activists have "sought to ride this wave of anti-Russian sentiment, to bolster the Syrian cause, but also to foster new, meaningful geopolitical relationships in Ukraine."

Syrian opposition leaders had met Ukrainian leaders on the sidelines of international gatherings, and "their shared experiences have been clear cause for unity," he told AFP.

The most important question for both is whether Moscow -- and in Syria the Kremlin-backed President Assad -- will ever be held accountable.

"If Putin was held accountable for his crimes in Ukraine, this means that he will be held accountable for his crimes in Syria as well. But if Putin gets away with it, then the next crime will only be a matter of time," said the White Helmets' Saleh.

Last month, Amnesty International's Agnes Callamard noted the situation in Ukraine "is a repetition of what we have seen in Syria".

Many have pointed to similarities in Russian tactics in Syria and Ukraine -- from targeting infrastructure to establishing so-called safe corridors and truces aiming to empty cities.

Moscow had shown a "lack of moral principles ... whether in its actions in Syria or Ukraine," said Ivan Cherevychny, 71, a resident of the Ukrainian town of Zaporizhzhia.

He also slammed "the irresponsible attitude of the United Nations and world leaders" faced with the two crises.

Others alleged that several commanders now playing leading roles in the Russian invasion had been involved in the Syrian war, naming among others Alexander Lapin and Alexander Dvornikov, commander of Russia's forces in Syria in 2016.

"Russia used Syria as a training ground for testing the effectiveness of strikes against the residential, social, and economic infrastructure," said a prominent Ukrainian lawyer-turned-fighter from Kyiv, who only wanted to be identified as Oleg.

Destroying the infrastructure makes the country "unsuitable for life," he added.

F.Carpenteri--NZN