Video reveals Assad ’family bunker’ under palaces with drive-through escape tunnels

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Video reveals Assad ’family bunker’ under palaces with drive-through escape tunnels
Video reveals Assad ’family bunker’ under palaces with drive-through escape tunnels

Syrian rebels say they have discovered a huge tunnel network underneath Bashar Al-Assad’s palaces.

A so-called ‘family bunker’ belonging to the Assad family reportedly stored gold and weapons.

Video of the tunnels, purportedly filmed at Major General Maher al-Assad’s ’mansion’, shows a door giving way to another reinforced door. Behind that, staircases descend into a tunnel network stretching far into the distance.

The video, apparently filmed by a rebel, shows the network of wide, empty tunnels with tall curved ceilings.

Maher al-Assad is Bashar al-Assad’s brother. He leads the Fourth Division of the Syrian army.

Heavy blast doors in the ’tunnel network’ qhiddxiqkdiudinv

Heavy blast doors in the ’tunnel network’. Picture: Social Media

The video which emerged on social media was captioned: “Massive tunnel complex beneath Maher Assad’s mansion, wide enough for trucks carrying Captagon and gold to drive through.”

It ‘is claimed the tunnels were “ready with ventilation, sitting rooms, bedrooms, locks and metal doors”.

Rebels seized control of the Syrian capital Damascus yesterday. Crowds flooded into the streets to celebrate the end of the Assad family’s 50 years of iron rule.

A spiral staircase leading down to the tunnels under the palace

A spiral staircase leading down to the tunnels under the palace. Picture: Social Media

Syrian state television aired a video statement early on Sunday by a group of men saying President Bashar Assad had been overthrown and all detainees in jails had been set free.

The man who read the statement said the opposition group known as Operations Room to Conquer Damascus has called on all opposition fighters and citizens to preserve state institutions of "the free Syrian state".

The statement emerged hours after the head of a Syrian opposition war monitor said Mr Assad had left the country for an undisclosed location, fleeing ahead of insurgents who said they had entered Damascus following a remarkably swift advance across the country.

An office, leading towards a secret entrance to the tunnels

An office, leading towards a secret entrance to the tunnels. Picture: Social Media

Many of the capital’s residents were in disbelief at the speed at which Mr Assad lost his hold after nearly 14 years of civil war.

As daylight broke over Damascus, crowds gathered to pray in the city’s mosques and to celebrate in the squares, chanting "God is great". People also chanted anti-Assad slogans and honked car horns.

Soldiers and police officers left their posts and fled, and looters broke into the headquarters of the Ministry of Defence. Videos from Damascus show families wandering into the presidential palace, with some emerging carrying stacks of plates and other household items.

Mohammed Amer Al-Oulabi, 44, who works in the electricity sector, was one of many celebrating on the streets. "From Idlib to Damascus, it only took them (the opposition forces) a few days, thank God. May God bless them, the heroic lions who made us proud," he said.

A statement from the Alawite sect - to which Mr Assad belongs and which has formed the core of his base - called on young Syrians to be "calm, rational and prudent and not to be dragged into what tears apart the unity of our country".

It added: "We were and still are advocates of peace and advocates of unity." It called for "the language of reason and dialogue to prevail over all parties in the service of Syria and its great people".

Syrian Prime Minister Mohammed Ghazi Jalali said the government is ready to "extend its hand" to the opposition and hand over its functions to a transitional government.

"I am in my house and I have not left, and this is because of my belonging to this country," Mr Jalili said in a video statement. He said he would go to his office to continue work in the morning and called on Syrian citizens not to deface public property.

He later told Saudi television network Al-Arabiyya that he does not know where Mr and the defence minister are. He said he lost communication with Mr Assad late on Saturday.

Rami Abdurrahman of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told the Associated Press that Mr Assad took a flight early on Sunday from Damascus.

It was the first time opposition forces had reached Damascus since 2018, when Syrian troops recaptured areas on the outskirts of the capital following a years-long siege.

The night before, opposition forces took the central city of Homs, Syria’s third largest, as government forces abandoned it.

The rebels had already seized the cities of Aleppo and Hama, as well as large parts of the south, in a lightning offensive that began on November 27. Analysts said rebel control of Homs would be a game-changer.

The advances in the past week were by far the largest in recent years by opposition factions, led by a group that has its origins in al-Qaeda and is considered a terrorist organisation by the US and the United Nations.

In their push to overthrow Mr Assad’s government, the insurgents, led by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham group, or HTS, have met little resistance from the Syrian army.

HTS already controlled much of north-west Syria and in 2017 set up a "salvation government" to run day-to-day affairs in the region.

In recent years, HTS leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani has sought to remake the group’s image, cutting ties with al-Qaeda, ditching hard-line officials and vowing to embrace pluralism and religious tolerance.

The UN’s special envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, called on Saturday for urgent talks in Geneva to ensure an "orderly political transition".

The Israeli military said on Sunday it has deployed forces in a demilitarised buffer zone along its northern frontier with Syria following the rebel offensive.

The military, which said it also sent troops to "other places necessary for its defence", said the deployment is meant to provide security for residents of the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.

 

Emma Davis

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