What just happened in Aleppo, and what it means for Syria’s civil war
Opposition forces seeking to overthrow Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad launched their biggest offensive in years last week, retaking the northern city of Aleppo and driving government forces out of the region.
It was the first significant development in years in Syria’s grinding civil war, which after almost 14 years had largely fallen from the world’s headlines. It also raises fresh questions about the opposing sides, who supports them, and what might happen next. Here’s what we know:
What happened in Aleppo?
Syrian rebels launched a two-pronged offensive on Aleppo last week, gaining control of the country’s second largest city amid little resistance from government troops, according to residents and fighters.
The insurgents are a coalition of Turkey-backed mainstream secular groups spearheaded by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), an Islamist group designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S. and United Nations.
The rebels have since pressed their advance to the south and southwest of Aleppo, capturing territory in Hama province and moving into the countryside around Idlib.
Which rebel groups are involved?
HTS, formerly known as the Nusra Front, was al-Qaeda’s official wing in the Syrian war but the groups broke ties in 2016.
Another rebel group — the National Coalition of Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces, the internationally recognized Syrian opposition — launched a separate offensive from north of Idlib. It represents anti-Assad groups including the Turkey-backed Syrian National Army or Free Syrian Army.
Why now?
The assault followed the recent ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, ending more than a year of fighting that started shortly after Israel went to war with Hamas in Gaza.
Hadi al-Bahra, president of the National Coalition, says rebels began preparing to seize Aleppo a year ago but were delayed by the Israel-Hamas war.
“The moment there was a ceasefire in Lebanon, they found that opportunity… to start,” he said.
Earlier this year, Israeli airstrikes in Aleppo hit both Hezbollah weapons depots and Syrian government forces, among other targets, according to an independent monitoring group. Israel rarely acknowledges strikes against Aleppo or other government-held areas of Syria.
Iran which, like Hezbollah, supports the regime, has also been weakened by recent Israeli airstrikes.
Russia — Assad’s main international backer — is meanwhile preoccupied with its war in Ukraine.
Why Aleppo is significant
Aleppo, an ancient centre of commerce and culture in the Middle East, was home to 2.3 million people before the war. Rebels seized the east side of the embattled city in 2012, and it became the proudest symbol of the advance of armed opposition factions, but changed hands again when a brutal air campaign by Russia helped al-Assad retake the city.
Intervention by Russia, Iran, Hezbollah and other groups did much to keep Assad in power, who now has 70 per cent of Syria under his control. The rest is held by a range of opposition forces and foreign troops.
This latest change “has the potential to be really quite, quite consequential and potentially game-changing,” if Syrian government forces can’t hold their ground, said Charles Lister, a longtime Syria analyst with the U.S.-based Middle East Institute.
Which countries are involved?
Syria is split into three regions: each controlled by either the Assad regime, opposition forces or the Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdish-led coalition of U.S.-backed ethnic militias and rebel groups opposed by Turkey.
Russia and Iran have sway over government-held areas, the single biggest chunk of Syria. The U.S. has forces in the northeast and east, backing the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces. Turkey has troops in the rebel-held northwest.
Hezbollah, the regime’s third main supporter, does not currently intend to send fighters to northern Syria to support Assad, according to sources who spoke to Reuters.
Turkish forces have previously attacked northeast Syria, wanting to eliminate one of its main concerns on its borders: Kurdish-led groups.
Iran has pledged to aid the Syrian government and on Monday hundreds of fighters from Tehran-backed Iraqi militias crossed into Syria to help fight the rebels, Syrian and Iraqi sources said.
What happens now?
Syria’s government has scrambled its forces to push back the offensive, with help from Russia. Both the government and Russia have been rushing reinforcements and striking rebel-held areas as they attempt to stall the opposition’s momentum.
Airstrikes pummelled Idlib in northwestern Syria on Monday, killed at least a dozen civilians including children, according to the White Helmets,� a volunteer rescue group also known as Syrian Civil Defence.
At least 44 civilians, including 12 children and seven women, were killed in northwest Syria from Tuesday to Saturday, according to the United Nations Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
OCHA added that over 48,500 people had been displaced, with key infrastructure — including hospitals, schools and water stations — damaged in the escalating hostilities.
The United Nations has described the situation in Aleppo as “volatile and unpredictable.”
“The latest developments pose severe risks to civilians and have serious implications for regional and international peace and security,” said UN Syria envoy Geir O. Pedersen in a statement.
