Syria in a Week (5 – 11 March 2019)

Syria in a Week (5 – 11 March 2019)

The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.

 

Statue!

11 March 2019

Hundreds of Syrians in the southern city of Daraa protested on Sunday at the erection of a new statue of the late President Hafez al-Assad, nearly eight years after the original was toppled at the outbreak of the Syrian conflict.

Demonstrators and witnesses said residents walked through the war-ravaged old quarter of the city calling for Assad’s overthrow, as security forces closed off the area to stop residents from other parts of the city joining the demonstration.

The government had given schools and government employees a day off on Sunday to attend a pro-government rally to inaugurate the new bronze statue of late president Hafez al-Assad, erected on the site of the previous statue felled by protesters. A witness said that the rally broke up after gunfire from near the square caused panic among attendees. A group of youths protesting in Daraa’s old quarter carried a placard reading: “It will fall. Your statue is from the past; it is not welcome here.”

The Syrian authorities have reinstalled several large statues of the elder Assad after military victories that have seen his son regain most of the territory once held by opposition forces.

 

Holding War Criminals Accountable

8 March 2019

International investigators are moving ever closer to finding justice for victims of atrocities in Syria’s eight-year war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people, the head of a UN war crimes body said.

Former French judge Catherine Marchi-Uhel,head of the International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM), said that her office had received fifteen requests from national judicial or prosecution authorities for cooperation on Syria-related cases in five countries, and amassed a million records in all. The IIIM was set up in 2016 to probe and help prosecute the most serious crimes committed in Syria. “We are progressing I have no doubt, we are going in the right direction,” said Marchi-Uhel.

During the war, large numbers have died in air strikes and bombardment of cities. The United Nations has documented repeated chemical weapons attacks on civilians, and countless have faced torture, summary execution, and disappearance.

Marchi-Uhel is building on evidence gathered by the separate UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria, a body of independent experts headed by Brazilian Paulo Pinheiro since 2011. “My mandate is to investigate the most serious crimes from all sides and do preparatory work for those most responsible for those crimes to face justice,” she said.

“I don’t sign off on any indictment. With the team we have stopped when we consider a case is ready (for prosecution) … These things take a long time. It is not a bad sign; it means authorities are working seriously.”

Lawyers representing twenty-eight Syrian refugees in Jordan this week asked the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate Syria, arguing the court has jurisdiction because Jordan is a signatory. Also, nine torture survivors submitted a criminal complaint in Sweden on 19 February against Syrian officials, invoking universal jurisdiction.

 

The Black Enclave

5 – 11 March 2019

The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) launched an attack on the Islamic State’s final enclave in eastern Syria on Sunday, aiming at wiping out the last shred of its territorial rule that once spanned a third of Syria and Iraq. Although al-Baghoz is the last residential area controlled by the group, ISIS still constitutes a major security threat through its activities in other remote area and ability to launch guerrilla attacks. The SDF paused their advance towards the surrounded pocket more than once to allow for the exit of civilians, including the wives and children of the group’s fighters. The SDF said that more than four thousand jihadists surrendered last month and tens of thousands of civilians were evacuated.

The United Nations said on Friday that more than sixty-two thousand people displaced by fighting around the ISIS enclave have flooded al-Hol camp, with five thousand and two hundred people arriving between 5-7 March and thousands more expected.

The weather is cold and rainy and there is a shortage of tents and supplies. Dozens of children have died on the way to the camp. The International Rescue Committee (IRC) on Friday said al-Hol was at “breaking point”. Those arriving in al-Hol are in “extremely poor health” with malnutrition, diarrhea, and skin diseases.

 

Safe Zone on Cold Fire

6-8 March 2019

Turkey cannot accept control of a planned safe zone in northern Syria being given to anyone else, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday. If the United States could not take back the weapons it had given to the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) in Syria, it should give them to Turkey.

Fawza Youssef, a senior Kurdish politician, said that the Kurdish-led authorities in northern Syria want a multinational force to deploy at the Turkish border and reject the creation of a large “safe zone” that Turkey hopes to control. The Kurdish-led authorities have proposed their idea in talks with US officials while stressing the need for continued joint efforts against ISIS, which is on the brink of losing its last enclave in eastern Syria.

The Kurdish-led authorities were left scrambling for a strategy to protect their region from Turkey in December when President Donald Trump abruptly declared his intention to withdraw all US forces.

Since then, the US has partially reversed that decision and will keep two hundred troops in Syria to join what is expected to be a total commitment of about eight hundred to one thousand five hundred troops from European allies to set up and observe a safe zone in the northeast.

In a related context, General Joseph Votel, Commander of United States Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Thursday that he was under no pressure to withdraw forces from Syria by any specific date, after President Donald Trump ordered the drawdown of most US troops from Syria. “What is driving the withdrawal of course is our mission, which is the defeat of ISIS, and so that is our principal focus, and that is making sure that we protect our forces, that we don’t withdraw in a manner that increases the risk to our forces,” Votel said.

“There is not pressure on me to meet a specific date at this particular time,” Votel added.

 

Slow Naturalization

4 March 2019

Adel Jubeir, the Saudi Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, said on Monday it was too early to restore diplomatic ties with Syria or reinstate Damascus to the Arab League without progress on a political process to end the eight-year-old war. “This (reopening the embassy) is related to progress on the political process, so it is still early,” Jubeir told a joint press conference with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Qatar’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said he discussed Syria and Libya with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov who is visiting Doha, the first stop in a Gulf tour. A political solution in Syria is the only option for the war-torn country, Al Thani said.

The Arab League suspended Syria’s participation seven years ago, and recently said that Syria’s restoration requires consensus of member states.

 

Return Guarantor!

9 March 2019

UNHCR Commissioner Filippo Grandi said the United Nations refugee agency should have a bigger presence inside Syria to observe and help refugees returning from abroad and from displacement within the war-torn country. After almost eight years of fighting, President Bashar al-Assad now controls most of Syria and the front lines appear stable for now between government territory and two big enclaves in the north and east still outside Damascus’s control.

