Gulf News

Syria cracks down on violent gangs that roam capital’s streets

MILITIAMEN TRAINED BY IRAN AS IRREGULAR TROOPS HAVE RULED THE STREETS FOR YEARS

- BY SAMI MOUBAYED Correspond­ent

After seven years of war, the Syrian government is attempting to restore ‘civility and normality’ to the city by cracking down on violent gangs and mafias that have been able to take advantage of the ensuing chaos of the war.

Now that major military battles against rebels across the country are largely over, civil forces can now turn their attention to those who sought to take advantage of the security vacuum.

Joint patrols of military and traffic police have been recently dispatched to the streets of the Syrian capital with the mandate to arrest civilians wearing military fatigues.

Standing nearby, although not always visible, are Russian soldiers watching and observing in silence.

Since January, the Syrian government began a campaign to disband local militias.

Many of the forces in these groups were irregular soldiers originally trained by Iran to supplement government troops — who were fighting elsewhere — to man checkpoint­s and conduct low-scale operations.

The irregular soldiers were grouped into many divisions including the National Defence Forces, Al Bustan Forces and the Baath Phalange. The exact number of these soldiers is unknown but some rough estimates count around 250,000 men.

These ‘militiamen’ have been able to roam the streets of Damascus, armed to the teeth usually with shaved heads and long beards.

The government now is giving them a choice: either enlist in the official army or surrender their arms and return to civilian life.

The thugs became a serious nuisance to many residents as they were able to loot and kidnap at will, extorting ordinary families for ransom money.

Many police stations closed down during the course of the conflict, allowing these militiamen to have a free rein in the city. They could be seen firing their guns in the air to break up traffic jams in order to pass through — often driving against the flow of traffic.

In 2013-2016, they profiteere­d from selling heating fuel at black market prices, and in January 2017, gallons of water during a crippling water crisis that held the Damascenes by the throat, resulting at the time from battles at the Ain Al Fija Spring near the Syrian capital.

Those stationed at checkpoint­s at the entrance to markets would charge cargo vans with transit fees, up to 300 Syrian pounds.

The Damascus Countrysid­e Governorat­e issued a statement saying that 90 per cent of checkpoint­s will be brought down within the upcoming period, because of improved security. For militiamen manning these checkpoint­s it will mark an end to a very profitable gold mine. The backlash by the militiamen against the crackdown has been fierce.

One Iraqi militiaman, from the Abu Al Fadel Al Abbas Phalange, was locked up by Syrian authoritie­s after delivering an animated monologue in Damascus which was caught on video.

In the clip fraught with sectarian language, the man threatens to “burn the city and those within it”.

In addition to dismantlin­g checkpoint­s, the government has begun confiscati­ng all motorbikes from the streets.

Technicall­y, motorbikes are illegal having been banned in the 1980s because they were used predominat­ely by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in military operations against the regime.

However, thousands have mushroomed in the capital in recent years, as a way to get around horrible traffic jams caused by security checkpoint­s.

They were also used by the militias to transport refrigerat­ors, washing machines, and television­s out of looted homes.

The proliferat­ion of these bikes has also caused a surge in traffic accidents.

 ?? Twitter ?? In this file picture irregular Syrian troops loot shops in the war-ravaged areas of the Yarmouk camp in Damascus.
Twitter In this file picture irregular Syrian troops loot shops in the war-ravaged areas of the Yarmouk camp in Damascus.
 ??  ?? In addition to dismantlin­g checkpoint­s, the government has begun confiscati­ng all motorbikes.
In addition to dismantlin­g checkpoint­s, the government has begun confiscati­ng all motorbikes.

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