logo
Fresh clashes break out in Syria as the interim government struggles to ease tensions

Fresh clashes break out in Syria as the interim government struggles to ease tensions

CTV News2 days ago
A Syrian security checkpoint is seen as forces deploy in Mazraa village on the outskirts of Sweida city, in southern Syria, Sunday, July 20, 2025. A burned-out vehicle is seen in the foreground. (AP Photo/Omar Sanadiki)
BEIRUT — New outbreaks of violence overnight into Sunday rocked Syria at two distinct flashpoints, straining a fragile ceasefire and calling into question the ability of the transitional government to exert its authority across the whole country.
In the north, government-affiliated fighters confronted Kurdish-led forces who control much of the region, while in the southern province of Sweida, they clashed with Druze armed groups.
The outbreaks come at a time when Syria's interim authorities are trying to maintain a tense ceasefire in Sweida province after clashes with Druze factions last month, and to implement an agreement with the U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces that would reintegrate large swaths of northeastern Syria with the rest of the country.
The Syrian government under interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa has been struggling to consolidate control since he led a surprise insurgency that ousted former President Bashar Assad in December, ending the Assad family's decades-long autocratic rule. Political opponents and ethnic and religious minorities have been suspicious of Sharaa's de facto Islamist rule and cooperation with affiliated fighters that come from militant groups.
State state television said clashes between government forces and militias belonging to the Druze religious minority rocked the southern province of Sweida on Saturday after Druze factions attacked Syrian security forces, killing at least one member. The state-run Alikhbaria channel cited an anonymous security official who said the ceasefire has been broken. The Defense Ministry has not issued any formal statement.
Meanwhile, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said in addition to the member of the security forces killed, one Druze was killed and at least nine others were wounded in the clashes that took place in the in the western part of Sweida province. The Observatory said the clashes took place at the strategic Tal al-Hadeed heights that overlook Daraa province next door.
Difficult conditions in Sweida
State media says that aid convoys continue to enter Sweida city as a part of a tense truce after over a week of violent clashes in July between Druze militias and armed Bedouin clans backed by government forces. However, humanitarian conditions remain dire, and residents of Sweida have called for the road into the city to be fully opened, saying the aid that has come in is not enough.
The clashes that displaced tens of thousands of people came after months of tensions between Damascus and Sweida. The fighting led to a series of targeted sectarian attacks against the Druze minority, who are now skeptical of peaceful coexistence. Druze militias retaliated against Bedouin communities who largely lived in western areas of Sweida province, displacing many to neighboring Daraa.
Elsewhere, in the northern Aleppo province, government-affiliated fighters clashed with the SDF. The Defense Ministry said three civilians and four soldiers were wounded after the SDF launched a barrage of rockets near the city of Manbij 'in an irresponsible way and for unknown reasons.'
SDF spokesperson Farhad Shami on the other hand said the group was responding to shelling by 'undisciplined factions' within government forces on Deir Haffar, an eastern city in the same province.
The eastern part of Aleppo province straddles areas controlled by the government and by the SDF. Though the two are slowly trying to implement a ceasefire and agreement that would integrate the areas under Damascus, tensions remain.
'The Ministry of Defense's attempts to distort facts and mislead public opinion do not contribute to security or stability,' Shami said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
Israeli forces carry out raids bordering annexed Golan Heights
In Quneitra province, in the south, the Israeli military announced it conducted another ground operation in the area that borders the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights. It said its troops questioned several suspects they accuse of involvement in weapons trafficking in the village of Hader, and raided four areas where they found weapons being trafficked.
Since Assad's ouster, Israel has conducted numerous strikes and military operations in southern Syria, saying its forces are taking out militant groups that they suspect could harm Israelis and residents in the Golan Heights.
Damascus has been critical of Israel's military activity, and the two sides have been trying to reach a security arrangement through U.S.-mediated talks. Syria has repeatedly said it does not intend to take military action against Israel.
Those talks intensified after Israel backed the Druze in Sweida during the earlier clashes. Israel struck military personnel near the southern city and most notably launched an airstrike targeting the Defense Ministry headquarters in the heart of Damascus.
Kareem Chehayeb, The Associated Press
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Palestinian-Canadians feel 'betrayed' by Canada, demand end to violence, starvation in Gaza
Palestinian-Canadians feel 'betrayed' by Canada, demand end to violence, starvation in Gaza

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Palestinian-Canadians feel 'betrayed' by Canada, demand end to violence, starvation in Gaza