“It is important that in areas of return, organizations like UNHCR are present and can observe the return, can have access to the returnees, and can help them address some of the problems they face,” Grandi said in Beirut, as the Syrian conflict approaches its eighth anniversary next week. “Without that presence, there is an element of confidence that is missing in the return of the people,” he added. Grandi also said that UNHCR was working with the Syrian government and its Russian ally on these matters.

Britain’s foreign office minister for the Middle East Alistair Burt said on Saturday the Syrian government had not so far done enough to make Syria a safe place for returnees. “It is clear (Assad) does not want to see many of his refugees return,” Burt told the BBC. “It is essential there will be no reconstruction support from UK and EU until there is a political settlement that goes some way to meeting the needs of those people,” he added.

Syria in a Week  (25 February – 4 March 2019)

Syria in a Week (25 February – 4 March 2019)

The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.

Entering the ISIS Pocket

4 March 2019

The Kurdish-Arab Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) cautiously advanced on Monday inside al-Baghoz town, the last ISIS pocket in eastern Syria, accusing the group of using civilians as human shields.

With support from the US-led international coalition planes, the SDF have pressed on with their “last offensive” launched on Friday against jihadists who refused to surrender and are currently encircled inside al-Baghoz.

In recent weeks, thousands of people left al-Baghoz, most of them civilian family members of the jihadists. They were settled in camps run by the SDF in north east of Syria, while suspected fighters were detained.

By taking control of the whole town, the SDF will pave the way for the end of the “caliphate” declared by ISIS in 2014 over vast areas it controlled in Syria and Iraq – estimated to be around the size of Britain.

Winning this battle does not mean the end of the group’s threat, in light of its ability to mobilize sleeper cells in liberated areas and spread in the vast Syrian desert.

Return is Subject to Change

4 March 2019

The Foreign Minister of Qatar Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani and his Russian counterpart affirmed their commitment to a political solution in Syria.

“We are committed to a political solution in Syria that is acceptable to the Syrian people,” said al-Thani in a joint press conference in the Qatari capital Doha.

He added that his country’s position in regards to reinstating Syria in the Arab League has not changed. “We explained the reasons in the past. There were grounds for suspending Syria’s membership and the grounds are still present. Nothing happened to make us change this decision. We are committed to a political solution that is acceptable to the Syrian people, in which Syria’s seat would be given to a political leadership representative of all the Syrian people,” al-Thani said.

Lavrov said that there is no need to form new workgroups on Syria in light of the active framework of the Astana process. He added that his country is in touch with all countries in the region regarding Syria “not just through the Astana process (talks)… We don’t see a need to form a new international communication group on the Syrian crisis.”

Counter-Revenge

3 March 2019

Thirty-three soldiers from government forces and allied fighters were killed on Sunday in attacks carried out by jihadists against Syrian government forces in Idlib governorate in north-west Syria, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

This is the bloodiest escalation in the area after Russia and Turkey signed an agreement in September to establish a demilitarized zone in the outskirts of Idlib.

According to the SOHR, elements in Anssar al-Tawhid, who are allied to Qaeda-affiliated Hurras al-Din, launched the first attack early morning on Sunday in north Hama governorate in which six jihadists were killed. The attack targeted two government posts in al-Masasneh town and killed 27 government soldiers and allied militants.

In the adjacent Lattakia governorate, six government soldiers were killed on Sunday in attacks carried out by Tahrir al-Sham (previously Nusra), according to the SOHR.

Tahrir al-Sham and less influential jihadist groups control two thirds of the demilitarized zone, which includes parts of Idlib governorate, the western countryside of Aleppo, the northern countryside of Hama, and the north-eastern countryside of Lattakia. Tahrir al-Sham also controls the bulk of Idlib governorate.

President of the Parliament in Amman

3 March 2019

The twenty-ninth session of the Arab Parliamentary Union kicked off in Amman, Jordan on Sunday. Seventeen heads of Arab parliaments participated, including the head of the People’s Assembly in Syria, which is still outside the Arab League amid divisions on reinstating it in the organization.

The President of the Syrian People’s Assembly Hammoudeh Sabbagh said that his country would be victorious in its war on terrorism. “Do not be afraid or sad in regards to Syria. In this country you have brothers who will definitely eliminate terrorism, rendering it the last lesion in modern history. Their victory will be the victory for all Arabs and the region. They will help the whole world in getting rid of this monster that was created by the most powerful forces of aggression in the world,” Sabbagh said.

“Four wars are waged on the Arab people in Syria; the war of armed terrorism, the war of embargo, the war of contemporary media which uses the internet to invade us inside our homes through coordinated misinformation and intensive psychological attacks, and finally the war of war merchants and those affected by the near decisive victory,” he added.

Syria’s membership in the Arab League was suspended at the onset of the conflict in the country in 2011.

“There must be active movement to reach a political solution that guarantees the unity of the people and land of Syria and restores Syria’s well-being, so that it can take back its role as a fundamental pillar of stability in the region,” the Speaker of the Jordanian Parliament Atef Tarawneh said in his opening remarks.

Chemical Weapons in Douma

2 March 2019

 The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said in a report published on Friday that chlorine was used in an attack that targeted the Syrian city of Douma in April of 2018.

The OPCW said in its final report that there are “reasonable grounds that the use of a toxic chemical as a weapon has taken place on 7 April 2018” during the attack on Douma in eastern Ghouta near Damascus, adding that “this toxic chemical contained chlorine gas.”

The report also said the two chlorine containers fell on a roof in Douma.

The report’s summary confirms information in a preliminary report published in July of 2018 – based on testimonies provided by doctors – that the attack left forty people killed.

The report does not point fingers at any party because this was not part of the mandate of the OPCW at that time. However, the organization was later granted the authority to identify who was responsible for any chemical weapon attacks after 2014.

The OPCW said that it did not find any evidence of using nerve gases previously used by parties of the Syrian conflict.

A team of OPCW inspectors collected more than one hundred samples from seven locations in Douma, when they entered the city a few weeks after the attack.

Witnesses told the inspectors that “forty-three people died as a result of the suspected chemical attacks, most of them appeared in a video lying on the ground in several floors of a residential building and in front of this building.”

The OPCW refuted the government account which said that the poisonous gas came from a chemical weapons facility affiliated with Syrian armed factions and a depot in the area, which the inspectors were allowed to visit.

