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'Cautious Calm' Prevails In Syria's Sweida As Death Toll From Sectarian Violence Nears 1,000

'Cautious Calm' Prevails In Syria's Sweida As Death Toll From Sectarian Violence Nears 1,000

News182 days ago
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Violence in Syria's Sweida province has claimed over 1,000 lives amid clashes between Druze fighters, Bedouin rivals, government forces, armed tribes, and Israel.
Violence in southern Syria has claimed over 1,000 lives, according to a Syria monitor, amid clashes between Druze fighters and their Bedouin rivals, as well as government forces, armed tribes and Israel.
According to a monitor and AFP correspondents, calm appeared to have returned to southern Syria's Sweida province on Sunday, after a week of sectarian violence between Druze fighters and rival groups left hundreds dead.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that since around midnight, 'Sweida has been experiencing a cautious calm", adding government security forces had blocked roads leading to the province to prevent tribal fighters from heading there.
It added that those killed since last Sunday included 336 Druze fighters and 298 civilians from the religious minority group, 194 of whom were 'summarily executed by defence and interior ministry personnel".
The dead also included 342 government security personnel and 21 Sunni Bedouin, three of them civilians, 'summarily executed by Druze fighters". Another 15 government forces were killed in Israeli strikes, the Observatory said.
US special envoy to Syria Tom Barrack said Sunday that the country stood at a 'critical juncture", adding that 'peace and dialogue must prevail — and prevail now".
'All factions must immediately lay down their arms, cease hostilities, and abandon cycles of tribal vengeance," he wrote on X, saying 'brutal acts by warring factions on the ground undermine the government's authority and disrupt any semblance of order".
The announcement by Sharaa on Saturday followed a statement by the United States just hours earlier, claiming to have brokered a ceasefire between Syria's government and Israel. This came after Israeli airstrikes targeted government forces in Sweida and Damascus earlier in the week.
Israel, which has its own Druze community, has said it was acting in defence of the group, as well as to enforce its demands for the total demilitarisation of Syria's south.
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