logo
As U.S. hails Syria ceasefire, Sweida residents say fighting rages on

As U.S. hails Syria ceasefire, Sweida residents say fighting rages on

Washington Post19-07-2025
Syria's president on Saturday declared a 'comprehensive and immediate ceasefire' after nearly a week of sectarian bloodshed in the country's Druze-majority south, saying government security forces would be dispatched to the region, but street battles raged on.
The fighting, which started with clashes between Druze and Bedouin militias in the city of Sweida, and drew in government forces, Sunni tribesmen and Israel, is among the deadliest since the fall of former dictator Bashar al-Assad in December. The fast-spreading violence has laid bare the challenges facing new President Ahmed al-Sharaa, a former Islamist rebel leader who is trying to rebuild a fractured Syria after a long civil war.
Sharaa's ceasefire demand came shortly after the Trump administration's Syria envoy made a similar appeal — for 'Druze, Bedouins, and Sunnis to put down their weapons' and 'build a new and united Syrian identity.' The envoy, Tom Barrack, also said a 'breakthrough' had been reached between Sharaa and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after days of Israeli airstrikes on the country.
Syria's interior ministry posted photographs Saturday afternoon showing what it said were government security forces outside Sweida, the epicenter of the violence, but attacks on civilians were 'still ongoing,' said a 52-year old teacher who spoke on the condition he be identified by his first name, Hossam, for safety reasons.
Residents and human rights groups described a catastrophic situation in the city, where hundreds have been killed in clashes or summarily executed, and where armed men have looted and burned homes and stores. The Syrian Network for Human Rights on Friday said it had confirmed the deaths of at least 321 people.
'Whole families are without blankets, without food, without clothes, without medicine, without electricity, without water,' Hossam said.
Government troops were sent to Sweida earlier this week to quell fighting between local Druze militias and Bedouin fighters, but the presence of state forces — who locals accused of abuses, some of which were filmed and went viral online — did little to calm the situation.
The government began withdrawing after Israel, Syria's neighbor, carried out bombing raids on military convoys and state buildings in Damascus, the capital, saying its strikes were aimed at protecting the Druze. In the days that followed, the fighting grew more deadly as reprisal attacks intensified and large numbers of armed Sunni Arab tribesmen from across Syria headed to the region to support local Bedouins.
In a speech Saturday, Sharaa said the events in Sweida were a 'dangerous turning point' in the country's development. He condemned Israel's intervention as well as the 'separatist' ambitions of some in Sweida, an apparent reference to leading Druze figures, including Hikmat al-Hijri, a spiritual leader who has opposed Sharaa's government and is seen as close to Israel.
Sharaa praised the Sunni tribesmen for mobilizing but called on them to abide by the ceasefire. The president's praise for the tribes was 'deeply troubling,' Hiba Zayadin, a senior Middle East researcher for Human Rights Watch, wrote in a post on X. 'Syria needs a professional, accountable security sector — not new loyalist factions,' she said.
It was far from clear Saturday if the agreement would hold. Druze and other minority communities in Syria have remained wary of Sharaa's government, doubting its commitment to inclusivity given its Sunni Islamist character. Their doubts extend to the forces the government commands, drawn from rebels that opposed Assad, among them militias long implicated in human rights violations, as well as foreign Islamist militants.
The fighting in Sweida has spurred impassioned appeals that transcended borders. From sandy berms where they were sought refuge from the violence, Bedouin women called on the Sunni governments of Saudi Arabia and Jordan for help. Druze citizens of Israel gathered at the fence with Syria, demanding to be let in to help friends and family across the border.
Long-standing communal tensions between Druze and Bedouin communities in Sweida have prompted previous interventions by Syria's central government, including under Assad.
Israel, which has opposed Sharaa's government, in word and deed, from the moment it took power, remains a wild card in the conflict. Israeli officials have likened Sharaa and his allies to the Islamic State militant group, demanded a portion of the country, south of Damascus, be demilitarized, and carried out repeated airstrikes, many of them targeting Syrian military sites.
In a post on X Saturday, Gideon Saar, Israel's foreign minister, accused Sharaa of peddling 'conspiracy theories' about Israel in his speech Saturday and said the 'international community' had a duty to ensure the protection of minorities in Syria.
Even if the violence in Sweida were to stop, a difficult reckoning awaits.
Among some in the government security services, there was a feeling that Sweida's Bedouin residents had suffered most. The Druze had carried out 'kidnappings and arrests of women and children,' said a military officer in the region, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.
Rabie Murshid, a Druze resident, said it was the Bedouins and their allies who had instigated the violence. 'They are burning the empty houses,' he said Friday. 'They killed the ones who stayed at home.'
Mouthana Hanawie, 45, from Sahwet Blatah, south of Sweida, said on Friday that 20 of his family members had been killed. He alleged the perpetrators were government security forces and masquerading as tribesmen who entered the village Monday. Those killed included his 21-year-old son, Anas. Other victims in his village 'were buried in mass graves,' he said, and 'many of them were unidentified.'
As the chaos continued Saturday, relatives of Sweida residents spent desperate hours trying to get news. Shatha, a 45-year-old woman who was outside the city, spoke to her parents at 5 a.m., when they were sleeping outside, among the trees, afraid that Bedouin gangs would attack their home.
When she spoke to them later in the day, they told her their house had been burned. 'The situation is disastrous,' Shatha said. 'I imagine that there are still many missing people, and no one knows anything about their fate.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Syria signs $14 billion in investment deals, including $4 billion airport expansion
Syria signs $14 billion in investment deals, including $4 billion airport expansion