French ISIS Militant Killed

28 February 2019

A French jihadist was killed in an airstrike by the US-led international coalition against ISIS on the Syrian village of al-Baghoz, the last ISIS stronghold, according to a statement from the coalition on Thursday.

The coalition did not reveal when Abu Anas was killed, a.k.a Fabian Clan, who was the media official for the radical group.

French media reported his death the previous Wednesday, but the news was not officially confirmed at the time.

According to French media reports, his voice was recognized in a voice recording in which ISIS claimed responsibility for the Paris attacks in 2015 that left one hundred and twenty-nine people dead in Bataclan Theater and pubs and cafés in the eastern French capital, in addition to one person near the Stade de France.

French media also said that Jean Michelle Clan was severely injured in the airstrike that killed his brother, but nothing was mentioned about this in the coalition’s tweet.

“The Distant End”

28 February 2019

The UN Special Envoy to Syria Geir Pedersen said on Thursday that the “conflict is far from over,” in this country suggesting a joint international forum of international powers to help bring peace to Syria.

In his first intervention before the UN Security Council, he said that “an international forum through which the major countries will work on outstanding issues will help resolve these issues and lead a political process led by Syrians.”

Pedersen, who took office in January, said “whole parts of the land are still out of state control,” and the organization of the Islamic state could “be reborn from under the ashes.”

He said that “eleven million Syrians are in need of humanitarian assistance,” raising at the same time the concerns of the people regarding the missing and detainees.

He also expressed the hope that a meeting of the Constitutional Committee would be held “as soon as possible,” while the establishment of the committee remains in force. Pedersen said the constitutional commission “increases the likelihood of relaunching the political process.”

According to the UN plan, the Constitutional Commission, which is supposed to lead the constitutional review process and electoral process, should include one hundred and fifty members: fifty of whom are selected by the government, fifty are selected by the opposition, and fifty are selected by the United Nations Special Envoy to take into account the views of experts and representatives of civil society.

It has yet to be agreed on the content of the third list, which is causing friction between Damascus and the United Nations.

During a UN Security Council meeting, all members expressed their full support for the UN envoy, but expressed differing views on the situation in the country.

Safe Return is an Illusion

28 February 2019

UN legal experts said on Thursday in Geneva that the ongoing war crimes and crimes against humanity in Syria do not allow refugees to go back to their homes despite the decline in violence.

Members on a UN commission of inquiry on Syria said that Syrians are not protected by law in any place, whether they live in areas controlled by the government, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, or Tahrir al-Sham, which is affiliated with al-Qaeda.

Commission Chairman Paulo Pinheiro said in a press conference that more than seven years of hostilities have generated security vacuums, elevating violence and lack of law and creating “conditions that render the possibility of safe and sustainable return completely illusionary.”

More than five and a half million Syrians fled to neighboring countries since the onset of the war, according to the UN refugee agency.

Al-Assad Invites Zarif

27 February 2019

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Wednesday invited Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif to visit Damascus, state news agency IRNA reported on Wednesday, without specifying a date for the trip.

Zarif tendered his resignation two days ago but Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani rejected it on Wednesday, calling it “against national interests”.

Rouhani told Zarif in a letter published on the electronic government website: “I consider accepting your resignation against national interest and reject it.”

The commander of the Quds Corps, which is part of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Qassem Soleimani said that Zarif was the main person in charge of foreign policy, and stressed that Zarif’s not attending the meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad “was not intentional.”

Netanyahu Warning

27 February 2019

During a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Wednesday that focused mainly on the Syrian conflict, the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu cautioned against the “threat” posed by Iran, Syria’s main ally alongside Russia.

“Iran is the greatest threat to the stability and security in the region and we will do what we can to keep this danger away,” Netanyahu said at the beginning of the Kremlin meeting.

“It is very important to discuss issues related to the region’s security,” Putin said.

Iran, Russia, and Hezbollah are Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s allies. Netanyahu has repeatedly said the he would not allow Iran to use Syria as a military base to launch attacks against Israel.

Netanyahu was accompanied by his National Security Council Director Meir Ben-Shabat and head of military intelligence Tamir Heiman.

Prior to his Moscow visit, Netanyahu said the talks will focus on “preventing Iran from entrenching in Syria, the entrenchment of a country which explicitly says that its goal is to wipe us out.”

On Sunday, the Israeli prime minister said talks with Putin will be “very important” to ensure Israel’s freedom to act against Iran and Hezbollah in Syria while avoiding frictions with Russian forces.

Syria in a Week (18 – 25 February 2019)

Syria in a Week (18 – 25 February 2019)

The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.

Evacuation from “Hell”

25 February 2019

The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are expecting the evacuation of more civilians from the last ISIS pocket in east Syria, as the exit of thousands of people in recent days is adding another burden on the Kurds and aid organizations.

The completion of the evacuation should set the countdown for the SDF to resolve the battle, either through the surrender of the jihadists or by launching the final offensive, in a prelude to declaring the end of a “caliphate” that has caused terror for years.

The head of the SDF’s media office Mustafa Bali expects that there are “around five thousand people inside,” according to the latest update based on information gathered from evacuees recently.

During its battles with ISIS, the SDF arrested hundreds of foreign fighters (non-Syrian and non-Iraqi) from various nationalities, including British, French, and German. The SDF has repeatedly demanded the concerned countries to take back their citizens and assume responsibility for them.

Ending the battle in Deir Azzor does not mean the end of the group’s danger, due to its ability to mobilize sleeper cells in liberated areas and disperse in the vast Syrian desert.

Iraqi ISIS Fighters Back in their Home Country

24 February 2019

US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have handed to Iraq two hundred and eighty Iraqi and foreign detainees in recent days, Iraq’s military said in a statement on Sunday.

An Iraqi military colonel confirmed to Reuters that one hundred and thirty people were transferred on Sunday, adding to the one hundred and fifty transferred on Thursday. They included the first known transfers of non-Iraqi detainees to Iraq, but it was unclear if they will remain in Iraqi custody.

There are meant to be more such handovers under an agreement to transfer a group of some five hundred detainees held by the SDF in Syria, Iraqi military sources said.

The Iraqi military has said only Iraqi nationals were handed over by the SDF.

