Syria – Druze leaders condemn the government for sectarian violence

30

Syrian Druze Reduction Leader has been found guilty of attacks on his community after dozens killed the south of Damascus in two days.

Sheikh Hikmat Al-Hijri launched violence earlier this week in Jaramana and Sanaya near Damascus as a massacre campaign against the Syrian Druze community.

Syrian intelligence ministry said 11 members of the country’s security forces were killed in two separate attacks.

The Syrian Human Rights Observatory (SOHR), a British-based war monitor, said at least 101 people were killed in a struggle between security forces, coalition fighters and local drum groups.

Based on Syrian source network, Sohr said there were 30 government loyalists, including former mayor of Sahnaya Husam Warwar, 21 Druze fighters and 10 civilian deaths. In a state in southern Sweida, a core ethnic minority nation, 40 Druze fighters were killed on Wednesday, and 35 were killed in an ambush at Sweida Damascus Strace.

The clash broke out on Monday after a social media audio clip of a man who criticized Islamic prophet Muhammad. Audio was attributed to Druze scholars. However, scholar Marwan Kiwan said in a video released on social media that he was not responsible for the audio that plagued many Sunni Muslims.

On Wednesday afternoon, the Syrian government said a contract between the alumni and official representatives of Draiser officials has been achieved, according to the retirement of security forces and the provincial fighter Sanaya from the streets. Social media videos show that they attacked the armed group of Druze Men, filmed in Shahya, and demonstrated offensive sect’s comments.

This collective killing is systematic, clear, visible and documented. The government no longer trusts a group called the government, as it has not killed itself through a militant gang loyal to her. After the massacre, she insists that they are loose powers.

Violence is a serious challenge for the new authorities of the country that attacked longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in December. According to the wave of Syrian Alawian massacre in March, the Mediterranean coastal centre appeared, and according to Soar, security forces and alliance groups killed more than 1,700 civilians, mostly Arawais.