HAJAR AL-ASWAD, Syria — A ghost town since a 2018 operation to flush
out Islamist extremists, Hajar Al-Aswad near the Syrian capital has come back
to life as the location of a
Jackie Chan-produced action movie.
اضافة اعلان
“Home Operation”
is inspired by China’s 2015 evacuation of Chinese and other foreign citizens
from the war in Yemen, an operation that was seen as a landmark for
Beijing.
Yemen was deemed
too dangerous a venue to shoot and some scenes of the film, which is also backed
by an Emirati production company, are being shot in Syria, although the script
only mentions a fictional country called “Poman”.
The ruins of
Hajar Al-Aswad on Thursday filled with a motley crew of actors in Yemeni tribal
attire, Syrian extras in uniform and polo-wearing Chinese film crew members.
Chan is
the main producer, although there are no plans for him to visit Syria.
The film pitches
itself as a
blockbuster that will glorify the role of the Chinese authorities
in a heroic evacuation.
Speaking to
reporters as his crew installed their equipment and tanks in hastily altered
livery moved into position, director Yinxi Song confirmed the film’s propaganda
credentials.
“It takes the
perspective of diplomats who are Communist Party members, who braved a hail of
bullets in a war-torn country and safely brought all Chinese compatriots onto
the country’s warship unscathed,” he said.
The ambassador
of China, one of few countries to have maintained good diplomatic relations
with the regime of
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, was present to launch the
Syria shoot, which is expected to last several days.
A red banner in
three languages was unfurled for the small ceremony and another that read
“Peace & Love” was propped up on the front of a tank.
‘Low-cost studio’
Hajar Al-Aswad, which means “black rock” in Arabic, was once a densely
populated Damascus suburb that lies next to the Palestinian refugee camp of
Yarmuk.
Both areas
became major hotspots in the
Syrian civil conflict that erupted in 2011 and
were at least partially controlled at one point by Daesh.
The reconquest
of both neighborhoods by Syrian pro-government forces in May 2018 marked the
moment the regime brought the entire capital Damascus back under its control.
Swathes of Hajar
Al-Aswad were completely leveled, however, turning the neighborhood into a
sinister sprawl of grey, gutted buildings.
A few residents
have returned to the least damaged parts of Hajar Al-Aswad, leaving the rest
completely uninhabited.
“The war-ravaged
areas in Syria have turned into a movie studio. These areas attract film
producers,” said director Rawad Shahin, who is part of Home Operation’s Syria
crew.
“Building
studios similar to these areas is very expensive, so these areas are considered
as low-cost studios,” he said.
Crew members are pictured in the Hajar Al-Aswad neighborhood of the Syrian capital Damascus on July 14, 2022, during the filming of a scene in a film titled “Home Operation”, a Chinese-Emirati joint venture produced by actor Jackie Chan and inspired by real events of the emergency evacuation of Chinese and foreign nationals and diplomats during the early days of a civil war in Yemen in 2015.
The production
team says it plans to use several other locations to film in Syria, where
productions from Iran and Russia, both allies of Assad, have also been shot.
Syria is
targeted by a raft of international sanctions and is also littered with unexploded
ordnances which last year made it the world’s most lethal country for landmine
kills.
Chinese navy
vessels carrying out anti-piracy patrols were diverted to Yemen in 2015 to
evacuate what officials at the time said were hundreds of people from 10 different
countries stranded by the escalating conflict.
The successful operation
was touted by Beijing at the time as a proud moment for its navy, evidence of
its humanitarian principles and of its growing global reach.
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