Around eight hundred foreign fighters who joined ISIS, including many Iraqis, are being held in Syria by the SDF, the group has said. More than two thousand family members are also in camps, with dozens more arriving each day.

Sixteen Workers, One Cylinder

24 February 2019

A gas cylinder explosion inside a warehouse in al-Hol camp in north-east Syria injured sixteen workers, most of them suffered from second degree burns, the International Rescue Committee told the AFP on Sunday.

The camp, which is overseen by the SDF and located in Hasaka governorate, holds more than forty-five thousand people, including five thousand people evacuated since Wednesday from the last pocket under ISIS control in eastern Syria.

The fire destroyed more than two hundred family tents stored inside the warehouse before it was extinguished.

Funeral for Refugees in Canada

23 February 2019

Hundreds of people attended the funeral on Saturday of seven Syrian refugee children killed in a house fire earlier this week in the eastern Canadian city of Halifax.

The Bahro family had moved to Canada in 2017, after being sponsored by a Halifax refugee society, and a widely watched YouTube video showed them being welcomed at an airport with flowers and balloons. The children ranged in age from fifteen years old to four months.

The fire also left their father in critical condition in hospital and their mother was released from hospital.

The cause of the fire remains unknown to authorities, who say the investigation could take months to complete.

Russian Train, Syrian Weapons

23 February 2019

A Russian train carrying various weapons captured by the Russian army from Syrian militants left Moscow on Saturday on a tour to parade Russia’s military gains in Syria.

The train headed from Moscow to Crimea before making its way to the Russian far east and then back to Moscow, visiting 60 cities along the 28,500-kilometer-long journey.

On Saturday, Muscovites were invited to see the nine-trailer train, which carries tanks and other military vehicles captured from Syrian rebels and jihadists, in addition to drones and various other weapons.

“The aim is to show a maximum amount of people in our country the success of the Russian army in the fight with international terrorism,” said Russian Colonel Dmitry Serobaba.

Aleksey, a 31-year-old railway worker, brought his toddler son to see the train. He brought his son “so that he can see that we have a strong army” and said “I am really proud that they are winning in this far away region.”

On Friday, President Vladimir Putin congratulated Russian war veterans and serving soldiers on their role in Syria. “By freeing Syrian lands from bandits and saving peaceful civilians, our soldiers are acting boldly, decisively and effectively,” he said at a Kremlin ceremony.

Russia deployed in Syria in September of 2015 upon a request from Syrian authorities. The Russian intervention changed the course of the eight-year conflict and left more than three hundred and sixty thousand dead.

Staying in Light of Withdrawal

22 February 2019

US administration officials said that the United States will not withdraw all its troops from Syria, contrary to what was previously declared, and will leave about four hundred troops instead of the two hundred previously announced.

The White House spokeswoman Sara Sanders said on Sunday that only two hundred troops would remain in Syria as a “peacekeeping group.”

US President Donald Trump, in December, ordered a withdrawal of the two thousand American troops in Syria, saying they had defeated Islamic State militants there.

Syria’s Kurds praised the decision to leave US troops in the area, describing it as a “positive decision.”

The acting US Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan met his Turkish counterpart Hulusi Akar at the Pentagon on Friday.

Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staffs Joseph Dunford said that the war against ISIS, in which numerous international parties take part, would continue. The resources for this war will be proportional with the magnitude of the threats.

Trump had declared in December victory over ISIS in Syria, although there are still thousands of the groups fighters defending their last stronghold.

Return After Absence

21 February 2019

Ayman Alloush, the Chargé d’affaires of the Syrian embassy in Amman, Jordan, handed over his country’s approval to participate in the conference of the Union of the Arab Parliaments, scheduled to be held next month.

Alloush said he met with the Nassar al-Qaisi, Deputy Speaker of the Jordanian House of Representatives, and handed him a letter from the Chairman of the Syrian People’s Assembly Hammoudeh Sabbagh.

The letter mentioned “participation with pleasure and gratitude in the conference, as Syria is the first country to receive an invitation to participate in the conference,” Alloush added.

Syria’s problem is with some Arab government and not with the people, Allsoush said, adding that the invitation from Jordan is not only from the people, as it carries a political message that Damascus appreciates.

Regarding his country’s participation in the Arab summit if it receives an invitation, Alloush said: “We hope that we do not go there just to take photographs. We hope Arab governments can take decisions that serve the region and its peoples.”

“Syria does not look backward, but forward as President Bashar al-Assad wants,” he added.

The Speaker of the Jordanian House of Representatives Atif al-Tarawneh said recently that he invited the Chairman of the Syrian People’s Assembly Hammoudeh Sabbagh to attend the conference for the Union of Arab Parliaments, which will be held in Amman in March under the slogan “Jerusalem is the eternal capital of Palestine.”

Syria’s membership in the Arab league was suspended with the onset of the conflict in the country in 2011. It is still outside the league, and Arab countries are divided on its return to the organization.

Withdrawal of the Passport

21 February 2019

Britain stripped a teenager who travelled to Syria to join ISIS of her citizenship on security grounds, triggering a row over the ramifications of leaving a 19-year-old mother with a jihadist fighter’s child to fend for herself in a war zone.

The fate of Shamima Begum, who was found in a detention camp in Syria last week, has illustrated the ethical, legal and security conundrum that governments face when dealing with the families of militants who swore to destroy the West.

With ISIS depleted and Kurdish-led militia poised to seize the group’s last holdout in eastern Syria, Western capitals are trying to work out what to do with battle-hardened foreign jihadist fighters, and their wives and children.

Begum, who gave birth to a son at the weekend, prompted a public backlash in Britain by appearing unrepentant about seeing severed heads and even claiming the 2017 Manchester suicide attack, which killed twenty-two people, was justified.

She had pleaded to be repatriated back to her family in London and said that she was not a threat.

But ITV News published a February 19 letter from the interior ministry to her mother that said Home Secretary Sajid Javid had taken the decision to deprive Begum of her British citizenship. “In light of the circumstances of your daughter… the order removing her British citizenship has subsequently been made,” the letter said.

