Syrian President Visits Aleppo for First Time Since 2011
ALEPPO (Middle East Eye) – Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has visited Aleppo and participated in Eid prayers in his first visit to the city since the foreign-backed war in Syria began in 2011.
SANA news agency reported that the president had “performed Eid al-Adha prayers at Sahabiy Abdallah bin Abbas mosque in Aleppo city” and also released a message from Assad wishing Syrians and soldiers a happy Eid.
On Friday, Assad began his trip to Aleppo and posted on Telegram that he and his wife visited “Aleppo’s historic Ummayad mosque” and “walked through the Old City’s souks, which were open on the occasion of Eid al-Adha”.
Aleppo, one of Syria’s largest cities and the once economic capital, was heavily damaged due to the war, including the old city near the Ummayad mosque, where the president and his wife were pictured walking.
During the war in 2011, Aleppo became the battleground between Syrian army forces and foreign-backed terrorists. But, with the introduction of Russian-backed government forces in 2012, the city eventually fell to the government in 2016, following a month-long aerial bombing campaign.
With much of the city reduced to rubble, the then UN humanitarian aid chief, Stephen O’Brien, warned in November that year that Aleppo risked becoming a “giant graveyard”.
On 22 December 2016, government forces announced they had taken control of the city and were now in control of Syria’s four largest cities.