Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Syrian town takes strife in stride
Syrian town takes strife in stride
Dec 15, 2025 3:10 PM

  The center of Salkeen in northern Syria looked deceptively normal, just a day after the town came under lethal regime air strikes.

  Shops were open for business. Residents strolled through the main square. Children could be seen playing in the narrow streets.

  Yet a closer look at the streets of Salkeen revealed the brutal scars of war. Away from the square, sidewalks were stained with blood and littered with broken glass.

  Residents said six people were killed when regime forces attacked the opposition-held town bordering Turkey on Friday. Dozens of people were injured, locals said, including many children.

  Three siblings - Basel, 12, Doriyeh, 10, and Raghad, 8 - were injured by shrapnel as a rocket detonated near their home while they played.

  The children were angry at those responsible for the blast. They cursed President Bashar al-Assad and wished the president's sons would endure the same fate. Their 10-year-old cousin was seriously injured in the same attack and had to be taken to Turkey for treatment.

  Down the street from the children's home, a vicious argument was under way. A woman had been killed by a rocket, and some of her neighbors said she and her family supported Assad.

  The brother of the slain woman called one of the anti-government neighbors a "dog". The neighbor responded: "You are a shabeeh [pro-Assad militia member]". Bystanders were soon forced to intervene.

  Salkeen was captured by opposition forces after fierce fighting with regime forces two months ago, but opposition activists say 70 percent of the town either supports of Assad, or at least opposed to the uprising against him.

  "I am ashamed to say that the town is mainly pro-Assad, but this is the reality," Ahmad, an activist who organized anti-government protests in the town, told Al Jazeera.

  Support for Assad, a member of Syria's minority Alawite sect, does not fall along sectarian lines, at least not in Salkeen. Most of the town's 40,000 residents are Sunni Muslims, with only a handful of Alawite families.

  "People support Assad because they are ignorant, and because instability caused by the uprising has harmed their personal interests," Ahmad said.

  Before the conflict began, Salkeen was considered to be a town pampered by the regime.

  Despite its relatively small size, several local officials were appointed to senior positions in the Assad administration. The former education minister and the former governors of Homs and Raqqa provinces all hailed from Salkeen.

  Assad loyalists believe the presence of opposition forces was the reason the town was targeted in the latest round of air strikes. In fact, opposition fighters had staged a parade in the town's main square after forming a new battalion of the Free Syria Army (FSA) the day the town was hit.

  Activists told Al Jazeera that government informants had reported the parade to the regime. MiG fighter jets soon bombarded the center. All casualties were civilians, except for an injured fighter, according to residents.

  But residents opposed to Assad said that if the regime were really interested in targeting the opposition forces, the air force should have bombed the FSA's military bases outside residential areas.

  "The regime is intentionally targeting the center of the town and residential areas to widen the tensions between the residents and FSA," speculated Abu Ahmad, a Salkeen resident, to Al Jazeera.

  Despite the occasional outburst or argument, residents with opposing views on the conflict mostly live in peace in Salkeen, buying from each others' shops and paying visits to one another.

  The opposition forces established courts and police centers after the withdrawal of the regime forces to maintain law and order. Most state employees remain in their positions, managing services such as electricity, water, telephone and the post office. They try to stay neutral so that they can receive their salaries from the government while helping their hometown.

  In Salkeen, electricity runs for only two hours a day and running water is a luxury. Even so, the town is one of the few in Idlib province that still has functioning state services.

  While the regime has lost control of Salkeen, the state has not collapsed, Abu Ahmad said.

  "Yes, we have some problems in Salkeen. But we are solving our issues as they come, with our own hands. We're always trying to overcome our differences for the sake of the town."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A day after deadly air strikes hit Salkeen in northern Syria, the town center was bustling.

  Source: Aljazeera.com

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
Israel accused of sexual child-abuse
  An international children's rights charity has said it has evidence that Palestinian children held in Israeli custody have been subjected to sexual abuse in an effort to extract confessions from them.   The Geneva-based Defense for Children International (DCI) has collected 100 sworn affidavits from Palestinian children who said they were...
Report details torture at secret Baghdad prison
  The torture of Iraqi detainees at a secret prison in Baghdad was far more systematic and brutal than initially reported, Human Rights Watch reported on Tuesday.   The existence of the prison, which housed mostly Sunni Arab prisoners, has created a political furor in Iraq, prompted government denials and fanned sectarian...
Poverty 'widespread' in E Jerusalem
  A majority of Palestinians in East Jerusalem, including three out of four children, live in poverty, an Israeli rights group has said.   In a report released on Monday, the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (Acri) accused Israel of neglect and discrimination in its policies.   Despite the conditions, only 10...
Pakistani military holding thousands of detainees
  Pakistani officials and human rights advocates are expressing concern today about the large number of detainees being held in extralegal detention by Pakistan’s military in the tribal areas.   According to reports, most of the thousands of detainees have been held for nearly a year and have been given no access...
Expelled from home and native land but not from history
  When asked for a definition of "peace" during a CBC interview, Canadian scientist, educator and renowned activist Ursula Franklin stated: "Peace is not just the absence of war. It is the presence of justice and the absence of fear." This simple definition helps explain why there is still no peace...
Iraqi orphans face uncertain future
  The Iraqi government says that there are 3.5 million orphans in Iraq; the UN estimate is around one million.   Noor Abdul-Rassoul Ali, of the Iraqi Orphan Foundation, estimates that there are about five million orphans.   Whatever the true number, the children of war face an uncertain future, Zeina Khodr, Al...
Pakistani civilians suffer from displacement over army attacks
  Pakistan suffered the highest number of internally displaced people in 2009 due to Pakistan's army attacks on civilian regions where Pakistani Taliban is powerful, a United Nations study showed on Monday.   The number of internally displaced people worldwide reached 27.1 million individuals in 2009, the highest number since records began...
Reckless private security companies anger Afghans
  Private Afghan security guards protecting NATO supply convoys in southern Kandahar province regularly fire wildly into villages they pass, U.S. and Afghan officials say.   The guards shoot into the villages to intimidate any potential fighters, the officials say, but also cause the kind of civilian casualties.   "Especially as they go...
New Israeli illegal settlement in East Jerusalem
  The Israeli government, headed by Benjamin Netanyahu, approved the construction of 14 units in Maaleh David outpost, which is a new settlement neighborhood planned to be built in Ras Amoud Palestinian neighborhood in occupied East Jerusalem.   Israeli Peace Now Movement issued a press release stating that the new settlement will...
‘US troops executing prisoners in Afghanistan’
  The journalist who helped break the story that detainees at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq were being tortured by their US jailers told an audience at a journalism conference last month that American soldiers are now executing prisoners in Afghanistan.   New Yorker journalist Seymour Hersh also revealed that the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved