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Dozens killed in Bedouin-Druze clash in Syria

Dozens killed in Bedouin-Druze clash in Syria

Gulf Today5 hours ago
Syria deployed security forces Monday in the southern province of Sweida after at least 50 people were killed in clashes between Sunni Bedouin tribes and Druze fighters, a monitor said.
The outbreak of sectarian violence underscores the challenges facing the administration of interim leader Ahmad Al-Sharaa, whose forces overthrew president Bashar al-Assad in December, in a country reeling from 14 years of war.
The latest fighting, which began Sunday, continued sporadically into Monday in several villages, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor and the Suwayda 24 news outlet.
The clashes reportedly erupted when a Druze vegetable vendor was seized by armed Bedouins on the main highway linking Sweida to Damascus.
The incident triggered a series of retaliatory abductions by both sides. Suwayda 24 said those abducted were released Sunday night.
The Observatory raised its death toll Monday to 50, including 34 Druze -- among them two children -- 10 Bedouins and six members of the security forces. State television confirmed six deaths among the security forces.
The highway between Damascus and Sweida remained closed, said the Britain-based monitor, which relies on a network of sources on the ground.
The defence ministry put the toll at 30 dead and around 100 wounded.
Dozens more have been wounded amid armed clashes and mortar fire in Sweida city and nearby villages.
Syria's defence and interior ministries announced the deployment of military units to the affected areas, the establishment of safe corridors for civilians, and a commitment to "end the clashes quickly and decisively".
"The lack of state, military and security institutions is a major reason for the ongoing tensions in Sweida," Interior Minister Anas Khattab said Sunday on X.
"The only solution is to reactivate these institutions to ensure civil peace," he added.
The latest unrest follows deadly violence in April and May, when clashes between Druze fighters and security forces in Druze-populated areas near Damascus and Sweida killed more than 100 people.
The Observatory said members of Bedouin tribes, who are Sunni Muslim, had sided with security forces during earlier confrontations.
Local leaders and religious figures brokered agreements at the time to de-escalate the tensions, putting Druze fighters in charge of local security in Sweida since May, though armed Bedouins remain present in several areas.
On Sunday, Sweida governor Mustapha al-Bakur urged his constituents to "exercise self-restraint", while Druze community leaders urged authorities to step in.
In response to the violence, the education ministry announced the postponement of Monday's scheduled secondary school exams in the province
Agence France-Presse
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Israel strikes tanks in Syria after dozens die in fighting in Sweida
Israel strikes tanks in Syria after dozens die in fighting in Sweida

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Israel strikes tanks in Syria after dozens die in fighting in Sweida

