Syria’s new authorities yesterday launched a security crackdown in a coastal region where 14 policemen were killed a day before, vowing to pursue ‘remnants’ of the Bashar Al Assad government accused of the attack, state media reported.
The violence in Tartous province, part of the coastal region that is home to many members of Assad’s Alawite sect, has marked the deadliest challenge yet to the authorities which swept him from power on December 8.
The new administration’s security forces launched the operation to ‘control security, stability and civil peace, and to pursue the remnants of Assad’s militias in the woods and hills’ in Tartous’ rural areas, state news agency SANA reported.
Members of the Alawite minority wielded huge sway in Assad-led Syria, dominating security forces he used against his opponents during the 13-year-long civil war, and to crush dissent during decades of bloody oppression by his police state.
Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, the former Al Qaeda affiliate which led the rebel campaign that toppled Assad, has repeatedly vowed to protect minority religious groups, who fear the new rulers could seek to impose a conservative form of government.
SANA reported that Mohammed Othman, the newly appointed governor of the coastal Latakia region that adjoins the Tartous area, met Alawite shaikhs to “encourage community cohesion and civil peace on the Syrian coast”.
The Syrian information ministry declared a ban on what it described as “the circulation or publication of any media content or news with a sectarian tone aimed at spreading division” among Syrians.
Dissent has also surfaced in the city of Homs, 150km north of Damascus. State media reported that police imposed an overnight curfew on Wednesday night, following unrest linked to demonstrations.
Footage posted on social media on Wednesday from Homs showed a crowd of people scattering, and some of them running, as gunfire was heard. Reuters verified the location. It was not clear who was opening fire.
Assad’s long-time Shi’ite regional ally, Iran, has criticised the course of events in Syria in recent days.
On Sunday, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called on Syrian youth to “stand with firm determination against those who have orchestrated and brought about this insecurity”.
Khamenei forecast “that a strong and honourable group will also emerge in Syria because today Syrian youth have nothing to lose”, calling the country unsafe.
Syria’s newly appointed foreign minister, Asaad Hassan Al Shibani, said in a social media post on Tuesday that Iran must respect the will of the Syrian people and Syria’s sovereignty and security.