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Syria's Assad makes rare visit to tense area

March 12, 2014 12:02 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 09:25 pm IST - Damascus:

In this photo released on the official Facebook page of Syrian Presidency, Syrian president Bashar Assad, center left, visits a shelter of internally displaced people in the Damascus suburb of Adra, Syria, Wednesday, March 12, 2014. Syria's state TV reported that President Bashar Assad made a rare public appearance, visiting people displaced by the war in the suburb. Syrian troops have been on the offensive in Adra, just northeast of Damascus, after rebels captured parts of it in December, which displaced thousands from the area. A July U.N. estimate said 6.5 million have been uprooted from their homes and displaced within Syria. (AP Photo)

In a rare public appearance, President Bashar Assad on Wednesday visited displaced Syrians in a frontline suburb of the country’s capital, where he vowed to keep up the fight against gunmen whom he blamed for driving people from their homes, state TV said.

The visit to a shelter for displaced people in the Damascus suburb of Adra, just northeast of the capital, coincides with advances by his troops battling rebels who captured parts of the suburb in December, displacing thousands from the area.

The visit comes nearly four months before Assad’s seven-year term officially expires. Syrian officials have said the presidential elections would be held on time, according to the constitution.

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Mr Assad has suggested he would run again but has not confirmed it. The election must be held between 60 and 90 days before his term ends on July 17.

The visit to Adra was Mr Assad’s first public appearance outside Damascus since August, when he toured the suburb of Daraya, once a rebel stronghold, and in the same week, took part in a public iftar, the meal that breaks the dawn-to-dusk fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

“The state will continue to fight terrorism and terrorists who displace people from their homes and commit ugly crimes against them,” Mr Assad said. His government refers to opposition fighters as terrorists.

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Suicide bombing

Meanwhile, three suicide bombers detonated themselves at a hotel in Syria’s Qamishli city Tuesday, leaving five people killed and eight wounded, state media said.

The incident occurred as terrorists wearing explosive belts carried out the suicide bombing at the Hadaya Hotel in the Kurdish-dominated city of Qamishli in Hasaka province, Xinhua reported citing local media, adding five people were killed and eight wounded in the attack.

According to recent statistics, over 100,000 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict over the three years; 9.3 million are in need, 4.65 million of whom are children.

Syria’s prolonged crisis has displaced millions of people, who either sought refuge inside the country or in neighbouring Lebanon and Jordan.

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