Israel launched air strikes on southern Syria on Monday after dozens of people were killed in fighting between forces allied with the Syrian government and sects wary of the post-Assad order. Syrian troops were sent to the Druze heartland of Sweida after 38 people were killed in clashes. The government said six of its troops were among the dead, while an estimated 30 government auxiliaries were also killed. Druze sources said pro-Syrian government militias launched attacks on the city of Sweida from Sunni areas to its west as the province came under a siege by government forces. The Syrian Defence Ministry said it had begun 'spreading military units in the affected areas'. It blamed 'an institutional vacuum' for 'worsening the chaos'. Israel later said its military struck a number of tanks in southern Syria. It did not provide details, but a source in Sweida said the area where the tanks were hit, between Sijen and Samii in Deraa province, had been a launchpad for attacks on the Druze. Israel intervened in April to halt attacks on Druze communities in Damascus and Sweida which killed dozens of civilians. Syria contains most of the world's one million Druze, who follow an offshoot of Islam that is also present in Israel, Lebanon and Jordan. The latest violence also follows the killing over two days in March of 1,300 Alawites in incursions by government forces and auxiliaries into Syria's coastal Alawite region. More than 30 killed in sectarian clashes in southern Syria On Sunday, at least one Druze town was seized by militias from neighbouring Deraa, in the worst violence against the community of 800,000 people since the April clashes, sources said. Syrian authorities said they were 'following the bloody developments in Sweida with worry and sadness'. They said troops had begun deploying in affected areas, providing safe passage for civilians and disengaging combatants. Sweida and parts of eastern Syria, where the mostly Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces are powerful, are the only areas where the Hayat Tahrir Al Sham (HTS) government that last year ended the rule of the dictator Bashar Al Assad does not exert control. The leadership of both the Kurds and the Druze have opposed what they describe as HTS's religious agenda under Syria's new President, Ahmad Al Shara. The latest clashes started last week after Fadlalah Duwara, a vegetable seller and member of the Druze community, was abducted while driving his lorry on the main road from Sweida to Damascus, which is under government control. His tribe responded by abducting a man in a Sunni neighbourhood of Sweida. The area is inhabited by members of Bedouin tribes who moved to the city decades ago from a rugged region on the outskirts. The attacks provoked a kidnapping cycle that broke into clashes in the city on Sunday, according to residents and sources in Jordan who are in contact with people in the province. By Monday the situation in Sweida had calmed after most of the hostages from the two sides were freed. But the western outskirts came under attack by militias based in Lajat, Busra Al Harir and Busra Al Sham, the Druze sources said. They said the Druze town of Al Dour fell to the militias overnight, while Daara, another Druze town, has changed hands several times. A Druze political figure close to the Druze spiritual leader Hikmat Al Hijri told The National that Sweida is 'falling under siege', with the 40th division of the new Syrian army backing the militias from Deraa who are attacking the Druze in the west. The 70th Division was deployed last month in the east of Sweida city, and since Sunday regular troops have provided manpower from the north. The south of Sweida province borders Jordan. Suhail Thebian, a prominent Druze civil figure, said the attackers from the west were being met with heavy resistance. 'If the incursion works out, there will be a sectarian massacre, like the one that befell the coast,' he said, adding that the authorities would blame 'undisciplined elements' within their ranks. 'Al Shara wants to break the mountain in any shape of form,' Mr Thebian added. Sweida is known as the Mountain of the Arabs. It is where a failed revolt against French rule started in 1925. That uprising was crushed after two years but it helped carve out an image of the Druze as Syrians above all. Sana, the official Syrian news agency, said Syrian security forces had been sent to the administrative borders between the Deraa and Sweida provinces. Secondary school exams due to take place on Monday were postponed. Many Druze, particularly the minority's spiritual leadership under Sheikh Al Hijri, have resisted attempts by the central authorities to control the province by deploying new police units. Sheikh Al Hijri has accused the HTS government of extremism and lack of interest in a civil-based, democratic order to replace the past regime. HTS, a group formerly affiliated with Al Qaeda, led an offensive that ended five decades of Assad family rule in December. In the last year of Mr Al Assad's rule, the Druze, led by Sheikh Al Hijri, mounted a peaceful anti-regime protest movement in Sweida, although the Assad regime maintained its forces in the area. The Druze have survived persecution by the French and the Ottomans, and retribution for a failed coup led by a Druze officer against the country's Alawite rulers in the 1960s, as well as the 13 years of civil war that preceded the downfall of Mr Al Assad. In the offensive that toppled Mr Al Assad, the HTS swept out from areas in northern Syria that it had run according to its strict interpretation of Islamic jurisprudence. Many inside the HTS rebel movement view the Druze – whose religion contains elements of Hinduism, Islam, Christianity and Judaism – as heretics. But since becoming Syria's President in January, Mr Al Shara, the leader of HTS, has repeatedly signalled that no harm will come to members of the country's many minorities unless they are found to have been complicit in the crimes of the former regime.

89 killed as sectarian clashes rage in Syrian province of Sweida
89 killed as sectarian clashes rage in Syrian province of Sweida

