Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Inside Dar'aa
Inside Dar'aa
Oct 29, 2025 1:38 AM

  The only outside visitors the people of Daraa are allowed to receive these days are friends and family attending funerals.

  To access the city where Syria's uprising began, a local reporter simply had to tell the guards at the first checkpoint the truth: The husband of his wife's cousin had been killed while protesting for freedom and he was there to help bury him.

  At three more checkpoints on the road into the city, security men scoured the car for cameras, recorders or laptops, anything that could be used to document the death and destruction that has been wrought on this ancient and increasingly arid farming town on the border with Jordan.

  It was here on March 6 that the spark that lit the Syrian uprising was struck: The arrest, detention and torture of 15 young boys for painting graffiti slogans of the Arab revolution –"The people / want / to topple the regime!" on a wall, copying what they had seen on television news reports from Cairo and Tunis.

  The boys, aged between 10 and 15, were taken to one of the cells of the local Political Security branch, under the control of General Atef Najeeb, a cousin of President Bashar al-Assad.

  There in the gloomy interrogation room the children were beaten and bloodied, burned and had their fingernails pulled out by grown men working for a regime whose unchecked brutality appears increasingly to be sowing the seeds of its undoing.

  Human Rights Watch recently documented multiple cases of torture, including of children, among hundreds of cases of protesters arrested over the past month.

  The story of Dar'aa is the story of the Syrian uprising: A single incident of brutality by a lawless secret police that ignited protests, which in turn escalated in size and scope fuelled by the ever increasing numbers of people killed by security forces.

  Family blood

  The disappearance of Syrian citizens, even children, inside the cells of one the state’s notorious security branches might not have ordinarily been anything unusual for a people accustomed to living for half a century under emergency laws.

  But the arrested boys were from almost every large family of Dar'aa: The Baiazids, the Gawabras, the Masalmas and the Zoubis.

  In the largely tribal society of Syria’s south, family loyalty and honor run deep. So, after days of failing to locate the boys through official channels, the parents and families of the missing, along with local religious leaders, marched on the house of the Dar'aa governor Faisal Kalthoum after Friday prayers.

  The governor's security guards initially struggled to beat the protesters back before riot police were called in and used water canons and tear gas. Then armed members of Political Security turned up and opened fire on the protesters.

  "A large number of security arrived and started shooting at people and injured some of them," said Ibrahim, a relation of one of the arrested boys.

  "When the people saw the blood, they went crazy. We all belong to tribes and big families and for us blood is a very, very serious issue."

  The gathering, which had started out with around 200 people, quickly swelled to several hundred as news spread around Dar'aa that Political Security had opened fire.

  "We were asking in a peaceful way to release the children but their reply to us was bullets," said Ibrahim.

  "Now we can have no compromise with any security branches."

  Another relative of one of the children said he had witnessed the contempt with which General Najeeb of Political Security had treated the family delegation.

  "Security prevented the ambulances from coming to take injured people to the hospital. We will not forget that,” said Mohammed, a 28-year-old who moved back to Dar'aa two years ago after working in Dubai.

  Since protests erupted in Dar'aa, Mohammed's brother-in-law has been killed and his brother injured.

  There were also unconfirmed reports that General Najeeb had taunted family members, telling them to forget about their children and go home and sleep with their wives to make some more.

  Prevented from reaching hospital, the enraged protesters took the injured to the Omari Mosque in the heart of Old Dar'aa.

  Mosque stormed

  On March 18, several hundred protesters in Dar'aa called for an end to corruption, the release of the boys and greater political freedom. Security forces opened fire and killed three. Two days later, furious crowds set fire to the offices of the Baath Party, calling for the first time for freedom and an end to emergency law.

  Al-Assad attempted to defuse local anger by sending a delegation of high-ranking officials with family ties to Dar'aa to reassure tribal leaders that he was personally committed to bringing to justice those who had opened fire.

  The delegation included Faisal Meqdad, the deputy foreign minister, whose former boss, Farouk al-Saharaa, now vice-president, is also from the region.

