37,500 people evacuated from Aleppo so far, Turkish Foreign Minister says
A young Syrian child evacuated from the embattled Syrian city of Aleppo during the ceasefire arrives at a refugee camp in Rashidin, near Idlib, Syria, early Monday, Dec. 19, 2016. (AP Photo)


37,500 evacuees have so far left the bombed-out eastern districts of Aleppo since evacuations began last week, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu announced on his social network account on Tuesday.

Çavuşoğlu also said that evacuations are scheduled to be completed by tomorrow.

The International Committee of the Red Cross is also supervising the evacuation process.

The committee reported that 15,000 people had been evacuated on Monday, also noting that thousands more are still waiting to leave the eastern Aleppo enclave besieged by Assad regime forces and their allied Iran-backed foreign militias.

Yesterday morning, the evacuation of two pro-Assad villages besieged by Syrian opposition forces in the Idlib provice, Fuaa and Kafraya, also began within the framework of the agreement reached between both parties.

Last week, Turkey and Russia brokered an evacuation plan for the besieged tens of thousands of civilians on the brink of being massacred by the Assad Regime and its allied forces.

The cease-fire and the evacuation deals had been breached several times by Iran-backed militiamen over the past days who also massacred civilians in several occasions, before being finally implemented as a result of Turkeytarget="_blank"'>