ALEPPO, Syria — Hundreds of displaced residents returned Monday to an Aleppo neighborhood in northern Syria after days of intense fighting between government forces and Kurdish fighters.
The clashes, which killed at least 23 people and displaced tens of thousands, broke out on Jan. 6 in the predominantly Kurdish neighborhoods of Achrafieh, Sheikh Maqsoud and Bani Zeid after the government and the Syrian Democratic Forces, the main Kurdish-led force in the country, failed to make progress on implementation of a deal that would merge the SDF into the national army. Security forces captured the three neighborhoods.
On Monday, armed security forces stood guard as traffic flowed normally through the streets of Achrafieh, while buses carried displaced families back to the neighborhood. Many shops had reopened, although residents complained about electricity cuts.
Jamal al-Youssef, an Arab resident, fled with his family for about four days because of the fighting. He said he welcomed the departure of the Kurdish fighters and the government's exertion of control over the neighborhood.
''We've been waiting for this to happen for a long time, not just recently,'' al-Youssef said, but added quickly that there was no issue between Arab and Kurdish civilians in the area. ''We have three or four Kurdish families in my building and we don't feel there's any difference between us.''
The majority of some 148,000 displaced people had fled to the district of Afrin in the northwest of Aleppo province. About 10 buses carrying 700 families returned to Achrafieh on Monday, said Masoud Battal, director of the Afrin region for the Syrian government.
''I left Achrafieh five days ago. I was in Afrin and now we're returning to our homes, thank God," said Mohammed Sheikho, who was on one of the buses.
Meanwhile, crews were combing through the neighborhood of Sheikh Maqsoud to decommission leftover explosives and tow away destroyed vehicles blocking the roads. Security forces were also inspecting tunnels under the neighborhood that appeared to have been used by fighters.