  But the delegation's most important figure was General Rustom Ghazali, one of the highest ranking members of Syria's Military Intelligence, who was head of Syrian intelligence in Lebanon when prime minister Rafiq al-Hariri was assassinated, and who faced questions in the subsequent international investigation into the murder.

  As a man from the area and a senior member of al-Assad’s inner circle, Ghazali was there to give assurances to Dar'aa leaders that the situation could be calmed down. In a gesture of goodwill the 15 children were released, having spent two weeks in jail.

  But the marks of torture on their sons only fuelled the rage of local tribal leaders. Now the demonstrators against the regime numbered in their thousands.

  In the early hours of the morning of March 23, just 48 hours after Ghazali’s meeting in Dar'aa, Syrian security forces stormed the Omari mosque, which had become a focus for the growing protest movement. Troops threw in stun grenades before opening fire, killing five people, including a doctor who was working to treat those injured in previous protests.

  Footage on YouTube claiming to show the aftermath of that raid shows plain clothes gun men parading around inside a mosque with blankets lining its walls and blood stains visible.

  Locals said the men who actually stormed the mosque were Syrian special forces, with unconfirmed reports that they belonged to the army’s fourth division, under the command of Maher al-Assad, the president’s brother.

  "We want the president to punish all of those who killed and injured the people of Daraa," said Mohammed’s mother, an Arabic-language teacher, visibly shaken with sorrow and anger.

  "We supported his father [Hafez al-Assad] and he appreciated us by nominating a Zoubi as prime minister, Sharaa as foreign minister and Suleiman Qaddah as the Baath Party’s leader. But instead, President Bashar sent our own sons, the Syrian army, to kill their brothers and sisters. A traitor is the one who kills his brothers."

  The following day, the much reviled Governor Kalthoum, whose residence was burned down, was sacked. General Najib was also removed from his position. Over a fortnight later, al-Assad referred the two men to court to investigate their role in igniting and handling protests in the city.

  But the sackings did little to abate the anger of locals.

  "Why didn't President Assad visit Dar'aa himself and say sorry to the people," said Mohammed. "We are 100 per cent Syrian and he should show us real sympathy and respect."

  Funeral protests

  The Dar'aa protests began to grow exponentially, falling into a familiar and tragic pattern: The funeral for those killed a day earlier would swell into a mass rally against the regime and security would open fire, killing more and guaranteeing an even larger turnout at the next funeral.

  On March 24, the government issued a decree to cut taxes and raise state salaries by 1,500 Syrian pounds ($32.60) a month.

  A day later tens of thousands turned out for funerals in Daraa shouting: “We do not want your bread, we want dignity.” Security opened fire and killed 15.

  A group of enraged protestors tore down the statue of Hafez al-Assad, the former president, whose name most Syrians hardly dared whisper, such was the fear he once inspired. Pictures of Hafez’s son, Bashar, were ripped and burned.

  In one week of protests in and around Dar'aa at least 55 people had been killed by security forces. Across the country the pledge to Dar'aa became a unifying chant of the protest movement: "With our souls, with our blood, we sacrifice to you Dar'aa."

  In his first public statement on the crisis, al-Assad blamed the uprising on a “foreign plot” and said those killed in Dar'aa had died as a sacrifice for national stability. The speech only fuelled the anger of families like Mohammed's.

  "He didn't ask the MPs to stand for a minute’s silence and he said those who were killed were sacrificial martyrs," said Mohammed. "But here in Dar'aa, the army and security deal with us like traitors or agents for Israel. We hoped our army would fight and liberate the occupied Golan, not send tanks and helicopters to fight civilians."

  By April 8, the fourth consecutive Friday of protests, the chants on the streets of Dar'aa were pure fury. "Hey Maher you coward, take your dogs to the Golan," shouted the protesters, 25 of whom were killed on that one day.