Against “Autonomy”

19 February 2019

Bouthaina Shaaban, a senior advisor to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, on Tuesday flatly rejected the idea of giving Syrian Kurds a measure of autonomy, saying such a move would open the door to the partition of the country.

The Kurdish-led authority that runs much of north and east Syria has presented a road map for a deal with Assad in recent meetings with his key ally Russia.

The Kurds want to safeguard their autonomous region inside a decentralized state when US troops currently backing them pull out. They also hope a deal with Damascus would dissuade neighboring Turkey from attacking them.

But when asked on Tuesday if Damascus was willing to do a deal that would hand the Kurds some measure of autonomy, Bouthaina Shaaban flatly rejected the suggestion.

“Autonomy means the partition of Syria. We have no way to partition Syria,” she told Reuters on the sidelines of a Middle East conference in Moscow organized by the Valdai Discussion Club.

“Syria is a country that is a melting pot for all people and all people are equal in front of the Syrian law and in front of the Syrian constitution,” she added, calling the Kurds “a precious and very important part of the Syrian people”.

Her comments come after Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad expressed optimism last month over dialogue with Kurdish groups, and suggest the Kurds will face an uphill struggle to wring concessions from Damascus, which has said it wants to retake every inch of territory lost during eight years of war.

Shaaban sat next to Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister at the conference and lavishly praised Moscow for its Syria intervention.

She was scathing about Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his idea of carving out “a safe zone” in northeast Syria however.

Syria in a Week (18 – 24 December 2018)

Syria in a Week (18 – 24 December 2018)

The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.

 

Trump Withdraws

19 – 23 December 2018

Reuters

US President Donald Trump overrode his top national security advisors, blindsided US ground commanders, and stunned lawmakers and allies with his order for US troops to leave Syria, a decision that upends US policy in the Middle East. Trump defended on Thursday his surprise decision to declare victory over ISIS in Syria and completely withdraw US troops from the country, amid criticism from some Republicans and concern from allies and some US military commanders. Trump tweeted that he was fulfilling a promise from his 2016 presidential campaign to leave Syria. Echoing a central plank of his foreign policy–that he seeks to stop the United States being taken advantage of–he said the United States was doing the work of other countries, including Russia and Iran, with little in return. “Does the USA want to be the policeman of the Middle East, getting nothing but spending precious lives and trillions of dollars protecting others who, in almost all cases, do not appreciate what we are doing? Do we want to be there forever? Time for others to finally fight,” he tweeted.

A US official said the United States would probably end its air campaign against extremists in Syria when it pulls out its troops. The US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis opposed the decision and abruptly announced on Thursday that he was resigning after meeting with the president. In a candid letter to Trump, the retired Marine general emphasized the importance of “showing respect” to allies that have voiced surprise and concern about the president’s decision. Democrats joined several republicans in Congress in urging the president to reverse course, saying the withdrawal would strengthen the hand of Russia and Iran in Syria and enable a resurgence of ISIS. Republican Senator Lindsey Graham on Friday called for immediate US Senate hearings on President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw all US troops from Syria, which prompted the resignation of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis. The surprise announcement by Trump that he would withdraw roughly 2,000 troops has felled a pillar of US policy in the Middle East. Critics say Trump’s decision will make it harder to find a diplomatic solution to Syria’s seven-year-old conflict.

US officials, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said that the US military ground commanders are concerned over the effects of a rapid withdrawal and that they were taken by surprise with the troop withdrawal decision. A US official said that all US State Department personnel would be evacuated from Syria within twenty-four hours, after the White House said it had started withdrawing US forces. The official said the US plans to pull military forces out of the country once the final stages of the last operation against ISIS is complete, and that the time-frame for the troop pullout is expected to be between sixty to one hundred days. The US president said on Sunday that he spoke with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan about “a slow and highly coordinated” withdrawal of US troops from Syria. Trump said he and Erdogan also discussed “heavily expanded” trade between the United States and Turkey, after the two NATO allies’ relationship went into a tailspin over the summer. The office of Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi said on Saturday that United States Secretary of State Mike Pompeo assured the Prime Minister that the US is still committed to fighting ISIS in Iraq and other areas despite its planned withdrawal of troops from Syria.

 

Turkey on Standby

20-23 December 2018

Reuters

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan “cautiously” welcomed Washington’s decision to withdraw its troops from Syria, adding that his country would postpone a military operation against Kurdish fighters in northeast Syria. Reuters reported that Turkey began reinforcing its positions on both sides of its border with Syria on Sunday, as Ankara and Washington agreed to coordinate a US withdrawal from Syria. The heightened military activity comes two days after Erdogan said Turkey would postpone a planned military operation against Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) east of the Euphrates river in northern Syria following the US decision to pull out. “We have postponed our military operation against (Kurdish fighters) east of the Euphrates river until we see on the ground the result of America’s decision to withdraw from Syria,” stressing that this was not an “open-ended waiting period”.

The Turkish presidency said that Erdogan and Trump agreed on Sunday to coordinate to prevent an authority vacuum from developing as the United States withdraws from Syria. In a phone call between the two leaders, Erdogan also expressed satisfaction with steps taken by Washington regarding combating terrorism in Syria and said Turkey was ready to provide any type of support, the presidency said. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogand said on Friday that Turkey will take over the fight against ISIS in Syria as the United States withdraws its troops, in the latest upheaval wrought by Washington’s abrupt policy shift.

 

Russia Welcomes

19 – 22 December 2018

Reuters

The Kremlin said on Friday that it did not understand what the United States’ next steps in Syria would be, and that chaotic and unpredictable decision-making was creating discomfort in international affairs. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow wanted more information about the planned withdrawal of US troops from Syria, announced unexpectedly by President Donald Trump this week. In Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin said he largely agreed with Trump that ISIS had been defeated, but added there was a risk it could recover. He also questioned what Trump’s announcement meant in practical terms, saying there was no sign yet of a withdrawal of US forces, whose presence in Syria Moscow calls illegitimate.

TASS news agency reported the Russian Foreign Ministry as saying on Wednesday that a decision to withdraw US troops from Syria creates prospects for a political settlement of the crisis there. TASS also cited the ministry as saying that an initiative to form a Syrian constitutional committee had a bright future with the US troop withdrawal. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi said that the US military presence in Syria had been “a mistake, illogical and a source of tension”, in Tehran’s first reaction to President Donald Trump’s planned pull-out.

 

Kurds Are Losing

19 – 23 December 2018

Reuters

After being among the biggest winners of Syria’s war, the Kurds stand to lose most from the US decision to withdraw forces who have helped them battle ISIS militants and deter Ankara and Damascus. With the US help, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have captured large parts of northern and eastern Syria from ISIS, but warn that the extremists still pose a threat even if President Donald Trump has declared their defeat.

The US-backed SDF spearheaded by the People’s Protection Units (YPG) said a Turkish attack would force it to divert fighters from the battle against ISIS to protect its territory. The co-president of the Syrian Democratic Council Ilham Ahmed said on Friday that the Kurdish-led forces in northern Syria may not be able to continue to hold ISIS prisoners if the situation in the region gets out of control after a US pullout. The US-backed SDF would have to withdraw fighters from the battle against ISIS to protect its borders in the event of a Turkish attack, spokesman Mustafa Bali told Reuters on Friday.

French presidency officials met representatives of the Kurdish-dominated SDF in Paris on Friday and assured them of French support, an Elysee palace official said. The SDF officials included Ilham Ahmed and Riad Darrar. “The advisers passed on a message of support and solidarity and explained to them the talks France had with US authorities to continue the fight against ISIS,” an Elysee official said.

The Syrian Democratic Forces, which have been fighting the militant group with US support for three years, said the withdrawal of troops would leave Syrians stuck between “the claws of hostile parties” fighting for territory in the seven-year war. The SDF are in the final stages of a campaign to recapture areas seized by the militants, but they face the threat of a military incursion by Turkey, which considers the Kurdish YPG fighters who spearhead the force to be a terrorist group, and Syrian forces committed to restoring government control over the whole country. The SDF said the battle against ISIS had reached a decisive phase that required more support, not a precipitate US withdrawal, which threatens to “revive” and lead to a “political and military vacuum in the area.”

 

Europe is the Last to Know

19 – 23 December 2018

Reuters

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Sunday he deeply regretted US President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw US troops from Syria. This abrupt shift in Washington’s policy in the Middle East alarmed US allies. French Defense Minister Florence Parly said US President Donald Trump took “an extremely grave decision” to pull troops from Syria, adding: “We do not share the analyses that ISIS has been annihilated.”

France and Germany, US allies in NATO, warned that the US change of course risked damaging the campaign against ISIS which seized big swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014-2015 but have now been beaten back to a sliver of Syrian territory.

A German defense ministry spokesman said in a news conference on Friday that the United States’ decision to withdraw from Syria had no direct impact on Germany’s mandate in the fight against ISIS. A government spokeswoman said that German would have found it helpful if the United States had consulted with other governments before deciding to withdraw US troops from Syria. Additionally, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Thursday that the United States’ sudden change of course on Syria is surprising and risks damaging the fight against ISIS. Similarly, British Defense Minister Tobias Ellwood said on Wednesday that he strongly disagrees with Trump, adding that ISIS “has morphed into other forms of extremism and the threat is very much alive.”

 

ISIS Attacks Once Again

19 – 21 December 2018

Reuters

ISIS launched an attack on Friday on positions held by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in Hajjin in southeastern Syria and the US-led coalition mounted air strikes in the area, said Mustafa Bali, Director of the Media Center of the SDF. “ISIS launched a massive attack, fierce fighting is going on there… Our forces liberated only thirty-five percent of Hajjin,” said Bali on Twitter. ISIS used car bombs and dozens of militants in the attack near Abu Khaser village in the Hajjin area of southeastern Syria, where the SDF and coalition are battling to wipe out the last ISIS pocket east of the Euphrates River, Bali added.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said on Wednesday that Islamic State militants had executed nearly seven hundred prisoners in nearly two months in eastern Syria. The SOHR added that the prisoners were among one thousand and three hundred and fifty civilians and fighters that the group had been holding in territory near the Iraqi border. SDF commander-in-chief Mazloum Kobani told Reuters last week that at least five thousand ISIS fighters remain holed up in the enclave, including many foreigners who appear ready to fight to the death.

 

Constitutional Committee Fumbling

19 December 2018

Reuters

Russia, Iran and Turkey, the supporters of the main sides in the Syrian conflict, failed on Tuesday to agree on the makeup of a UN-sponsored Syrian Constitutional Committee but called for it to convene early next year to kick off a viable peace process. After the trio met UN Syria peace envoy Staffan de Mistura, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov read out a joint statement saying that the new initiative should be guided “by a sense of compromise and constructive engagement”. The ministers had hoped to seal their joint proposal on a committee–which could usher in elections – and win UN blessing for it. But the statement by the three made no mention of the composition of the panel, pointing to lingering disagreement over lists of candidates. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, speaking to Turkish state media, said that the three countries had made “important contributions” to the creation of the panel and that suggested names were assessed.

De Mistura, addressing a separate news conference, made clear the three powers had not nailed down a workable political forum yet, after years of abortive attempts at ending a war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced around half of Syria’s population. “I believe there is an extra mile to go in the marathon effort to ensure the necessary package for a credible, balanced, and inclusive constitutional committee… to be established under UN auspices in Geneva,” de Mistura added.

 

 

Syria in a Week (29 October 2018)

Syria in a Week (29 October 2018)

The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.

The Istanbul Summit and Syria: Four Leaders and Four Positions

27 October 2018

Leaders of Turkey, Russia, France, and Germany called for preserving the ceasefire in Idilb governorate and a “political solution” for the conflict in Syria during a summit they held in Istanbul, Turkey on Saturday.

The meeting “stressed the importance of a lasting ceasefire (in Idlib) and the need to continue the fight against terrorism,” said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the final statement of the summit.

The statement praised the “progress” achieved in Idlib in regards to the establishment of a demilitarized zone and the withdrawal of fanatic groups according to the Turkish-Russian agreement reached in September.

The summit was attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, in addition to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The four leaders affirmed their determination “to work together to create favorable circumstances to preserve peace and security in Syria” and “support a political solution and strengthen international consensus on this issue.”

