
'You can't punish an entire sect': Fear and distrust as Syrian authorities encircle Druze-majority town
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The National
a day ago
- The National
Syria aid workers abducted en route to Sweida
Five aid workers have been abducted in Syria while delivering supplies to the besieged province of Sweida this week, in what their colleagues told The National was an alarming development. On Monday, seven of eight vehicles carrying privately donated aid from the Damascus suburb of Jaramana were ambushed and looted by unknown assailants. The attack prevented critical supplies from reaching Sweida, where residents face severe shortages of food, electricity and water. 'One of the eight cars in the convoy was able to escape after a large number of people on motorbikes surrounded them,' an aid worker in Jaramana who was co-ordinating with the convoy told The National. 'Out of the eight vehicles, only one reached Sweida. The rest were looted and sent back.' Three workers from Sweida who were also co-ordinating with the convoy confirmed the information. Residents of Sweida say the besieged province is in a state of disaster following last month's clashes between armed tribesmen, supported by government forces, and Druze fighters. A ceasefire and government-imposed lockdown declared on July 19 have left Sweida reliant on sporadic aid deliveries. Sweida residents say that some pro-government tribal fighters, many of whom withdrew from the province following the ceasefire, remain stationed along key roads into the province, hindering the entry of goods. Another aid volunteer said the convoy, had it arrived in the province, would have helped 'around 2,000 to 4,000 households. There were also 250 doses of cancer medications, other medications, baby formula and diapers'. All aid volunteers interviewed by The National spoke on the condition of anonymity, fearing retaliation and aid access restrictions. With about 192,000 people internally displaced in the province since the July clashes and relief trickling through the single crossing, private donors and international aid groups have mobilised to deliver convoys, which must be co-ordinated with Syrian authorities. 'They'd been sharing their live GPS location with us,' one of the relief volunteers in Sweida said of the missing aid workers. 'After a while we realised they had stopped moving.' There was gunfire. The cars were looted. And the men are still being held Aid worker in Sweida One abducted man, Aabed Abu Fakhr, managed to call a colleague, while another phoned his wife. 'From the calls it was clear they were being watched, but they reassured us they were all right,' the Jaramana-based volunteer who was speaking to Mr Fakhr said. But the men have not been heard from since Tuesday despite efforts to secure their release. The Jaramana City Endowment Committee, which organised Monday's convoy, said it had obtained government approval for the delivery. The abducted men were identified as Samir Barakat, Aabed Abu Fakhr, Yamen Al Sahnawi, Radwan Al Sahnawi and Fidaa Azzam. The four aid workers familiar with the case said a Syrian General Security official – who had co-ordinated previous aid deliveries on behalf of the endowment – is now mediating between the kidnappers and the families. 'At first they talked about a prisoner exchange,' said the Jaramana aid worker. 'But when we asked for names, they didn't send any. We haven't heard from the men since Tuesday. We don't know if they're OK.' He warned the abductions were an 'alarming precedent'. 'These are aid workers. Kidnapping people delivering humanitarian relief will affect the entire province,' he said. The only route into Sweida has seen repeated attacks in recent weeks. Last Friday, the Syrian Arab Red Crescent reported that a convoy was 'directly targeted by gunfire', damaging several vehicles. A Red Crescent volunteer in Sweida said armed men blocked the road and fired on the first three lorries. 'Problems on the road are common,' he said. 'And the aid entering Sweida is so little compared to the need on the ground.' The Syrian government denies it is imposing a siege. But the province remains inaccessible except through a single humanitarian crossing, which requires prior co-ordination with authorities for entry and exit. Bread is rationed, supermarket shelves are bare and residents of rural towns survive on harvests from their orchards, sending what they can to the city. The fuel shortage has rendered water pumping stations inoperable, reducing supply to critical levels, according to the UN, and damage to infrastructure has further disrupted electricity, internet and telecoms. And journalists are barred from entering the province, hindering independent verification and the spread of news from inside. A spokesman for the Red Crescent called on armed groups to 'refrain from targeting humanitarian efforts and to facilitate aid access to the affected families in the southern region'. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says more than 1,600 people have been killed since the sectarian violence erupted on July 13 – including 429 summary executions by government forces.