  One week later, a delegation from Dar'aa held their first direct talks with the president. But for many residents of a city that once prided itself on sending its sons to top positions in government the surprising transformation of Dar'aa into the centre of Syria’s uprising is unlikely to be easily reversed.

  "They think we want new roads or a new hospital. No! We want to lift the state of emergency, release all political prisoners and allow our relatives who live in Jordan, Saudi Arabia and other countries to return to Syria. We want to buy and sell our land without permission from security," said Ayman, an opposition activist from Dar'aa.

  "My uncle is suspected of being a member of the Muslim Brotherhood and so was forced to live in Saudi Arabia. Every day my grandmother prayed to God that she could see her son, but she died without ever seeing him again. What we want now is freedom."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Hundreds of protesters from Ghabagheb in Dar'aa province gather to walk towards the restive city of Dar'aa, 120 kilometers south of Damascus, in a solidarity protest on March 25, 2011.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Syria files reveal regime espionage
  In the ransacked and burnt-out remains of various security headquarters in al-Bab lie many clues to the means used by Bashar al-Assad's government to stay in power, revealing why life under the regime had become increasingly intolerable for its citizens.   In the widely-hated building of military security, the formerly locked...
The battle for Area C
  Palestinians face severe restrictions in the more than 60 per cent of the West Bank under full Israeli control.   Dozens of tents, made of wooden planks, small boulders and plastic tarps, cling to the rocky hilltop. Tires, garbage, shoes, children's clothes and broken electronic equipment are strewn between the tents,...
Former Israeli Soldiers Confess Abuse of Palestinian Children
  Testimony by ex-Israeli Defense Force soldiers reveals a devastating portrayal of ill-treatment and abuse of Palestinian youth by members of Israel's occupying army in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.   The testimony by more than 30 soldiers, and fashioned into a booklet by Breaking the Silence, an organization of former...
Israel ex-soldiers say troops abused Palestinian kids
  Former Israeli soldiers who served in the occupied territories say that mistreatment of Palestinian children by troops is "routine" and occurs even at times of relative calm.   A collection of over 30 testimonies published on Sunday by Breaking the Silence, a group of ex-servicemen critical of army practices, says physical...
Syria running '27 torture centers'
  A new report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) said that Syrian intelligence agencies are running torture centers across the country where detainees are beaten with batons and cables, burned with acid, sexually assaulted, and their fingernails torn out.   The report released on Tuesday by the New York-based group identified 27...
Amnesty: Syrian civilians suffer most in Aleppo
  Human rights group Amnesty International says artillery and mortar fire and airstrikes by regime forces in the northern city of Aleppo are killing mostly civilians, including children.   A new Amnesty report released Thursday said air and artillery strikes against residential neighborhoods are indiscriminate attacks that seriously endanger civilians.   Government troops...
Evolving tactics of Syrian opposition fighters
  As violence appears to have escalated in Syria, the BBC's Ian Pannell reports on the situation in the north of the country, where he has just spent the last two weeks with some of the opposition fighting groups in Idlib province.   The commander had "gone to ground" and we sat...
The foot soldiers in Syria's war
  The food is piled high. Steaming pots of seasoned tomatoes and potatoes, yogurt and cucumber, cheese and piles of tortilla-like khubz, dipped in oil. A dozen or so young Syrian men crowd around, chattering excitedly about the day's events.   These men are foot soldiers in the public relations wing of...
Palestinian village faces demolition by Israel
  Palestinians in this hamlet have clung to their arid acres for decades, living without proper electricity or water while Israel provides both to Jewish settlers on nearby hills. But the end now seems near for Susiya: Demolition orders distributed last week by the Israelis aim to destroy virtually the entire...
Who is held to account for civilian deaths by drone in Yemen?
  There is a history of Yemeni officials lying to protect the US, and the Pentagon and CIA greeting queries with obfuscation.   When news flashed of an air strike on a vehicle in the Yemeni city of Radaa on Sunday afternoon, early claims that ‘al-Qaida militants had died’ soon gave way...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved