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Rare anti-regime protests breakout in Sweida city

Residents in  southern Sweida province took to the streets for the second day demonstrating against collapsing living standards and corruption, local activists said Monday.

Pictures released on social media appeared to show locals from the southern province burning tyres and blocking the Sweida-Damascus highway.

Sit-ins also reportedly took in several other locations across the province.

Some demonstrators flew the multicoloured Druze flag, which represents the religious faith of the majority of the inhabitants of the region.

Sweida province is the heartland of the country's Druze minority, which made up roughly three percent of Syria's pre-war population -- or about 700,000 people.

There have been sporadic protests in Sweida in recent years, a rare stronghold of discontent in government-controlled areas that Bashar al-Assad has largely managed to wrestle into submission since the beginning of the civil war in 2011.

A combination of a decade of war, western sanctions, and the Covid-19 pandemic, however, have devastated the Syrian economy, pushing most of the population into poverty as the value of the Syrian pound has plummeted. 
 
Government spending has been cut by more than 40 percent over the past two years, with cuts threatening a critical social support programme. 

The Sweida demonstrations have now been ongoing for around a month, with much of the anger focusing on a government decision to exclude hundreds of thousands of people in the province from a subsidy programme.

The subsidy applied to ration cards which are used by millions of people in Syria. The government justified the cut saying it would instead aim to provide the subsidy to "more vulnerable people".

Many people in the province participated in the Syrian revolution in 2011, but as it developed into a civil war and the influence of hardline factions expanded, Sweida preferred to stand neutral.

The Syrian conflict has claimed 494,438 lives and has displaced 13,2 million people since it erupted in 2011 
marking the largest conflict-induced displacement since World War II.

With MEE

MEE
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