Middle East Eye
a day ago
- Middle East Eye
Turkey-Syria defence deal covers training and weapons supply
Turkey has signed a security agreement with Syria to assist Damascus in military training and cooperation, including consultancy and equipment procurement, a Turkish defence ministry source told journalists on Thursday. The previous day, Turkey and Syria's defence ministers inked a 'joint training consultancy memorandum of understanding' during a visit to Ankara by a high-level Syrian delegation to discuss the security challenges Damascus has faced since the fall of Bashar al-Assad's government. The agreement is viewed as an initial step towards enabling Syria to restructure its armed forces, transfer expertise, and acquire equipment to build a modern military capable of addressing both internal and external threats. Last month, Syria formally requested military assistance from Turkey after Israeli strikes targeted Damascus and Sweida, during intercommunal violence between the Druze and Bedouin tribes. Independent experts have criticised the Syrian government, which intervened as tensions were ratcheted up by the Israeli strikes, for failing to adequately address the violence. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Ankara and Damascus have been in talks over a broader defence pact that could involve the deployment of Turkish troops to at least three major Syrian bases. However, the newly signed joint training consultancy agreement does not yet provide the framework for such a deployment. Managing emerging threats A Turkish defence ministry source said Ankara has repeatedly expressed its readiness to assist Syria in combating terrorism, including threats from the Islamic State group. According to ministry sources, the memorandum aims to coordinate and plan military training and cooperation, provide consultancy, share expertise and operational experience. It will also facilitate the procurement of military equipment, weapons systems, logistical materials and related services in line with defence needs, and offer technical support and training for their operation when necessary. Turkey has provided similar security assistance and training to several countries in the region, with Turkish officers overseeing cadet training programmes either on-site or by hosting foreign officers for instruction. Turkey warns Syrian Kurds: Don't become Israeli pawns Read More » The deal is also believed to establish a framework for advising the Syrian army's command during active conflicts, particularly on managing emerging threats. Although Turkey has become a central player in Syria following Assad's fall - maintaining close relations with the current Syrian president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, and his inner circle - Ankara had, for months, stepped back to allow the new Damascus administration to take the lead. However, repeated Israeli strikes in southern Syria that targeted the newly restructured Syrian army - despite Ankara's efforts to mediate between Damascus and Israel - prompted frustration in both Ankara and Damascus. Sharaa ultimately decided to formally seek Ankara's assistance to counterbalance Israeli actions. On Wednesday, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan reaffirmed that Ankara has been, and will remain, supportive of any peaceful resolution to the Sweida crisis, where Israel claims it is acting to defend the rights of the Druze community. Ankara was also vocal about negotiations dragging on between the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and Damascus, saying that the Kurdish groups in the militia weren't acting in good faith and were delaying their merger with the new Syrian government. Turkey perceives the SDF as an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), a proscribed organisation. Security sources told Middle East Eye that while Turkey would not directly intervene against the SDF, the Turkish military could provide indirect support for a limited operation by the Syrian army. The sources said preparations for such an operation had already been completed in case the SDF fails to comply with the 10 March agreement, under which SDF commander Mazloum Abdi pledged to join the new government.


Middle East Eye
2 days ago
- Middle East Eye
MPs urge UK to disclose if it holds spy plane footage of Al Jazeera journalist's killings
The British government faces mounting scrutiny over its military cooperation with Israel after the targeted killing of six journalists in an Israeli strike on Sunday. The Ministry of Defence has refused to disclose whether it holds information from spy planes which flew over Gaza that day. Anas al-Sharif, Middle East Eye contributor Mohammed Qreiqeh, Ibrahim Zaher and Mohammed Noufal, who all worked for Al Jazeera, and freelancers Moamen Aliwa and Mohammed al-Khalidi were the latest among 238 journalists killed by Israel during its genocide in Gaza. Aircraft from Britain's Royal Air Force (RAF) have conducted hundreds of surveillance flights over Gaza in the last two years. Last week, it emerged that the UK has recently been spending taxpayers' money to hire American contractors for surveillance flights over Gaza. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Scotland's The National reported on Wednesday that flight radar data shows a spy plane registered under the code N6147U was active at the RAF Akrotiri airbase in Cyprus two hours before the Israeli strike which killed the journalists on Sunday night. But there is no visible flight path, indicating the plane's transponder was turned off when it flew over Gaza, which has been standard practice during British surveillance flights. Middle East Eye asked the Ministry of Defence (MoD) whether it holds information gathered by a spy plane over Gaza on 10 August, the day the journalists were killed, and if so, whether it would share that information with any international body investigating the killings. The MoD declined to comment. "We cannot keep dodging questions about the use of spy planes," Labour MP Kim Johnson told MEE. "Transparency on such a serious matter is a democratic obligation," she said. "If these aircraft are gathering intelligence, the public has a right to know who it is shared with and why. Refusing to answer raises serious concerns about accountability and oversight." 'It is time for the truth' Independent MP Ayoub Khan told MEE: "Secrecy in the face of the killing of journalists is a disgrace. It is time for the truth. "The government must be absolutely transparent about any intelligence it gathered before and during the events of 10 August. Khan said that if the UK was sharing intelligence with Israel, "it raises profound legal, moral and political questions". Exclusive: UK won't say if spy planes captured footage of Israeli attacks on UK charity workers Read More » He added that the government was "hiding behind the veil of 'operational confidentiality' to withhold even basic information about surveillance missions". "The government's silence is not neutral; it actively enables the targeting of civilians and journalists." MEE revealed last week that the MoD refused to disclose whether it holds video footage taken by spy planes of two Israeli attacks in Gaza on British citizens or volunteers working for British charities. The MoD cited national security and defence exemptions in its response to MEE. Officials at the ministry had previously confirmed they hold information gathered by spy planes on Israeli attacks. The MoD has been widely criticised for not disclosing such information. In April this year, the family of British aid worker James Kirby, who was killed by an Israeli drone strike in April 2024, slammed the government for refusing to release information about the attack gathered by an RAF spy plane. The MoD told The Times it had footage from a RAF spy plane that was flying over Gaza trying to locate Israeli captives on the day of the strike. The Kirby family questioned why they were not allowed to be informed about what was filmed. 'Secrecy in the face of the killing of journalists is a disgrace' - Ayoub Khan MP "I want to know who's made that decision not to make it public and why they haven't," Kirby's mother Jacqui Kirby said. The MoD has repeatedly insisted surveillance flights over Gaza are in support of "hostage rescue". Labour MP Johnson told MEE on Wednesday: "The UK must end all intelligence sharing with Israel while it carries out its genocidal actions that have caused mass civilian deaths and clear breaches of international humanitarian law. "Continuing this risks making the UK complicit in war crimes."