Published at Tue, 03 Dec 2024 01:04:24 +0000
In world 1st, Belgian sex workers now have access to contracts, benefits and pensions
As It Happens5:56In world 1st, Belgian sex workers now have access to contracts, benefits and pensions
Many sex workers in Belgium will now be treated like any other worker in the country, with access to employment contracts, maternity leave, health benefits, pensions and more.
That’s thanks to a groundbreaking new law, which came into effect Sunday, and is being hailed the first of its kind anywhere in the world.
“Sex work is work, and that is something people need to understand,” Mel Meliciousss, a sex worker based in Antwerp, Belgium, told As It Happens host Nil Köksal.
“When somebody works at another industry or something, they do also get these rights, so why not for sex workers?
CBC is identifying Meliciousss by her professional pseudonym in light of the dangers and stigma sex workers often face.
Sex workers rights’ advocates are hailing the new law as a victory that will make the industry significantly safer and more equitable.
But some feminist organizations argue it formalizes an industry they see as inherently violent, while failing to protect those who are most likely to be exploited.
How does it work?
The new law was passed last year, following the country’s 2022 decision to decriminalize sex work. It applies to sex workers who have employers, like those who work in brothels.
Under the legislation, anyone wishing to employ sex workers must obtain authorization from the state, adhere to safety protocols, and meet background requirements, including no prior convictions for sexual assault or human trafficking.
“From the employer’s perspective, this will also be a revolution,” Isabelle Jaramillo, co-ordinator of Espace P, an advocacy group involved in drafting the legislation.
“Under the previous legislation, hiring someone for sex work automatically made you a pimp, even if the arrangement was consensual.”
Workers at these establishments will have access to health insurance, paid leave, maternity benefits, unemployment support and pensions.
Employers must provide clean linens, condoms, and hygiene products, and install emergency buttons in workspaces.
The legislation also establishes rules on working hours, pay and safety measures, ensuring sex workers can refuse clients, choose their practices, and stop an act at any moment.
What does this mean for sex workers?
Meliciousss, a member of the Belgian union of sex workers UTSOPI, says the law doesn’t impact her directly, as she is currently self-employed.
But she’s hopeful it means her younger colleagues will never have to go through what she did.
“I know for the younger Mel, it would have made a big difference. Because the first time I went to work at a brothel, the things that were happening over there were not quite right, and I felt it,” she said.
She had no choice but to take on clients that she wasn’t comfortable with, she says. It was also brothel policy to perform oral sex without a condom.
“If I had the rights back then that are happening now for sex workers, I would have made a change about this, and I would speak up and defend myself in this job,” she said.
Meliciousss says she knows other sex workers who became pregnant and had to keep working until the very last minute, then start working again right away after having their babies.
“It’s not healthy. It’s not right that this ever was like this,” she said.
She hopes other countries will follow suit, including Canada, where it is legal to sell sexual services, but illegal to purchase them.
It’s also illegal in Canada for third parties to advertise, facilitate or benefit from sex work. The Supreme Court of Canada is currently hearing arguments about the constitutionality of those laws.
What’s the pushback?
But not everyone sees the law as a victory for sex workers, and several feminist organizations have decried it.
Isala, a non-profit that works with sex workers on the streets in Belgium, argues that prostitution is inherently violent, and this law “amounts to normalizing the exploitation of women’s bodies and sexuality.”
This exploitation, Isala argues, disproportionately affects undocumented women and girls, who will be far less likely to benefit from employment contacts.
“On the contrary, the new legislation reinforces the social and psychological isolation in which they already live, and above all does not respond to the wish expressed by the majority of them: that of leaving prostitution and leaving it with dignity,” the group said in a press release, translated from French.
Jaramillo says the law alone won’t be enough to protect everyone, and called for better police and judicial training to protect marginalized workers.
“There’s still a lot of work to be done,” she said.
Meliciousss says she understands this law is not a magic bullet.
“I’m not naive,” she said. “The bad people who don’t have good intentions, they don’t care about this law. I understand that.”
Nevertheless, she says it’s a positive first step that entrenches rights, and legal resources, for those who previously had none.
As far as Meliciousss is concerned, sex work has always existed, and it always will.
“It’s better to have it regulated than just leave people to their destiny,” she said.
Published at Mon, 02 Dec 2024 23:08:44 +0000