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Syria signs $14 billion in investment deals, including $4 billion airport expansion

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Syria signed agreements worth $14 billion with regional and international companies on Wednesday for 12 investment projects, including modernizing the international airport in Damascus and a new subway system, state media reported. The deals are the largest so far since foreign companies and countries started an investment push into the war-torn country after Western sanctions were eased following the fall of the 54-year rule of the Assad family. The head of Syria's Investment Authority, Talal al-Halili, was quoted by state-run news agency SANA as saying that the expansion of Damascus' International Airport will cost $4 billion and will be done by the Qatar-based UCC Holding. SANA said that the airport will be able to serve up to 31 million travelers a year, after the expansion. SANA added that the agreement for the new subway system in the capital is worth $2 billion, and the network is expected to be used by 750,000 people a day. The deal for the subway was signed by Syria's Transportation Ministry and the United Arab Emirates' National Investment Corporation, SANA said. Other projects include the $2 billion construction of 60 residential towers with 20,000 housing units outside of the capital. 'Syria is open for investments and determined to build a bright future,' al-Hilali said during the ceremony, which was attended by President Ahmad al-Sharaa. In late July, Syria and Saudi Arabia announced 47 investment agreements, valued at more than $6 billion to mark a significant step in rebuilding Syria's war-battered economy. In May, Syria signed an agreement with a consortium of Qatari, Turkish and U.S. companies for the development of a $7 billion 5,000-megawatt energy project to revitalize much of Syria's war-battered electricity grid. 'The future of a prosperous and peaceful Syria is in the hands of Syria and its regional partners,' said the U.S. special envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack, who attended Wednesday's signing in Damascus.

Grok, is that Gaza? AI image checks mislocate news photographs
Grok, is that Gaza? AI image checks mislocate news photographs

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Grok, is that Gaza? AI image checks mislocate news photographs