They also called for “the formation of a constitutional committee and for it to convene in Geneva before the end of the year if conditions are favorable.” The final statement also said that the four countries “stressed the need to create conditions that provide for the voluntary and safe return of Syrian refugees.”

It is up to the Syrian people “inside and abroad” to decide the fate of President Bashar al-Assad, said Erdogan at the end of the Summit on Saturday.

The French president called on Russia to apply very clear pressure on the Syrian government to “ensure a permanent ceasefire in Idlib,” saying “we are counting on Russia to exert a very clear pressure on the government which very clearly owes it its survival.”

Moscow “reserves the right to help the Syrian government in eliminating any terrorist threat in Idlib in case the fanatics launch an attack,” said the Russian president in a press release.

“We have to push the political process forward, which should lead to free and open elections to all Syrians, including those abroad,” said the German chancellor.

The summit was not attended by two active countries in the Syrian conflict, the two rivals Iran and the United States. However, Macron called US President Donald Trump on Thursday to coordinate positions.

On the issue of Russian influence after victories of the Syrian government, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Saturday that Russia cannot “replace the United States” in the Middle East.

 

Bombing Idlib: Who’s Responsible?

26 October 2018

The military leader of the opposition National Front for Liberations (NFL) blamed government forces for bombing the buffer zone in Hama and Idlib governorates on Saturday.

The military leader, who asked for his name not to be identified, told a news agency: “government forces continue their breach of the Sochi agreement by bombing demilitarized areas controlled by NFL factions. Twenty-five shells fell on the outskirts of Mork city in the northern countryside of Hama, and the town of al-Taman’eh in the southeastern countryside of Idlib was also bombed.”

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said that “government forces targeted the village of al-Raffeh in the southern countryside of Idlib with artillery bombardment, killing seven civilians including three children and three women.”

Tahrir al-Sham (previously Nusra) controls this town which is located outside the demilitarized zone established by Russia and Turkey according to an agreement reached on 17 September. The agreement spared the governorate of Idlib a military offensive that Damascus hinted to for weeks.

The SOHR said the number of deaths is “the highest” in Idlib since the Russian-Turkish agreement.

The western outskirts of Aleppo city witnessed an exchange of gunfire between the factions and government forces for two consecutive days, according to the SOHR.

A child was killed in government bombing of the Kafr Hamra town in the western countryside of Aleppo, while one week before that three civilians were killed as a result of shells launched by opposition factions.

Since the agreement was announced, Idlib and surrounding areas have witnessed calmness on battle fronts to a great extent, however, there has been intermittent bombing from both sides.

The Russian-Turkish agreement provides for the establishment of a demilitarized zone in Idlib and surrounding areas. The withdrawal of heavy weapons has been completed as a first step, but jihadist factions were supposed to evacuate by mid-October.

Although jihadist have not withdrawn yet, both Moscow and Ankara have stressed that the agreement is being implemented.

Despite the agreement, Damascus has reiterated its intention to regain control of all Syrian territory, including Idlib.

Syria “will not allow Idlib to turn into new caves for terrorists,” the official Syrian news agency SANA reported the Syrian UN representative Bashar al-Jaafari as saying during a meeting of the UN Security Council on Friday.

“It is normal for the Syrian government to fight terrorism in Idlib to rid its people of terrorism and extend its sovereignty over it,” he said.

Idlib, which hosts around three million people, is the last stronghold of opposition and jihadist factions in Syria. The majority of Idlib is controlled by Tahrir al-Sham.

 

Bombing Before the Ink Dried

28 October 2018

Turkish forces bombed positions of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) on the eastern bank of the Euphrates river in northern Syria, according to the Anatolia news agency on Sunday.

The news agency said that the bombardment targeted the Zor Maghar area, east of Ain al-Arab in northern Syria, and that it meant to prevent “terrorist activities”.

Turkey carried out an offensive against the YPG in the Syrian city of Afrin last year, and repeatedly said that it would target the YPG east of the Euphrates.

The bombardment came during the Istanbul summit as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened to target “terrorist”, in a reference to Kurds east of the Euphrates.

Erdogan gave an ultimatum on Friday for those who are jeopardizing the security of Turkish border, and said that Turkey is determined to focus on Syrian Kurds east of the Euphrates.

Addressing a group of regional leaders in the Justice and Development Party in Ankara, Erdogan added that Turkey will focus on east of the Euphrates in Syria and not Manbej because of the presence of the YPG.

Turkey considers the YPG a terrorist group.

 

“The Sun Rises from Moscow”

26 October 2018

The chief negotiator of the Syrian opposition said during his visit to Moscow on Friday that the opposition is “seeking to reach an understanding” with Russia to find a political solution that ends the ongoing war in the country since 2011.

“We have strived and will continue to strive for dialogue and negotiations with Russia to achieve a political solution,” Hariri told reporters before he met the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

“We think it is in Russia’s interest right now to look for a comprehensive political solution, it is in our interest as well,” he said.

“We all know that Russia is a country that has major influence on the Syrian issue, and influence outside the Syrian issue … we still believe that Russia is capable of seizing this this historic moment to help fix the relationship with the Syrian people.”

Hariri said that fixing this relationship requires Moscow “to adopt a rational political solution that not only takes the interests of the government, but also takes into account the people who revolted for eight years and paid a heavy price.”

Since the Russian military intervention in Syria to support President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, the Syrian opposition have repeatedly characterized this intervention as an “occupation”.

But Hariri’s remarks signaled the Syrian opposition’s readiness for more concessions following the government’s battlefield successes.

After the meeting between Hariri and Lavrov, Moscow said their talks had a “frank exchange of opinions” and that they stressed the need to settle the crisis as soon as possible.

 

Confrontation over the Syrian Constitution

25 October 2018

The UN Security Council held a session on Friday called for by the United States to discuss the Syrian crisis after Damascus refused the formation of a UN-sponsored committee to draft a new constitution.

UN Special Envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura failed to acquire the Syrian government’s approval regarding the constitutional committee, which he was commissioned to form during a Syrian dialogue conference organized by Russia in Sochi in January.

De Mistura did not attend the Security Council session in person, but was present through video conference.

