
© Mikhail Alaeddin/SputnikLocal residents pass a soldier on a street in Aleppo.
Last week, the Syrian Army declared victory in Aleppo. As the city was freed,
msm reports began seeking out civilians who 'didn't trust' their liberators, citing this as evidence of the government's 'brutality'. Commenting on the phenomenon, journalist Thierry Meyssan explained that
many residents are actually suffering from Stockholm Syndrome. On Wednesday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry announced that about 37,500 people had been evacuated from eastern Aleppo, with buses taking them to camps in opposition-controlled areas and to Turkey following a deal negotiated with Damascus, Moscow and Tehran. Many of the evacuees are thought to be opposition fighters and their families, but other civilians are also assumed to be in the mix.
Meanwhile, even while the majority of the city's residents, estimated at 120,000 people in total, have greeted their liberators and welcomed them as heroes, others have been less eager to do so, saying they don't trust the government or its efforts to assist them.
French journalist and political writer Thierry Meyssan described this phenomenon in a recent article for Syrian online newspaper al-Watan. According to the journalist,
a significant minority of the city's non-militant affiliated residents are suffering from what he has dubbed the 'East Aleppo Syndrome', a localization of the well-known psychological condition known as Stockholm Syndrome."Strangely," Meyssan wrote, "although the state is offering them food, health care and temporary housing, some residents of these neighborhoods continue to say that 'they do not trust the state.'"
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