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Evacuees who were injured in a suicide car bombing that targeted vehicles carrying them from besieged government-held towns, sit in a tent on the Syrian-Turkish border in Idlib province on Monday. The blast hit a convoy from the northern towns of Fuaa and Kafraya. Image Credit: AFP

Bab Al Hawa, Syria: Fatima Rashid was recovering in a Syrian hospital after a deadly suicide blast when she glanced at a teenager with a bloody, disfigured face. She did not recognise her daughter.

The wounded teenager was later taken across the border to Turkey for treatment and now Rashid, like many parents caught up in a horrifying attack on Saturday, is searching frantically for her child.

“I lifted the curtain back in the emergency room and I saw a girl. Half her face was gone and she was bleeding,” Rashid told AFP, speaking at a shelter for displaced families near the Syria-Turkey border.

“I didn’t think about whose daughter she was.”

“When I woke up the next day, the doctors came to show me a picture of that girl. I remembered what my daughter Gadeer had been wearing. That was her,” she said, with tears in her eyes.

At least 68 children were among 126 people killed when a suicide car bomb tore through buses evacuating Foa’a and Kafraya, two villages in northern Syria under rebel siege.

Dozens of wounded, including 37-year-old Fatima and her children, were rushed to hospitals in nearby opposition-controlled territory, while others were taken to government-held Aleppo city.

Fatima has no news of Gadeer, her son Adel, 15, her 13-month-old daughter Rimas, or her husband Mohannad.

Only Zahra, seven, is safely at Fatima’s side.

The carnage on Saturday came as thousands gathered to be evacuated from Foa’a and Kafraya as part of a complex deal that also saw people leave Madaya and Zabadani, towns near Damascus surrounded by pro-government forces.

“I saw a car distributing potato chips to the children. My daughter asked me to get her a bag, but a little kid came and snatched the bag from me,” Fatima said.

A smile briefly crossed her face before it turned dark again, as she remembered the devastating scene that followed.

“I went to get another one and suddenly something exploded. I flew back onto the ground and there were bodies on top of me ... I pulled myself and my daughter out from under the bodies and ran.

“They took us to a hospital and treated us well ... But when they took Gadeer to Turkey, I didn’t know anything. They didn’t even have her name,” Fatima said.

Dozens of survivors from Foa’a and Kafraya were squatting on blankets and rugs in the displacement centre, awaiting news of relatives of whom they lost track after the explosion.

Several children, some as young as three, sat shell-shocked in a row, staying quiet as people asked for their names or where their parents were.

One woman, whose daughter was taken to another village for treatment, anxiously tried to locate her in unfamiliar rebel-controlled territory.

“Where is this village? How am I supposed to know anything about her?” she called out.

Nearby, Umm Mohammad, her face scratched and her left hand wrapped in gauze, was hysterical.

She was flanked by her two young boys, whose faces were bandaged, but her third child was nowhere in sight.

“I want information about my son. Is he in Turkey? Did he die?” she screamed, as mothers nearby tried to soothe her.

“He’s eight months old, he can’t tell people who he is. No one knows his name. How am I supposed to get to him?”

In a section of the tent reserved for men, Sharif Al Hussain, 35, waited with his two sons.

Haider, 10, was lightly wounded in the forehead. All that was visible of four-year-old Hamza’s face from behind his bloodied bandages was his nose.

“My children cry every day because they want to see their mother. We hope to go back one day” to Kafraya, Al Hussain said.

He and fellow evacuees were besieged for two years by rebel fighters — some of whom helped rescue people hurt in the suicide attack.

“They got us medication and food, they helped us with the kids,” Al Hussain told AFP, which requested that rebel fighters not be present during the interview.

Osama, a resident of Foa’a who had joined a local pro-government militia in the village, said he was “not afraid” of being in opposition-controlled territory.

“Our brothers here are assuring us that we are not their hostages,” he said.

Syria’s six-year war has so bitterly divided its population that many anti-regime rebels and residents of government-held territory struggled to believe they were under the same tent.

Abu Obaida, a 33-year-old rebel fighter, said he helped rescue wounded civilians after Saturday’s attack, but acknowledged it was “difficult” to say how he would have reacted if a deal between the two sides had not been under way.

“But I had to rescue the children and the old people,” he added.

“It’s a human issue.”