Social Sharing Watching the violence in Gaza unfold for the last 22 months has been painful, traumatic, and a "continuous nightmare" for Palestinian-Canadians in Windsor — and according to some advocates, the last several weeks have gotten even worse. The Gaza death toll has hit 60,000, with reports of widespread starvation, malnutrition and disease after months of an Israeli-imposed blockade and almost two years of Israel's military offensive. On July 29, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), which monitors hunger around the world, issued a famine alert for the enclave. Advocates say the Canadian government and international community need to do more to end the violence and the starvation. "It's like nothing you've ever imagined humanly possible," described Maher El-Masri, a Palestinian-Canadian living in Windsor with family still in his homeland of Gaza. "To see the sheer level of suffering and trauma, not only in Gaza, but also to us living here," he said. "In my household, we haven't had a normal day. You don't have a normal day." In the time of genocide, you cannot be political. You have to be principled. Each day he calls his siblings and cousins to make sure they are alive and to find out where they are located, because they've been displaced many times. He's already experienced direct loss as a result of the conflict: he told CBC that his brother was shot and killed by an Israeli sniper on December 5, 2023. He said his family is exhausted from the prolonged suffering to the point where they are wishing death. "Food is really dwindling," he described. He's able to send some financial support to his loved ones, but food prices have become "astronomical," he said. "You can buy a kilogram of bread for close to $50... which is unbelievable. So, they're lucky if they find flour to do bread, pasta, plain pasta, they do it with salt and water, or lentil soup. That's their meal and they eat about pretty much once a day," he said. 'I feel betrayed' All the while, a report last week suggested that arms still flow from Canada to Israel despite the government being adamant that it has not allowed arms shipments to Israel since January 2024. However, Israeli import data and publicly available shipping records appear to contradict that claim, showing imports of Canadian "bullets" and other military hardware. The data was uncovered by a group of researchers from four NGOs: World Beyond War, the Palestinian Youth Movement, Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East and Independent Jewish Voices. "To put it mildly, I feel betrayed," El-Masri said. "We're a country that stands for values, stands for principles. We preach freedom and liberty across the world.... And now to see this is happening from a country like Canada, it's a betrayal of everything that we stand for." It's a sentiment shared with other Palestinian-Canadians in Windsor. Windsor's Bilal Rafiq, a member of the Palestinian Solidarity Group at the University of Windsor says it's "very difficult" for the community. "We're watching our people every single day cry out to the world to help us, and the world is... not only turning our backs on the suffering of the Palestinians, we're actually actively aiding and abetting Israel as it commits a genocide against us," he said. "If Canada actually cared about Palestinian sovereignty and statehood, we would be placing an immediate arms embargo and sanctions on Israel, and working as much as we can to stop this genocide — not being complicit in it."​​​ Rafiq said the arms report should result in a "political crisis" that the government should answer to, saying that the Canadian people should be holding the government accountable to this. Canada plans to recognize Palestinian state On July 30 Canada said it planned to recognize a Palestinian state in September, provided the Palestinian Authority commits to certain reforms, including demilitarization. In doing so, Canada joins other Western countries making similar declarations in recent weeks to apply pressure on Israel. Israel has said that a Palestinian statehood would be a "reward" for militant group Hamas, which governs Gaza. Rafiq said this is a "performative" statehood declaration and does little to end the violence in Gaza. El-Masri also believes it's "political posturing" to release pressure. He also stresses that while he would love to see the recognition of a Palestinian state, tying it to conditions like demilitarization is a "recipe for failure." Advocates with Windsor's Palestinian Canadian Community Association agree. "We don't want anyone to announce the Palestinian state with any condition. Let the Palestinians themselves to decide. Let them be free. And that's what we're asking all the time. Free Palestine," Maher El-Youssef told CBC. Fellow advocate Saaed AlFaqeeh explained that the last two years have been exhausting and have taken a toll on the community, watching their people getting "massacred" all while trying to bring awareness and lobby the government for action. AlFaqeeh said that all the while, the community is facing increased anti-Palestinian racism while still having to go on with their own lives. "That has been extremely devastating to the community. I mean, we feel let down by our government here in Canada," he said. A toll on the Palestinian community El-Masri implores people to tap into their common sense humanity, regardless of their faith or nationality, to intervene and help the Palestinian people. He points out that children and babies are dying of starvation and if action is not taken, the situation will get even worse. "Send food to people and make sure they're surviving," he implored. According to the IPC, which describes the situation in Gaza as "the worst-case scenario of famine," more than 20,000 children were admitted for treatment for acute malnutrition between April and mid-July, and hospitals have reported a rapid increase in hunger-related deaths in children under five, with at least 16 deaths since July. With international criticism growing, Israel announced steps in recent days to slightly ease aid access, but some organizations like the World Food Program said last week, it was not getting the permissions it needed to deliver enough aid. 'End the genocide,' El-Masri implores Canadian Forces also airdropped humanitarian aid into Gaza for the first time on Monday, even though aid experts have said that airdrops are vastly less effective than truck convoys. Some of the pallets dropped by air earlier this week have fallen into the sea, and at least one has struck and killed Palestinians on the ground. "In the time of genocide, you cannot be political. You have to be principled," El-Masri said. Meanwhile, Israeli media is reporting that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu favours a complete military takeover of Gaza for the first time in two decades, and was to meet senior security officials on Tuesday to finalize a new strategy. This, after mediation between Israel and Hamas collapsed despite intense international pressure for a ceasefire.

