Najha Cemetery Exposes Extent of Pandemic Outbreak in Damascus

A woman walks in a deserted Souk al-Hamidieh as restrictions are imposed to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease in Damascus, March 24, 2020. (Reuters)
A woman walks in a deserted Souk al-Hamidieh as restrictions are imposed to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease in Damascus, March 24, 2020. (Reuters)
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Najha Cemetery Exposes Extent of Pandemic Outbreak in Damascus

A woman walks in a deserted Souk al-Hamidieh as restrictions are imposed to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease in Damascus, March 24, 2020. (Reuters)
A woman walks in a deserted Souk al-Hamidieh as restrictions are imposed to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease in Damascus, March 24, 2020. (Reuters)

Scenes at the Najha cemetery in Damascus’ southern countryside reveal the extent of the COVID-19 outbreak in the Syrian capital.

Asharq Al-Awsat bore witness to the frequent burials of virus victims at the cemetery, which belies the official data about the pandemic.

Cemeteries in Damascus are already at their limit with the corpses of war victims. The government has dedicated an area within Najha for COVID-19 victims.

The cemetery is named after the nearby Najha village, some 13 kilometers south of the capital. The cemetery had been set up years before the conflict, which erupted in 2011. It is located between the towns of Babbila, Sayyidah Zaynab and Al Adleyeh.

The vast cemetery, known as the “new southern cemetery”, is divided into 13 sections, each of which is divided by a-meter-wide path.

Years before the war, very few residents of Damascus used to bury their dead there given its distance from and the fact that graves were available in the capital. As graves began to fill up with mounting war casualties and the growing cost of burials – between 7 to 10 million Syrian pounds – the majority of Damascus’ residents opted to bury their dead in Najha, where a burial costs around 80,000 pounds.

As COVID-19 began to spread and claim lives in March 2020, burials increased at the cemetery. The southern section of the area – the largest at the site - is dedicated to virus victims. Gravestones reveal that the majority of burials took place between July and August, with figures rising up to around 400.

By October, the burials dropped in that section. Moreover, a section for Christians has also been allotted in Najha after Christian cemeteries were filled up in Damascus and nearby areas. Shiites have also been buried at Najha.

Abdul Rahim Bdeir, who issues death certificates at Najha, said in October that some 40 burials used to take place there every day. He revealed that those figures had tripled in July and August.

An informed source told Asharq Al-Awsat that the drop in burials since October is attributed to the government’s ruling that virus victims could be buried in family graves in Damascus. Before that virus victims were only being buried in Najha.

An official statement on Monday said that 841 people have died from the coronavirus in regime-held regions since the outbreak began. However, the number of burials in Najha tell a different story and confirm that the numbers are far greater and the site is only dedicated to victims from Damascus. What about the rest of the country?

Syria has officially confirmed 13,132 infections and 6,624 recoveries. The numbers appear low compared to the massive damage incurred to the country’s health sector and displacement of millions of people due to the war. They are also starkly lesser than the figures in neighboring countries that are witnessing a surge in infections.

During the initial months of the outbreak, the World Health Organization did not comment on government figures, but has recently noted that the limited means in Syria have not revealed the extent of the pandemic, especially in Damascus.



War Reaches Lebanon's Far North After Rare, Deadly Israeli Strike

First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP
First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP
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War Reaches Lebanon's Far North After Rare, Deadly Israeli Strike

First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP
First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP

A day after Israeli warplanes flattened their building, Lebanese residents helped rescuers scour the rubble for survivors, still reeling from the rare strike in the country's far north.

The bombing killed at least eight people in Ain Yaacoub, one of the northernmost villages Israel has struck, far from Lebanon's war-ravaged southern border.

"They hit a building where more than 30 people lived without any evacuation warning," said Mustafa Hamza, who lives near the site of the strike. "It's an indescribable massacre."

Following Monday’s strike on Ain Yaacoub, residents joined rescuers, using bare hands to sift through dust and chunks of concrete, hoping to find survivors.

The health ministry said the death toll was expected to rise, AFP reported.

On the ground, people could be seen pulling body parts from the rubble in the morning, following a long night of search operations.

In near-darkness, rescuers had struggled to locate survivors, using mobile phone lights and car headlamps in a remote area where national grid power is scarce.

For years, Syrians fleeing war in their home country, along with more recently displaced Lebanese escaping Israeli strikes, sought refuge in the remote Akkar region near the Syrian border, once seen as a haven.

"The situation is dire. People are shocked," Hamza told AFP. "People from all over the region have come here to try to help recover the victims."

The village, inhabited mostly by Sunni Muslims and Christians, lies far from the strongholds of Hezbollah, a Shiite Muslim movement.

A security source said Monday's air strike targeted a Hezbollah member who had relocated with his family to the building in Ain Yaacoub from south Lebanon.

Contacted by AFP, the Israeli military said the strike was aimed at "a Hezbollah terrorist" and specified that the missile used sought to minimise civilian harm.

Local official Rony al-Hage told AFP that it was the northernmost Israeli attack since the full-blown Israel-Hezbollah war erupted in September.

After Israel ramped up its campaign of air raids, it also sent ground troops into south Lebanon.

"The people who were in my house were my uncle, his wife, and my sisters... A Syrian woman and her children who had been living here for 10 years, were also killed," said Hashem Hashem, the son of the building's owner.

His relatives had fled Israel's onslaught on south Lebanon seeking a safe haven in the Akkar region more than a month ago, he said.

The Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon has displaced at least 1.3 million people, nearly 900,000 of them inside the country, the United Nations migration agency says.

Israeli strikes outside Hezbollah strongholds have repeatedly targeted buildings where displaced civilians lived, with Lebanese security officials often telling AFP the targets were Hezbollah operatives.

On Sunday, Lebanon said an Israeli strike killed 23 people, including seven children, in the village of Almat -- a rare strike north of the capital.

Earlier this month, authorities said an Israeli strike on a residential building killed at least 20 people in Barja, a town south of Beirut that is outside Hezbollah's area of influence.

The war erupted after nearly a year of cross-border exchanges of fire, launched by Hezbollah in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas following their October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the Gaza war.

More than 3,240 people have been killed in Lebanon since the clashes began last year, according to the health ministry, with most of the deaths coming since late September.