This image by AFP photojournalist Omar al-Qattaa shows a skeletal, underfed girl in Gaza, where Israel's blockade has fuelled fears of mass famine in the Palestinian territory. But when social media users asked Grok where it came from, X boss Elon Musk's artificial intelligence chatbot was certain that the photograph was taken in Yemen nearly seven years ago. The AI bot's untrue response was widely shared online and a left-wing pro-Palestinian French lawmaker, Aymeric Caron, was accused of peddling disinformation on the Israel-Hamas war for posting the photo. At a time when internet users are turning to AI to verify images more and more, the furore shows the risks of trusting tools like Grok, when the technology is far from error-free. Grok said the photo showed Amal Hussain, a seven-year-old Yemeni child, in October 2018. In fact the photo shows nine-year-old Mariam Dawwas in the arms of her mother Modallala in Gaza City on August 2, 2025. Before the war, sparked by Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, Mariam weighed 25 kilograms, her mother told AFP. Today, she weighs only nine. The only nutrition she gets to help her condition is milk, Modallala told AFP--and even that's "not always available". Challenged on its incorrect response, Grok said: "I do not spread fake news; I base my answers on verified sources." The chatbot eventually issued a response that recognised the error -- but in reply to further queries the next day, Grok repeated its claim that the photo was from Yemen. The chatbot has previously issued content that praised Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and that suggested people with Jewish surnames were more likely to spread online hate. - Radical right bias - Grok's mistakes illustrate the limits of AI tools, whose functions are as impenetrable as "black boxes", said Louis de Diesbach, a researcher in technological ethics. "We don't know exactly why they give this or that reply, nor how they prioritise their sources," said Diesbach, author of a book on AI tools, "Hello ChatGPT". Each AI has biases linked to the information it was trained on and the instructions of its creators, he said. In the researcher's view Grok, made by Musk's xAI start-up, shows "highly pronounced biases which are highly aligned with the ideology" of the South African billionaire, a former confidante of US President Donald Trump and a standard-bearer for the radical right. Asking a chatbot to pinpoint a photo's origin takes it out of its proper role, said Diesbach. "Typically, when you look for the origin of an image, it might say: 'This photo could have been taken in Yemen, could have been taken in Gaza, could have been taken in pretty much any country where there is famine'." AI does not necessarily seek accuracy -- "that's not the goal," the expert said. Another AFP photograph of a starving Gazan child by al-Qattaa, taken in July 2025, had already been wrongly located and dated by Grok to Yemen, 2016. That error led to internet users accusing the French newspaper Liberation, which had published the photo, of manipulation. - 'Friendly pathological liar' - An AI's bias is linked to the data it is fed and what happens during fine-tuning -- the so-called alignment phase -- which then determines what the model would rate as a good or bad answer. "Just because you explain to it that the answer's wrong doesn't mean it will then give a different one," Diesbach said. "Its training data has not changed and neither has its alignment." Grok is not alone in wrongly identifying images. When AFP asked Mistral AI's Le Chat -- which is in part trained on AFP's articles under an agreement between the French start-up and the news agency -- the bot also misidentified the photo of Mariam Dawwas as being from Yemen. For Diesbach, chatbots must never be used as tools to verify facts. "They are not made to tell the truth," but to "generate content, whether true or false", he said. "You have to look at it like a friendly pathological liar -- it may not always lie, but it always could." dou-aor/sbk/rlp

Syria signs $14 billion in investment deals, including $4 billion airport expansion
Syria signs $14 billion in investment deals, including $4 billion airport expansion

Washington Post

timean hour ago

  • Washington Post

Syria signs $14 billion in investment deals, including $4 billion airport expansion

DAMASCUS, Syria — Syria signed agreements worth $14 billion with regional and international companies on Wednesday for 12 investment projects, including modernizing the international airport in Damascus and a new subway system, state media reported. The deals are the largest so far since foreign companies and countries started an investment push into the war-torn country after Western sanctions were eased following the fall of the 54-year rule of the Assad family . The head of Syria's Investment Authority, Talal al-Halili, was quoted by state-run news agency SANA as saying that the expansion of Damascus' International Airport will cost $4 billion and will be done by the Qatar-based UCC Holding. SANA said that the airport will be able to serve up to 31 million travelers a year, after the expansion. SANA added that the agreement for the new subway system in the capital is worth $2 billion, and the network is expected to be used by 750,000 people a day. The deal for the subway was signed by Syria's Transportation Ministry and the United Arab Emirates' National Investment Corporation, SANA said. Other projects include the $2 billion construction of 60 residential towers with 20,000 housing units outside of the capital. 'Syria is open for investments and determined to build a bright future,' al-Hilali said during the ceremony, which was attended by President Ahmad al-Sharaa. In late July, Syria and Saudi Arabia announced 47 investment agreements , valued at more than $6 billion to mark a significant step in rebuilding Syria's war-battered economy. In May, Syria signed an agreement with a consortium of Qatari, Turkish and U.S. companies for the development of a $7 billion 5,000-megawatt energy project to revitalize much of Syria's war-battered electricity grid. 'The future of a prosperous and peaceful Syria is in the hands of Syria and its regional partners,' said the U.S. special envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack, who attended Wednesday's signing in Damascus.

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