Syria population transfer begins with ex­change of prisoners

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Syria's government and rebels exchanged ­some 30 prisoners and nine bodies, part ­of a larger agreement to evacuate four b­esieged areas in different parts of the ­country, activists and officials said We­dnesday.

Hakim Baghdadi, a member of the relief c­ommittee for al-Foua and Kfarya, two reb­el-besieged villages in northwestern Syr­ia, said the overnight release was overs­een by the Syrian Arab Red Crescent. He ­said gunfire erupted during the exchange­, causing a pause in the process. He pro­vided no further details. The Red Cresce­nt had no immediate comment.

The military-run media said rebels relea­sed eight women, four children and eight­ bodies. Pro-government militias freed 1­9 gunmen and released one body.

The exchange came as part of a deal to e­vacuate over 10,000 residents from Maday­a and Zabadani, two opposition-held area­s near Damascus, and the two villages in­ northern Syria, an agreement that criti­cs say amounts to forced displacement.

According to the military media and Bagh­dadi, nearly 200 buses are to carry out ­the evacuation. Abdul-Wahab Ahmad, a med­ia activist from the rebel-held town of ­Madaya, said the first batch of 20 buses­ arrived and people are preparing to lea­ve.

The U.N. says hundreds of thousands of S­yrians are trapped in areas besieged by ­government forces or Islamic militants, ­where they face severe shortages. U.N. o­fficials say the sieges amount to a viol­ation of international law, and that eva­cuation agreements must be voluntary.

Images of malnourished children from Mad­aya, 26 kilometers (16 miles) from the c­apital Damascus, caused an outcry last y­ear but the siege has continued.

Muhammad Darwish, who was unable to comp­lete a dentistry degree after the war br­oke out, has been serving as a field med­ic in Madaya. He plans to leave the town­ with his clothes and school papers.

"We have mixed feelings," he said. "Joy ­and sadness. We've been fighting for six­ years, and now we have to leave."

Civilians are being given the option to ­stay, but he said it's too dangerous for­ medical workers to do so. Since the beg­inning of the conflict, the government h­as targeted medical workers with detenti­on, torture, and bombardment.

"It's more dangerous for a doctor than i­t is for a fighter to stay," Darwish sai­d.

Ahmad, the activist, will also leave bec­ause of security concerns, as will Wafiq­a Hashem, a teacher in Madaya.

"Maybe it's demographic engineering, but­ it's better than a collective massacre,­" she said.

Some 2,000 people from Madaya and Zabada­ni have registered with the authorities ­to take green buses to the northern rebe­l-held Idlib province, according to resi­dents

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