The caves dotting the sheer cliffs in picturesque northwest Syria have been there for so long that locals do not know what they were originally used for. Now they serve as makeshift homes, refuges from the incessant regime bombardment that is steadily reducing their nearby village of Al-Hamama -- a poor hamlet located in a rebel-held zone -- to rubble. \"We came here because of the shelling, because the regime is always shelling our village,\" Abdallah Bedaoui, 32, tells AFP. \"Some shells landed very close to my home in the village. One blew out all the windows and broke the door. That\'s when I decided to take my family and live in this cave.\" Bedaoui stands in front of a grotto that now shelters all 15 people in his family. He has built a wall and put in a door to the entrance. The exhaust flue from a stove pokes outside, smoking in the chill winter air. On the floor inside are carpets, on which stand Bedaoui\'s young children.\"The children don\'t like it here, they think it\'s bad and very small, and there\'s not much food,\" Bedaoui says. His cave is one of scores gaping out of the rock walls overlooking a river. Many show signs of habitation: clothes drying on shrubs, carpets or plastic sheeting strung up to shield the interiors, rudimentary steps carved out of rock or soil leading up to them. Often, only women occupy a cave. Their husbands or sons have been jailed by the regime as suspected rebels or sympathisers. \"My three sons have been in jail for nine months and I have no news of them at all. I went to ask about them and the regime arrested me and kept me in jail for six weeks,\" Najah Gafari, 55, says. She is rolling heavy rocks to make a wall to a cave she is preparing to live in with a dozen other girls and women from her family.\"It\'s to make sure the children don\'t fall over the edge,\" she says. The boulders also provide some protection from curious prying eyes. \"We are scared the girls will go to jail too\" just because they come from the same family as the detained men, Gafari says. Hearing the distant boom of artillery strikes targeting rebel areas, she adds: \"Here is better than in the village because you can\'t see the rockets. You feel safer.\" The villagers are too poor to consider fleeing to Turkey, where life is unaffordable and where they cannot take the chickens and livestock that they depend on for food. And they also want to stay together, with the rest of their community. But their existence as cave people, they realise, is likely to last a long time. \"I don\'t know how long we will be here. Maybe two months, maybe five, maybe six. Until the shelling stops,\" Bedaoui says.
GMT 01:03 2018 Wednesday ,24 January
Trump 'imitates' Modi's accent in private conversation: ReportGMT 21:24 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
Puigdemont accuses EU of not defending rights in CataloniaGMT 21:18 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
Vietnam oil exec 'kidnapped' from Germany jailed for lifeGMT 21:08 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
Turkey in new assault on Kurdish militiaGMT 21:04 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
Turkey detains 24 over 'terror propaganda'GMT 20:52 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
Dawoodi Bohra leader arrives in DubaiGMT 22:09 2018 Monday ,22 January
Israel apologises to JordanGMT 16:11 2018 Sunday ,21 January
Pope condemns criminals in crime-stricken Peruvian city

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor