Wednesday , March 5 2025

Syrian forces deployed in Jaramana to end unrest

05-03-2025

DAMASCUS: Syria has deployed security forces in Jaramana, a suburb of Damascus, to restore order after a dispute at a checkpoint led to the killing of a Syrian security officer and the injury of another by a militia linked to Bashar al-Assad’s former regime.

The move to deploy forces late on Sunday follows the refusal of local militias to hand over suspects involved in Friday’s incident.

“Our forces have begun deploying in Jaramana after those involved in the assassination of Ahmed Al-Khatib, a Defence Ministry employee, refused to surrender,” Lieutenant Colonel Hussam al-Tahan told the state-run Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA).

Al-Tahan added that the operation aims to dismantle illegal checkpoints operated by armed groups accused of kidnapping, murder and armed robbery. Calm had begun to return after negotiations between Ministry of Interior forces and local leaders, media reported.

Jaramana, a densely populated suburb, is predominantly inhabited by Druze and Christian communities. The Druze live mainly in Lebanon, Syria and Israel.

Israeli military order

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Saturday that orders had been given to the Israeli army to “prepare to defend” Jaramana’s Druze population.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Jaramana was “under attack by the forces of the Syrian regime” and Israel is “committed to our Druze brothers in Israel to do everything to prevent harm to their Druze brothers in Syria”.

Israel is occupying Syria’s Golan Heights, where a sizeable Druze community lives and which lies less than 100km (62 miles) from Jaramana.

About 18,000 Druze in Golan have rejected Israeli citizenship while about 140,000 living within the state of Israel have accepted it.

Israel has also been launching air strikes on parts of southern Syria and has been violating a demilitarized zone between the two countries.

Jaramana leaders dismissed the Israeli statements as interference.

“Let Israel say what it wants. We are part of Syria,” Jaramana resident Issa Abdul Haq, 53, told media.

In November, Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said Israel must leverage other regional minorities, particularly Kurdish and Druze communities, to advance its aims in the region.

Lebanese Druze leader Walid Jumblatt called on Syria’s Druze community to remain “vigilant against Israel’s schemes in Syria” at a news conference in Beirut on Sunday.

Jumblatt, the former head of the Progressive Socialist Party, also cautioned against what he said were broader efforts to undermine Arab national security and said he would visit Syria to discuss developments.

Who are the Druze?

The Druze are an ethnoreligious minority that largely identifies as Arab and is Arabic-speaking.

The Druze religion grew out of Ismaili Shia Islam in the 11th century but has evolved to include aspects of other religions, including Hinduism, as well as ancient philosophies.

The faith believes in reincarnation while recognizing traditional figures in Islam, Christianity and Judaism.

The minority has remained largely separate from surrounding communities with no proselytizing and marriage outside the faith discouraged. (Int’l News Desk)

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