The Syrian Observatory For Human Rights

Under the night’s darkness deal south of the capital Damascus, a new batch of ISIS departs towards the Syrian Desert after midnight of yesterday

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights learned that a new batch of the “Islamic State” organization’s fighters and their families have departed after midnight of yesterday from the south of Damascus towards the Syrian Desert, where the buses came out carrying members of the organization and their families from Yarmouk Camp, al-Tadamon, and the area between Yarmouk Camp and the northern of al-Hajar al-Aswad neighborhood, these buses have departed as the first batch have done, where the first batch came out after midnight of yesterday away from the regime media and amid the denial of its authorities.
In the same context, the “Islamic State” organization continues to burn its headquarters and vehicles in its controlled areas in the southern part of the capital, Damascus, where the smoke was seen rising from the area in the morning of today, Monday, coincided with the continued calm in the southern part of the capital, within the ceasefire process in the area which has been in progress for 2 days since the afternoon of Saturday, the 19th of May 2018, while preparations are underway for getting a new batch of the organization out of the aforementioned areas, until all members and their families have come out to the Syrian Desert, where Damascus, its outskirts and surroundings will become completely under the control of the regime forces for the first time since 2012.

The Syrian Observatory published on Sunday night that the calm is still prevailing the southern part of the capital Damascus, where the ceasefire has been is still continuing for 36 after it stopped yesterday noon, Saturday the 19th of May 2018, this cautious calm is accompanied by ongoing preparations for evacuating a new batch of the members of the “Islamic State” organization and their families from Yarmouk Camp, al-Tadamon and the overlapping part of Yarmouk Camp with the north of al-Hajar al-Aswad neighborhood, towards the Syrian Desert, where the evacuation process of this batch is expected to start after the midnight of Sunday – Monday, like the first batch which departed after the midnight of Saturday – Sunday, where the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights published on today morning, Sunday the 20th of May 2018, that it monitored the exit of fighters of the “Islamic State” organization from the south of Damascus towards the Syrian Desert, and in details obtained by the Syrian Observatory: a number of buses entered after midnight of yesterday to areas controlled by the “Islamic State” Organization in the southern part of the capital Damascus, to carry on board fighters of the organization and their families, after that the buses exited and departed towards the Syrian Desert, all of that took place in a complete secrecy and away of the Syrian regime’s media amid denial by the regime.

And the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitored in the past few hours, the “Islamic State” organization continuing the process of burning its headquarters and vehicles, amid the continuation of the exit process of the remainder members of the “Islamic State” organization from less than 70% of Yarmouk Camp, part of al-Tadamon neighborhood and the interlaced area between the northern neighbourhood of al-Hajar al-Aswad south of Yarmouk Camp, and the intersected sources of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed that the regime forces are advancing and combing the areas from which the organization withdrew and prepared itself to get out of south Damascus towards the Syrian Desert, in accordance with the secret agreement that took place with regime’s authorities, which imposed a calm since the afternoon of Saturday, the 19th of May 2018, after a month of the violent ashes that took place between the regime forces and militiamen loyal to them of Syrian and non-Syrian nationalities against members of the “Islamic State” organization, accompanied by hundreds of airstrikes by warplanes and helicopters, and hundreds of missiles, rocket and artillery shells, which caused damage and destruction in large parts of these areas located in the southern part of the capital, Damascus.