'They were shot in the head': Canadian Druze ask Ottawa to intervene
'They were shot in the head': Canadian Druze ask Ottawa to intervene

Edmonton Journal

time2 hours ago

  • Edmonton Journal

'They were shot in the head': Canadian Druze ask Ottawa to intervene

Members of the Druze diaspora in Canada are facing anguish and uncertainty as they await word from family and friends in Syria amid reports of massacres and kidnappings. The largely Druze town of Suwayda was shaken in mid-July by clashes between Druze and armed Bedouin. Reuters reports execution-style killings of unarmed Druze civilians and home-to-home massacres, with about a thousand believed killed in the bloodshed. A medical examiner said he had seen about 500 bodies, including a decapitation, close-range gunshots, and teenage girls with throats slit. The government of President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who overthrew the Assad regime last December, has denied any involvement in the civilian killings. Canadian Druze held a news conference on July 25 outside Toronto City Hall to call the public's attention to the atrocities and to call on the Canadian government to intervene. Among them: Rahaf Alakbani, 34, who arrived from Suwayda with her husband, Esmaeel Aboufakher, in February 2016, following the escalation of violence and persecution in Syria. Article content Article content Article content Article content She still has family members in Suwayda, including her parents and siblings. Her two nephews – Salah, 13 and Yusuf, 15 – and brother-in-law Samir, were killed, and her friend's brother is still missing. With electricity and internet cut, she's unable to determine their safety or whereabouts. Alakbani has worked with the Canadian Centre for Victims of Torture, supporting refugees and survivors of trauma as they adapt to life in Canada. She spoke to Dave Gordon for National Post. What was it like for you when the Assad regime fell? We always dreamed the regime would be done, and it was so amazing, and we felt optimistic for a new future. We wanted to rebuild Syria. My husband and I work in the humanitarian field, and social work, and we had lots of ideas to build our countries. But the new regime ruined all these dreams. When you heard of the atrocities this month, what went through your mind? I still cannot believe it. I could barely sleep. I could barely talk. My parents are still there, my husband's family with eight sisters. We're worried about them. Article content Article content What kind of contact have you had with friends and family in Syria? Before the internet cut off, I was talking to them through WhatsApp. But they cut the internet and the landlines and electricity. I don't know whether they are still alive. How did you find out about what happened to your brother-in-law and his boys? When there was internet. My sister-in-law has three boys, one of them, he lives in Jordan. He's studying there. And so he sent us on the WhatsApp group that his brothers and his dad were killed. They were shot in the back and the head. My sister-in-law, my husband's sister Hanna, had a camera in the home, and had everything documented, but she doesn't know how to release this, so we're trying to help her to have this as evidence. Tell me about Salah and Yusuf, your nephews. I remember when we went to Syria (six years ago), they were both learning instruments. We sat together, we started singing, playing music. They're very talented. They were very beautiful spirits. They were full of life, and very funny. So they have nothing to do with any politics, any war. What do you remember about Samir? He used to have a detergent factory and always liked to help people. My mom-in-law always said when sometimes people came to buy some detergent, and he knew that they are poor, he didn't take money from them. He was very funny, wise. My sister-in-law lives in the city centre; all of the militias were attacking the neighborhood, and was very horrible situation for them. It was tragedy. They heard gunfire, rockets and the fighters were shouting, 'Allahu Akbar,' and they were just running. And my sister-in-law saw all this from her door, and saw a civilian knifed in the head. I have a friend who told me her entire town was gone.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store