Monday, December 09, 2024 - Syria's former President Bashar al-Assad is in Moscow with his family after Russia granted them asylum on humanitarian grounds, a Kremlin source told Russian news agencies on Sunday, December 8, adding that a deal has been done to ensure the safety of Russian military bases, including a strategically important naval facility in Tartous.
Russia's Foreign Ministry said earlier, that Assad had left Syria
and given ‘orders’ for a peaceful transfer of power, after rebel fighters raced
into Damascus unopposed on Sunday, ending nearly six decades of his family's
iron-fisted rule.
"Syrian President Assad of Syria and members of his family have
arrived in Moscow. Russia has granted them asylum on humanitarian
grounds," the Interfax news agency quoted the unnamed Kremlin source as
saying.
It cited the same source as saying Russia favoured a political solution
to the crisis in Syria, where Moscow supported Assad during the country's long
civil war.
The source said negotiations should be resumed under the auspices of the
United Nations.
Syrian opposition leaders had agreed to guarantee the safety of Russian
military bases and diplomatic institutions in Syria, the source told news
agencies.
Russia, a staunch backer of Assad whom it intervened to help in 2015 in
its biggest Middle East foray since the Soviet collapse, is scrambling to
salvage its position with its geopolitical clout in the wider region and two
strategically-important military bases in Syria on the line.
A deal to secure Russia's Hmeimim air base in Syria's Latakia province
and its naval facility at Tartous on the coast would come as a relief to Moscow
after warnings that the bases were dangerously exposed.
The Tartous facility is Russia's only Mediterranean repair and
replenishment hub, and Moscow has used Syria as a staging post to fly its
military contractors in and out of Africa.
Losing Tartous would be a serious blow to Russia's ability to project
power in the Middle East, the Mediterranean and Africa, according to Western
military analysts.
Earlier on Sunday, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that
the two military facilities had been put on a state of high alert, but played
down an immediate risk to them.
"There is currently no serious threat to their security," the
ministry said as it announced Assad's departure from office and from Syria.
"As a result of negotiations between B. Assad and a number of
participants in the armed conflict on the territory of the Syrian Arab
Republic, he decided to resign from the presidency and left the country, giving
instructions for a peaceful transfer of power," it said in the statement.
"Russia did not participate in these negotiations."
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