
Suweida: Druze residents describe 'bloodbath' in Syrian city
Nayef, a Druze man whose name we have also changed, was also confronted with horrific scenes in Suweida."We are collecting bodies from the streets. We found bodies left outside houses, next to houses for two or three days," he told the BBC in a phone interview.Despite being a government employee, Nayef lashed out in disbelief at what he saw as the government forces' brutality inside the city."They stormed neighbourhoods, selecting the houses that look wealthy. They looted these houses and then torched them. They sprayed unarmed civilians with bullets."Videos circulating on social media appeared to support Nayef's allegations.Footage shared on Facebook on Wednesday afternoon shows at least half-a-dozen men dressed in camouflage firing live rounds at a group of residents, who are kneeling on the sidewalk.The UN human rights office said it had documented the killing of at least 13 people on Tuesday by armed men affiliated with the government who deliberately opened fire at a family gathering. On the same day, they reportedly summarily executed six men near their homes.While bullets and shells rained down, Suweida residents were left wondering when help was coming. But it never came.Rima said she watched as security forces and foreign fighters entered her neighbourhood and later shot her neighbour in front of his mother."Is this the army and security forces who were supposed to come and protect us?" she asked. "People's livelihoods were stolen. Those who were killed were young and unarmed."Other testimony we heard backed up Rima's claim. Those we spoke to said most of the fighters who entered Suweida and attacked civilians appeared to be Islamists.One woman heard the fighters shouting "Allahu Akbar" (God is greatest) in her building, calling the Druze "infidels" and "pigs", and saying they were there to kill them.Some of these fighters posted videos of themselves online humiliating men in Suweida, including cutting or shaving off the moustaches of Druze sheikhs. The moustaches are a symbol of Druze religious identity.The BBC has approached the Syrian government for official comments on the issue but not so far received a response.In a televised address early on Thursday, Sharaa vowed to hold the perpetrators accountable and promised to make protecting the Druze a "priority"."We are eager to hold accountable those who transgressed and abused our Druze people because they are under the protection and responsibility of the state," he said. He went on to blame "outlaw groups", saying their leaders "rejected dialogue for many months".
For many, the promise of protection felt like déjà vu.It resembled the message the president delivered when government forces and allied Islamist fighters carried out deadly reprisals against civilians from another religious minority, the Alawites, in response to attacks by Assad loyalists in the coastal region in March.A committee was established to investigate those violations - but is yet to deliver any findings.The accounts from Nayef and others bore many similarities to what happened on the coast in March."There's a total lack of trust with the government," Nayef said. "They are just doing a lip-service. They say nice things about freedoms, documenting violations and accountability, but they are all lies."Many Suweida residents say this latest episode of sectarian violence will have long-lasting effects."If it was not for Israel's bombardment, we wouldn't be able to talk to you today," one woman told the BBC.However, some were also critical of Israel's airstrikes and its claim that it was acting to protect the Druze.Nayef said: "Nobody wants Israel. We are patriotic people. We were at the forefront of people to adopt patriotism. Our loyalty and patriotism should not be doubted."Additional reporting by Samantha Granville in Beirut
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