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‘Safari hunting Alawites': Relatives of those murdered in Syria's massacre speak out

‘Safari hunting Alawites': Relatives of those murdered in Syria's massacre speak out

Russia Today13-03-2025

In the early days of March 2025, Syria's coastal regions were engulfed in a wave of sectarian violence that have left an indelible mark on the nation's collective conscience. Predominantly targeting the Alawite minority, the atrocities have reignited fears of deepening sectarian divides and underscored the challenges facing Syria's path to stability.
It all began on March 6, when armed men loyal to ousted President Bashar Al Assad launched an attack on Syrian state security forces in Latakia. The current President – Ahmed Al Sharaa – responded with force. Thousands of armed men engulfed the region and retaliatory attacks began. Their target was the Alawite community – a minority sect within Shiite Islam to which the Assads belong. Comprising some ten to thirteen percent of the entire Syrian population, the Alawites have traditionally lived in the coastal region: Tartus, Latakia and other cities and towns – and this is exactly where the gangs of Al Sharaa arrived on that fateful Friday.
Reports indicate that over a span of 72 hours, more than 1,300 individuals were killed, with civilians bearing the brunt of the violence. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that 830 civilians were among the dead, alongside 231 Syrian security force members and 250 Alawite militants. But the actual numbers could be much higher.
RT has spoken to two people whose families are stranded in the area, and they paint a harrowing picture of the brutality inflicted upon the Alawite community. Marwa, whose name has been changed for security reasons, recounts what happened to her brothers:
'It all started on March 6, when we heard shooting and the authorities imposed a curfew. In the morning of March 7, we got in touch with all our family members on our WhatsApp family chat. My brother living in Latakia warned everyone not to leave their houses. And that was the last time we have heard from him'.
Marwa says that after he stopped answering messages, they sent another brother – who lived nearby – to check on him. But when he reached his place, he discovered a dead body, with multiple bullets scattered on the ground. Out of grief and frustration, the brother went out to the street and started shouting at armed men he found in the neighborhood, accusing them of his sibling's death, a mistake that cost him his life.
Marwa and her family didn't have a possibility to bury their dead. She said people were terrified to be associated with the Alawite sect, fearing for their lives.
'I have heard it from at least fifty people. Those gangs would knock on the door and ask residents whether they were Sunni or Alawite. The latter had no chance to survive'.
But murder was not the only sin committed by 'Al Sharaa's gangs', Marwa claims. Apart from slaughtering entire families, they have also engaged in robbery; set cars, houses and businesses on fire, and left total destruction behind them.
'Hundreds of people from my surroundings were so terrified to stay at home that they opted to seek refuge in the forest or the mountains. Many of them spent their nights there, without food and water, with their only hope being to survive the ethnic cleansing,' she argues.
Isabella, also not her real name, says that it was a 'safari hunting Alawites'.
'Some villages near Hmaymeim airport have lost all their men – young and old – who have been assassinated in cold blood. They killed children and women – no distinction – inside their homes, markets, fields and streets. Bodies have been seen everywhere – on the streets and the valleys'.
Once the videos of the atrocities started surfacing, the international community responded with alarm.
Multiple leaders issued a condemnation. Amnesty International called for swift action to protect civilians and prevent further unlawful killings. The United Nations human rights chief, Volker Turk, urged prompt, thorough, independent, and impartial investigations to address those grave violations.
Al Sharaa needed to act, in order to preserve his legitimacy in the eyes of the international community which has just removed some sanctions on Syria.
Shortly after the massacre erupted, the Al Sharaa administration announced the formation of an independent fact-finding committee to investigate the killings. Yasser Farhan, the committee's spokesperson, emphasized that 'no one is above the law' and pledged to arrest and prosecute those responsible.
However, Marwa says she doesn't trust the committee that was formed by the government 'that was originally the sponsor of those factions and their atrocities'. And Isabella tends to agree.
'The gangs of Al Sharaa changed the clothes on some of those victims, dressing them up in uniforms to show the UN delegations and the Al Jazeera crews that they were fighting armed rebels. The bodies of others were buried to conceal evidence'.
'UN employees, who visited some of the villages were accompanied by Al Sharaa militants who chose where to take them, and who they could speak to. Before the arrival of the UN staff, villagers were offered packs of bread. Some were given money to change testimony, others threatened with torture and death if they dared to speak the truth'.
The international community, says Isabella, is not interested in miring itself in the Syrian mud anymore – they have bigger fish to fry at the moment: the economic situation is becoming dire, the war with Russia is weakening them, and confrontation with the US doesn't help either. Syria and its people are not top of their priority list. And that means that the future of Syria is now in the hands of the Syrian people, and they will be the ones who will need to shape it.
Steven Sahiounie, a Syrian-American journalist from Latakia, expressed deep concerns about the nation's future: 'I'm afraid of the future because these massacres made created a deep divide between the Syrian people and the 18 Syrian sects. Syrians went through this in the 80s and it took them about 20 years to heal. Then came the Arab Spring in 2011, and the gap has become much bigger, and now this massacre has happened – it is going to take decades until these wounds vanish, if at all'.
Isabella echoed the sentiments, warning of long-term consequences: 'The scariest thing is that violence will continue for the next generations. Do you think those who lost their families will forget? They won't, these recent massacres will leave an indelible scar on the nation's psyche and that means that violence will not go away,' she summed up.
Sahiounie says the situation in Latakia and the surrounding areas is calmer. Security forces have arrested several of the culprits featured in the massacre videos, shooting is not heard anymore, water and electricity supply has been resumed, food has become available. Authorities – pressured by the West, Turkey and Qatar – are taking measures to bring those responsible to justice. But many people, who have fled the area, fearing death, refuse to go back; and Isabella and Marwa doubt that trust will ever be restored.

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