Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Syria's carnival that ended in bloodshed
Syria's carnival that ended in bloodshed
Jun 15, 2026 4:47 AM

  The events in the New Clock Square on April 18, 2011, evoke both bitter and sweet memories for the thousands who participated in the largest demonstration in the city center since the country-wide uprising against President Bashar al-Assad had started.

  "It was a day where we thought the Syrian regime was two days from collapsing. A day when all remaining barriers of fears were broken," Ammar, an employee at an internet cafe in Homs, said.

  The sit-in in the New Clock Square began as a funeral for seven anti-government protesters killed by the regime forces a day earlier. Tens of thousands participated in the burial at al-Kateeb cemetery.

  "On our way back from the cemetery, we started chanting ‘to the clock, to the clock’ and ‘sit-in, sit-in’. And when we passed by the Christian neighborhood of Hamidiyeh we started chanting “the Syrian people are one’."

  "Our Christian brothers were throwing rice, rose petals and water drops from the balconies. It was beautiful," Aboudi, a 17-year-old student in Homs, said.

  People began flocking into the square from all directions. Protesters from other neighborhoods entered the city center with no apparent resistance from security forces. Soon enough, the square was transformed into a carnival.

  "We set up tents, we brought food, we listened to speeches, we chanted. It was like a dream come true," Aboudi said.

  Because the square was surrounded by banks and companies equipped with surveillance cameras, activists quickly wrapped them in plastic bags to prevent security forces from using the footage to identify the demonstrators.

  Some people suggested we break the cameras. But we decided it to use bags instead. This is how organized and civilized the Homs sit-in was," Ammar said.

  'Shot in cold blood'

  Majd, a 21-year-old Homs resident, said people were surprised the regime was allowing them to carry out the protest without interference.

  "There were policemen watching us from a distance. That was it. But we were still very suspicious," he said.

  "Religious leaders started asking us to leave. They also felt the regime was up to something."

  And they were right.

  The crowd was dispersed by security forces after midnight, at around 1:45am, with intense rounds of live bullets. Several people were killed.

  Ammar said he believed the security forces first began shooting in the air. But later they shot at people as they ran away.

  "People were running in all directions. Many of us hid in commercial buildings and slept there overnight. The sounds of bullets were unbelievable".

  Majd said a man shouted ‘I want to curse the family of Assad’.

  "They shot him. They shot him in cold blood," he said.

  There is no verified death toll from the crackdown on the protest. A local activist group says tens were killed, but has only documented the names of eight.

  The uprising against Assad had only started about a month earlier and there were no established activist networks which could effectively document deaths, Abou Rami, an activist in Homs, said.

  "The regime made it so difficult for people to find out the fate of those who could not run away. They removed the bodies and the square was cleaned overnight from all the blood and glass pieces," he said.

  "They cleaned it as if nothing had happened a day earlier."

  'Angry city'

  However, despite attempts to restore the business-as-usual mode, Ammar said Homs was forever changed.

  "Homs became an angry city. While the upper class had not yet been very involved in demonstrations, the sit-in near their homes moved them. They became an integral part of the protest movement in the city," he said.

  The brutal crackdown on the sit-in, Ammar said, was meant to deter activists from attempting to occupy the city centers of the capital, Damascus, and Aleppo, the country’s second city Aleppo.

  "I think that Assad saw the new trend of sit-ins and wanted to stop it. Before the Homs protest, there had been a large rally in [the coastal city of] Latakia and another one in [the Damascus suburb of] Douma, but they were not comparable in numbers to the New Clock Square sit-in.

  "Assad wanted to teach a lesson to all Syrians through Homs."

  One year on, many Homs neighborhoods are unrecognizable. Activists say hundreds have been killed in the city.

  Since the sit-in, residents of Homs have tried on several occasions to recreate the city center rally by calling on people to "crawl to the New Clock Square", but the heavy security around the area and the presence of snipers on the rooftops around the square have made it impossible.

  However, Abu Rami and many others who participated remain defiant and hopeful that they will return to what they now call "Freedom Square".

  "For us in Homs, the regime has fallen," he said. "Re-occupying the square is only a technicality. I see this day coming soon."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad shell the opposition stronghold of Homs, two days after U.N. truce monitors arrived in Damascus.

  Al-Jazeera

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
Thousands of Syrian babies becoming stateless
  Ibrahim Khattar and his fiancé Daouk were forced to flee Aleppo for Lebanon in late 2012. Months later, the young couple wed and Daouk became pregnant; after the upheaval of the war and a long engagement, they were finally starting a fresh life.   But it was not to be. The...
Bedouins fear Israeli resettlement plans
  At a steep rocky hillside by the road that winds down to the Dead Sea, children of this Palestinian Bedouin community run up and down the rugged slopes, as goats graze on thorny weeds and sheep bleat nearby.   The encampment falls on a bare ridge between Jerusalem and Jericho, almost...
Where is accountability for Gaza's children?
  Before Israel's invasion of Gaza last July, Farah Baker was an ordinary Palestinian teenager growing up in the besieged strip of land by the Mediterranean Sea. But a compelling Twitter feed catapulted her to international fame.   "I'm the modern Anne Frank Gaza-Palestine, 16 years old," is the description of Baker's...
Egypt's prisons still rife with torture
  Amr was arrested in March while having a cup of tea with two friends at a coffee shop in downtown Cairo.   Four months later, the 17-year-old remains in jail, accused of involvement with Ansar Bait al-Maqdis, an armed group in the Sinai that has claimed responsibility for a number of...
Central Gaza homes turn into refuge for the displaced
  The clock above Gaza Strip resident Ahlam Abed chimed 6:00am and in that hour there was strong knocking on the door of her house. The knocking was one of fear.   Behind the door there was a Palestinian family that sought safety from Israel's ceaseless rocket and bomb attacks on the...
Israel locking up more children in isolation
  Jamil was only 16 years old when Israeli soldiers raided his Bir al-Basha home near Jenin late last year. It was a few hours before dawn when he was awakened by a hard nudge, blindfolded and handcuffed, then taken away in his pyjamas and house slippers.   His ordeal took place...
Amnesty slams US over Afghan civilian deaths
  On September 16, 2012, at three in the morning, Mohammad Zahir Shah, received a phone call.   There were air strikes in the mountains near his home in Lagham province.   For the next two hours, Shah and fellow villagers waited for the shelling to come to an end. Then they set...
Iraqi Shia militias accused of murder spree
  Shia militias have abducted and murdered scores of Sunni civilians in Iraq in crimes committed in retribution against the actions of ISIL, according to a new report by Amnesty International.   The London-based rights group on Tuesday published what it said was evidence that Shia militias abducted civilians in Baghdad, Samarra...
Amnesty: Dozens of Sunni detainees killed by Iraq government
  Evidence is emerging of reprisal killings of 50 Sunni detainees in the custody of Iraqi forces as retaliation for predominantly Sunni militant group, ISIS's take over of parts of Iraq in the last three weeks, say Amnesty International.   Survivors and relatives of the victims said that the detainees were extra...
Palestinian hunger strike passes 40-day mark
  Just outside the Tbeish family home, people began to gather at sunset. Some carried flags, but most held posters of the town's native son, Ayman. A child carried a placard depicting a young man in chains; "Ayman is dying" read another sign, held by an elderly man.   In what has...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved