Syrian Rebels Are Killing Each Other for Control

Kοινοποίηση

“Watch out—there are snipers on this street,” warned the ISIS fighter as my driver stopped next to him and eight other heavily armed men who were preparing to head into battle. ISIS, or the Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham, is an offshoot of al Qaeda currently operating on the battlegrounds of Syria.

He wouldn’t have guessed it, but we were all trying to reach the same place—the front line outside the headquarters of yet another of the militant groups fighting in Syria, Ahfad al-Rasul. This organization is affiliated with the Free Syrian Army and had declared war on ISIS just a few hours earlier, for control of the provincial capital of Raqqa.

This was my third visit to the city in the four months since it had been “liberated,” as Syrians tend to refer to areas where rebels have managed to expel government troops. The battle against Bashar al-Assad’s forces in Raqqa had only lasted for about a week—a sharp contrast to the fighting in Aleppo, where gunfights and shelling have continued for over a year since the conflict began.

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Once rebels take control of an area, it is now standard procedure for the regime to respond by bombarding it with indiscriminate air strikes in the hope of killing swathes of anti-Assad fighters. But back in April, just weeks after the liberation, cheerful residents seemed to greet the inevitable trail of destruction as a good thing—a sign of the progress the rebels were making.

Recently, however, the tension has risen considerably in Raqqa and the atmosphere has completely changed, as the rebel resistance continues to splinter, pitting many groups who once fought side by side against Assad against each other. The original celebration of freedom has given way to fear and uncertainty.   

A number of civil movements—both religious and secular—have also been trying to establish themselves in a bid to influence the future of the city and eventually the country. A group named Haqna, Arabic for “Our Right”, is one of the organizations leading the charge. Its logo, a hand making a V sign, the index finger marked with election ink, is spray-painted all over the city. Mostly made up of young local activists, Haqna is aiming to educate the population about their civil rights and the importance of elections.

Haqna has already met opposition from ISIS, however, and some of their members have been arrested recently for organizing protests against the militant Islamist group. After a demonstration outside their headquarters, one activist claimed to have seen someone filming them from inside the building. “They’re worse than the mukhabarat [the secret police]—they have eyes everywhere,” he said.

While members of ISIS currently occupy Raqqa’s governorate building—their black flag raised high in the main square outside—it is the independent Islamic movement of Ahrar al-Sham that plays the most significant role in the administration of the city. The group has been maintaining essential services such as garbage collection, water, and power supply. It also manages public bakeries and distributes food relief packages to thousands of families in the province, as well as promoting Islamic education through public lectures, workshops and religious and philosophical messages painted on public walls and posters across the city.

Which doesn’t mean the group isn’t fully engaged militarily. Though the city is controlled by the rebels, an area known as Division 17—around half a mile outside of the city—is still disputed, and Ahrar al-Sham’s fighters are the main rebel force in the battle. I asked one of their fighters when he expected Division 17 to be overtaken. He quickly replied, “I hope not any time soon,” clearly aware that the regime would respond with air strikes, causing civilian casualties in the process.

I’ve had first-hand experience with that problem myself. At the end of Ramadan, I was woken by the sound of a fleet of ambulances screaming by—it turned out that Syrian army helicopters had dropped bombs on three different buildings, killing 13 people. Within a few hours, I found myself standing in the refrigerated room of a morgue with a father as he watched the bodies of six of his children being wrapped up in burial sheets.

The family waited until the evening for the funeral to avoid being caught in another attack, as funerals are often targeted by shelling from the regime. A rebel manning a heavy machine gun—or a “dushka,” as they’re colloquially named—on the back of a pick-up truck followed us for protection.

Three trucks carried the bodies, along with the mourners. All the way to the cemetery, I watched as a young boy sitting on the back of one of the trucks wept over the body of one of his six murdered siblings. Bystanders, mostly families who had been enjoying a cheerful Eid evening, stood silently and watched the procession pass, the palms of their hands held face-up in respect. A man announced the martyrs: “Shahid! Shahid! Six brothers and sisters!”

Once we arrived, there was no time for ceremony. The burial had to be carried out in a rush because of the site’s proximity to Division 17 and our lights had to be turned out in case they attracted any remaining Syrian army officials in the region. A number of men helped hand over the bodies to the father as he stood inside the massive open grave. Others held their phones up to provide just enough light for the bodies to be laid in the right place. After a few minutes, we left.

Back at the HQ of Ahfad al-Rasul—which the group had established in Raqqa’s non-operational train station, where we’d been heading when we bumped into the ISIS fighters—I sat with Abu Mazin, the commander who’d just declared war against the militant Islamist group. His men had set up barricades all around the station.

Describing his group as a military organization with no political affiliations, Abu Mazin talked about a larger project that Ahfad al-Rasul is part of. “We are working to unify all FSA groups under the National Security Council,” he told me. “In the future, we will form the Syrian National Army.” Abu Mazin continued, assuring me that his group has no particular ideology: “We are only Syrians for all. We can’t keep Syria together as one if we want to keep a single ideology.”

A local resident, Abu Mazin said the main reason that he declared war against ISIS is to fight for the release of a reported 1,500 prisoners currently being held by the group, about 500 of them FSA members. He also said that he had the support of Raqqa’s residents: “The people don’t want to be under the rule of ISIS,” he explained.

The interview was kept short, as Abu Mazin and his men were somewhat preoccupied with the battle they’d started only a couple of days before. During that time, he claimed his men had killed or injured 40 ISIS members, while suffering only three injuries in their ranks. “This is my city. They cannot defeat us in an urban battle here,” he told me.

Before leaving, I asked him if I could photograph his fighters on the frontline. “Sure, but please don’t show their faces,” he responded. “They are afraid of ISIS.”

The following day, before I left Raqqa, I thought of calling Abu Mazin to ask him a few more questions, but my phone rang before I could dial his number. A car bomb had hit his headquarters; killing him and all the men I had met on the previous day. “It’s over,” said the activist who called to share the news. “ISIS won.”

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