Saudi Al Watan newspaper quoted its sources in
the Syrian opposition as saying that “the authorities of Damascus have been
granting Lebanese Hezbollah members and Iraqi militia Shiites the Syrian
nationality , and has been registering them as residents of the city of Sweida,
which is predominantly Druze. Sweida is known as the largest city in Jabal
al-Arab, known as the “cradle of the Great Revolution” in the face of the
French occupation led by Sultan Pasha al-Atrash in 1925.
According to Al Watan sources Syrian
president Bashar Al Assad is aiming to change the demographics of Sweida with
the aim of confronting the Sunnis who are very strong south of Syria.
This is not the first time this
issue comes up. Reports circulated in mid July that Iran was also seeking to
extend its influence in Jabal al-Arab or Jabal al-Druze, through local agents.
This according to the report included the settling of Lebanese and Syrian
Shiites displaced by the fighting in the area near Sweida ( Daraa) . This is
reportedly part of an Iranian plan to grant the Syrian nationality to 750,000
Shiites from the Middle East. According to the report the Iranians have
deposited $2 billion into the Real Estate Bank of Syria to purchase land in
this area
Forcing the minorities to join the
war
Also around mid July Al Arabiya
reported that the Syrian government is trying to force the minorities to engage
in the Syrian civil war against the mostly Sunni rebels and for this reason it
has been providing members of the Lebanese Shiite militant group, Hezbollah, as
well as Shiite fighters from Iraq with “forged” Syrian identity cards carrying
Druze names.
The Druze are a minority in the
Middle East and live primarily in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Palestine ( present
day Israel ) and the United States.
” Such action by the criminal Syrian regime could create a
conflict between the Druze and the Sunni communities”, according to Ayman
Maarouf an analyst in the Jabal Al Arab where most of the Druze in Syria live .
This development comes after the
Syrian regime failed to involve the Druze community to fight against the
rebels, according to Syrian observers .
Since the beginning of the
uprising in March 2011 against the Assad regime, Syria’s Druze community like
most minority groups in the country tried to remain neutral and did not voice
their opposition to Assad, who is an Alawite, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.
Soueida the capital of the Druze
stronghold of Jabal al Arab and which borders Jordan and Daraa has reportedly
been used as a channel of entry into Daraa by Hezbollah and other Shiite and
Assad forces to fight the rebels, according to the report.
The Damascus regime has reportedly
sent a number of influential Lebanese Druze to persuade the Druze community in
Syria to take part in the fight alongside Assad forces against the rebels but
instead were instructed by their religious leaders to stay out of the conflict.
Lebanese Druze leader Walid
Jumblatt , who heads up the Progressive Socialist Party has been urging the
Druze community in Syria to join the rebels against the Syrian regime. But
others like former minister Wiam Wahab, a close ally of Hezbollah and the
Syrian regime has been calling on the Druze to fight against the rebels.
In a statement issued last
November , Jumblatt said “Syria’s Druze community should join the Syrian rebels
who are shedding their blood in heroic battles against oppression on a daily
basis.”
“ Failure of the Druze to join the rebels does not fall in line
with their heroic stances during the great Syrian Revolution that overthrew the
French mandate,” Jumblatt stressed.
Agencies
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