RNA - A number of wounded residents of Fua'a and Kafraya who have been transferred to Hasya camp under the agreement between the government and the militants in Aleppo underlined that their psychological wounds would never heal as long as their family members are under the terrorists' siege.
"Our family members are under everyday attacks by the terrorists' mortar and missile fire," the father of a family who has been transferred to Hasya told FNA on Saturday.
"Many families in Fua'a and Kafraya have no shelters in the cold winter under rain and snow," he added.
The wounded father and other people accompanying him in Hasya camp called on the Syrian army and its allies, specially Iran and other friends of Syria, to help them rescue their family members from the hands of the terrorist groups.
According to an agreement between the Syrian government and the militants, approximately 2,500 civilians of Idlib should have left Fua'a and Kafraya in two 1,250 groups in return for evacuation of trapped militants in Aleppo's Eastern neighborhoods.
In the next stage, 1,500 injured and patient civilians of Fua'a and Kafraya would leave the towns in return for the evacuation of 1,500 militants in Madaya and Zabadani in Damascus province.
People in Aleppo took to the streets on Friday after the Syrian Army General Command declared restoration of security and stability to Aleppo city and its liberation from terrorists.
The citizens marched through the streets, expressing joy over the victory of the Syrian army and its allies over the terrorists and expelling them from Aleppo.
Aleppo residents carried flags of the homeland and raised pictures of President Bashar al-Assad, while mosques called to prayers and the churches tolled their bells.
On Thursday, the last batch of terrorists and their families left the neighborhoods of Al-Zobaydiyeh, al-Ansari and Salahuddin East of Aleppo.
The Syrian Army and its allies from the resistance front made history and took back the country's second most important city from thousands of terrorists in a landmark victory that will change the future of the war in Syria.
The last pocket of terrorists left Eastern Aleppo on Thursday evening, meaning that the Syrian army and its allies purged all city districts of Jeish Al-Fatah terrorists and completed control over the entire city.
Syria has been grappling with deadly unrests since early 2011, and only after two years, Damascus found itself under the siege of a variety of terrorist groups overtly and covertly supported by the western powers and their regional allies -- especially Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey.
Since mid-2012, the government forces have been fighting with the foreign-backed militants to take control of Aleppo, Syria's largest city and the country’s former commercial hub.
The terrorist groups, mostly from Al-Qaeda's official branch in Syria the Al-Nusra Front, occupied the Eastern, Northeastern and Southeastern districts of Aleppo and the Western, Northwestern and Southwestern parts of the city remained under the control of the army and popular forces.
There were no remarkable changes in arrangement of forces in Aleppo city till September 2015 when the Damascus government requested Iran to send a large number of military advisors, war strategists and commanders to Syria and also asked for Russia's direct military involvement in the war on terrorism. And that's when the scene changed.
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