However, de Mistura told the Security Council in person last week that he had decided to resign from his position by the end of November and that he would work in the remaining period to overcome obstacles facing the formation of the constitutional committee.

In the last few months, de Mistura sought to form a constitutional committee that would include one hundred and fifty members to revive the negotiation track between the two sides of the Syrian conflict.

Both Damascus and the opposition’s High Negotiations Committee presented a list of fifty representatives. De Mistura, who was commissioned to present a third list of fifty names, told the Security Council that Damascus did not approve of the name he chose to take part in the committee, stressing the need for the committee not to be dominated by any side.

After choosing the members of the committee, fifteen members, representing the three lists, will be commissioned with making “constitutional reforms,” according to de Mistura.

The Syrian government and the opposition have different views regarding the tasks of this committee. Damascus restricts its powers to discussing the current constitution, while the opposition says that its objective is to draft a new constitution.

SANA reported the Syrian Foreign Minister Waleed Moualem, who met de Mistura on Wednesday, as saying that “this whole process should be under Syrian leadership and ownership, considering that the constitution, and anything related to it, is a purely sovereign matter that will be decided on by the Syrian people themselves without any foreign intervention, by which some parties and countries seek to impose their will on the Syrian people.”

Western countries have called on the UN envoy to form this committee as soon as possible to resume the political process after it was dominated by parallel diplomatic efforts led by Russia, Turkey, and Iran.

Since 2016, de Mistura has headed nine rounds of indirect talks between Damascus and the opposition, with little progress to settle the conflict that has led to the deaths of more than three hundred and sixty thousand people since its onset in 2011.

 

A US Drone Storm on Hmeimeim

24 October 2018

The Russian deputy defense minister accused the United States of attacking the main Russian airbase in Syria. General Alexander Fomin said in a statement reported by TASS news agency that a US reconnaissance airplane took control of thirteen drones in order to attack the Russian Hmeimeim airbase in January.

TASS reported Fomin as saying during a security conference in Beijing that a US P-8 Poseidon airplane was on “manual control” of the drones as it flew near them.

On 5 January, more than twelve drones loaded with explosives attacked the Russian airbase in Hmeimiem and the marine base in Tartus west of Syria, in a night attack, according to a report from the Russian defense ministry that was released a few days after.

At that time, the Russian army said in a statement that it was able to overtake radio communication with some drones and control them, while other drones were destroyed.

The Russian army also said then that a US plane was flying over the Mediterranean and may be involved in the attack, without presenting any charges.

The Kremlin said that the presence of evidence implicating the United States in the attack on the Russian base is “extremely disturbing”.

 

ISIS Returns to Eastern Syria

28 October 2018

ISIS retook control of all areas it lost after the advance of Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which is a coalition of Kurdish and Arab factions, in the last enclave it controls in Deir Azzor governorate in eastern Syria, according to the SOHR on Sunday.

On 10 September, the SDF, with support from the US-led international coalition, launched a military operation against ISIS in the area of Hajeeen, in the eastern countryside of Deir Azzor near the Iraqi border.

These forces were able to advance and control several towns and villages. However, two weeks ago, ISIS launched a counter-attack, taking advantage of a sand storm in this desert region, according to the SOHR.

The Head of the SOHR Rami Abdurrahman told the AFP “in vast attacks that continued from Friday until early Sunday, ISIS was able to regain control over all the areas that the SDF had advanced to.”

A leader in the SDF, who did not wish to be identified, confirmed to the AFP that ISIS had indeed retaken control of all the areas it lost during the last seven weeks. He attributed this to the “sand storm and ISIS’s knowledge of the area more than our forces.”

The SDF has dispatched military reinforcement, according to the SOHR.

“Military reinforcements and heavy weaponry have been sent to the fronts. Some units will be replaced with more experienced and capable units,” said the leader in SDF, adding that “a new military campaign will be launched immediately after the reinforcements arrive.”

Since Friday, ISIS’s attacks have led to the deaths of seventy-two members of the SDF, according to the SOHR.

The battles have led to the deaths of around five hundred jihadists and more than three hundred fighters from the SDF since 10 September, according to the SOHR.

The international coalition estimates the number of ISIS fighters in the enclave to be around two thousand. The coalition spokesman Sean Ryan told the AFP on Saturday that “the sandstorm allowed an ISIS counterattack … but now the air is clear, the coalition will continue to increase air and fire support to assist our partners.”

ISIS suffered consecutive defeats in Syria in the last two years, and now only controls a few small pockets at the far end of Deir Azzor and in the Syrian desert east of Homs.

 

Flashfloods and Hell

28 October 2018

Anatolia news agency reported that six immigrants died on the Turkish border with Syria after they were swept away by flashfloods. The news agency said that the immigrants were trying to illegally cross into Turkey’s border with Syria in the Hatay region. The agency did not specify the nationality of the immigrants.

Turkey, which now hosts three and a half million Syrian refugees, was a main crossroad for more than a million immigrants who went by sea to the European Union in 2015. Many of them were fleeing conflicts and poverty in the Middle East and Africa.

On a different note, a 44-year old Japanese journalist went back to his country and had rice balls prepared by his mother after spending three years as a hostage by fanatics in Syria, which was described as a physical and emotional “hell”.

Jumpei Yasuda, who resigned from his job in a Japanese newspaper to cover the Iraq war in 2003, arrived in Tokyo coming from Turkey, rekindling debate in Japan about journalism in war areas, which some sea as a reckless adventure and others see as a brave journalistic work.

TV footage showed the exhausted Yasude as he descended stairs on his way to the car waiting for him at Narita airport to take him to another building near the airport. To reporters’ calls of “Welcome home” he simply nodded with a strained smile as he disappeared down a corridor to where his family waited.

Later, his wife, a singer known as Myu, bowed deeply and apologized to a packed news conference at which Yasuda did not appear. “He would like to apologize for causing a fuss and making people worry about him, but fortunately he was able to safely return to Japan,” she said, sniffing back tears.

“He feels he has a responsibility to explain things to you as much as possible,” she added, but said this would have to wait until he had undergone medical checks.

Yasuda gave few details of his captivity but told his parents, who were also there, that he had worried they might not be alive, Myu said, adding that he ate some rice balls his mother had made for him “very happily”.