Khaleej Times

time2 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

89 killed as sectarian clashes rage in Syrian province of Sweida

At least 89 people were killed in the southern Syrian province of Sweida as clashes between Bedouin tribes and Druze fighters raged for a second day Monday, a monitor said. As the violence escalated, Israel — which had previously warned that it would intervene in Syria to protect the Druze — said it struck "several tanks" in Sweida, without providing further details. The fighting underscores the challenges facing interim leader Ahmad Al Sharaa, whose Islamist forces ousted president Bashar Al Assad in December, in a country reeling from 14 years of war. The Syrian military and interior ministries announced troop deployments, safe corridors for civilians and a pledge to end the fighting "quickly and decisively". The violence began on Sunday when Bedouin gunmen abducted a Druze vegetable vendor on the highway to Damascus, prompting retaliatory kidnappings. Though hostages were later released, the fighting carried on Monday outside Sweida city, with mortar fire hitting villages and dozens wounded, said the Suwayda 24 news outlet. The streets of Sweida were deserted, with an AFP photographer reporting gunfire during funerals. "We lived in a state of extreme terror — the shells were falling randomly," said Abu Taym, a 51-year-old father in Sweida. "Traffic on the streets is paralysed, and most shops are closed." Suwayda 24 reported the arrival of "dozens of victims" at hospitals as a result of clashes in the province's western countryside and shelling of villages. The Observatory, which relies on a network of sources on the ground, raised its death toll to 89, including 46 Druze, four civilians, 18 Bedouin fighters and seven unidentified people in military uniforms. A defence ministry source told Al Ekhbariya state television six security forces personnel were killed "during disengagement operations in Sweida". An AFP correspondent on the outskirts of Sweida city saw vehicles carrying fighters, large interior ministry military convoys, civilian vehicles and motorcycles carrying armed men towards the front lines, as well as ambulances transporting the wounded to hospitals in Damascus. While Druze spiritual leaders called for calm and urged Damascus to intervene. Sheikh Hikmat Al Hijri, one of the three Druze spiritual leaders in Sweida, expressed his "rejection of the entry" of general security forces into the province, demanding "international protection". 'Lack of state institutions' In a Sunday post on X, Interior Minister Anas Khattab said: "The lack of state, military and security institutions is a major reason for the ongoing tensions in Sweida, "The only solution is to reactivate these institutions to ensure civil peace," he added. The latest bloodshed follows deadly violence in April and May, when clashes between Druze fighters and security forces in Druze-populated areas near Damascus and Sweida killed more than 100 people. The Observatory said members of Bedouin tribes, who are Sunnis, had sided with security forces during earlier confrontations. Local leaders and religious figures brokered agreements at the time to de-escalate the tensions, putting Druze fighters in charge of security in Sweida since May, though armed Bedouins remain present in several areas. On Sunday, Sweida governor Mustapha Al Bakur urged his constituents to "exercise self-restraint", while Druze community leaders urged authorities to step in. In response to the violence, the education ministry announced the postponement of Monday's scheduled secondary school exams in the province. Israel and the Druze Syria's pre-civil war Druze population numbers around 700,000, many in Sweida province. The Druze are mainly found in Syria, Lebanon and Israel. Bedouin and Druze factions have a longstanding feud in Sweida, and violence occasionally erupts between the two sides. A surge in violence in March targeting the Alawite community — with more than 1,700 killed — and the subsequent attacks on Druze areas have undermined confidence in the new Syrian authorities' ability to protect minorities. In the wake of those incidents, Israel — which has occupied part of Syria's Golan Heights since 1967 — cited the protection of the Druze to justify several strikes, including one in early May near the presidential palace in Damascus. Israel is home to around 152,000 Druze, according to the latest available data, including 24,000 living in the Israeli-occupied Golan, of whom fewer than five percent hold Israeli citizenship.

Dozens killed in Bedouin-Druze clash in Syria
Dozens killed in Bedouin-Druze clash in Syria

Gulf Today

time5 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

Dozens killed in Bedouin-Druze clash in Syria

Syria deployed security forces Monday in the southern province of Sweida after at least 50 people were killed in clashes between Sunni Bedouin tribes and Druze fighters, a monitor said. The outbreak of sectarian violence underscores the challenges facing the administration of interim leader Ahmad Al-Sharaa, whose forces overthrew president Bashar al-Assad in December, in a country reeling from 14 years of war. The latest fighting, which began Sunday, continued sporadically into Monday in several villages, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor and the Suwayda 24 news outlet. The clashes reportedly erupted when a Druze vegetable vendor was seized by armed Bedouins on the main highway linking Sweida to Damascus. The incident triggered a series of retaliatory abductions by both sides. Suwayda 24 said those abducted were released Sunday night. The Observatory raised its death toll Monday to 50, including 34 Druze -- among them two children -- 10 Bedouins and six members of the security forces. State television confirmed six deaths among the security forces. The highway between Damascus and Sweida remained closed, said the Britain-based monitor, which relies on a network of sources on the ground. The defence ministry put the toll at 30 dead and around 100 wounded. Dozens more have been wounded amid armed clashes and mortar fire in Sweida city and nearby villages. Syria's defence and interior ministries announced the deployment of military units to the affected areas, the establishment of safe corridors for civilians, and a commitment to "end the clashes quickly and decisively". "The lack of state, military and security institutions is a major reason for the ongoing tensions in Sweida," Interior Minister Anas Khattab said Sunday on X. "The only solution is to reactivate these institutions to ensure civil peace," he added. The latest unrest follows deadly violence in April and May, when clashes between Druze fighters and security forces in Druze-populated areas near Damascus and Sweida killed more than 100 people. The Observatory said members of Bedouin tribes, who are Sunni Muslim, had sided with security forces during earlier confrontations. Local leaders and religious figures brokered agreements at the time to de-escalate the tensions, putting Druze fighters in charge of local security in Sweida since May, though armed Bedouins remain present in several areas. On Sunday, Sweida governor Mustapha al-Bakur urged his constituents to "exercise self-restraint", while Druze community leaders urged authorities to step in. In response to the violence, the education ministry announced the postponement of Monday's scheduled secondary school exams in the province Agence France-Presse

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