Gulf News

Rebels dig in as regime eyes Dara’a, cradle of Syria revolt

SOUTHERN REGION IMPORTANT TO GOVERNMENT FOR ECONOMIC AND SECURITY REASONS

-

On a tense urban frontline in Syria’s Dara’a, rebel Atallah Qutayfan has been steadily reinforcin­g his defensive post for weeks in anticipati­on of a looming assault by government troops.

The 25-year-old spends his days stacking sandbags to shore up his post overlookin­g a market in the southern city, and monitoring the amassing regime forces nearby.

“Their reconnaiss­ance planes are constantly above the city. There are daily clashes and they try to infiltrate our positions, but we’ve stopped them,” says Qutayfan.

“Our commanders told us to be ready for an attack by regime forces — and we’re on high alert.”

As loyalist forces mop up the last pockets of resistance around the capital, President Bashar Al Assad appears to already have set his sights on his next target: Dara’a.

The city is split between rebels, who hold the southern Old City, and regime forces who control the modern districts and government posts to the north.

Opposition forces still hold more than two-thirds of the surroundin­g 3,730-square-kilometre province which borders Jordan. Seizing the border area could bring the regime both military and economic security, analysts have said.

And a victory in Dara’a city would carry symbolic weight — it was the cradle of Syria’s sevenyear uprising against Al Assad’s rule. The resurgent regime just this month dealt rebels their biggest blow yet by recapturin­g Eastern Ghouta, the former opposition stronghold outside Damascus.

That freed up troops who had spent years bombing the Ghouta front. “After Ghouta, the regime escalated its bombing against us with surface-to-surface missiles, machine-gun fire, mortars, tanks, and heavy artillery,” says rebel fighter Fahed Abu Hatem.

In response, Abu Hatem says, his forces reinforced their positions, dug trenches and erected fresh barricades. Gritting his teeth, rebel field commander Ebrahim Musalima, 27, insists the extra measures are necessary.

“It’s not fear, it’s readiness,” says Musalima. “We’re setting up lines of defence and attack, and upping our coordinati­on with the Quneitra rebels to the west, all the way to the border with Suweida to the east.”

Quneitra is the province directly to Dara’a’s west, and Suweida neighbours it to the east.

Sections of the three provinces make up a “de-escalation zone” agreed in May 2017 by rebel backer Turkey and regime allies Russia and Iran.

The US and Jordan have also backed the zone, announcing alongside Russia in July that a cessation of hostilitie­s would begin in the southern sliver.

Despite the steadily increasing violence, Musalima says the south’s rebel factions had been “advised” by their foreign backers not to provoke the regime or its loyalist militias, and to preserve the de-escalation zone.

The subtle warning belies the region’s importance to rival actors in Syria’s complex war.

Al Assad is keen to recapture the strategic Nasib crossing with Jordan, which the regime lost to rebels in 2015 but whose recapture could generate desperatel­y needed income from cross-border trade.

Far away from these geopolitic­al interests, civilians are worried about what the escalation could bring.

Umm Mohammad Al Baghdadi, a 45-year-old nurse in a field clinic in Dara’a, describes a constant stream of wounded from shelling and bombing.

Around 30,000 people live in rebel-held parts of Dara’a city, according to the local opposition-run council.

Its head Mohammad Abdul Majid Al Musalima, 38, says residents struggle to cope with severe shortages of water and electricit­y, and widespread destructio­n. Rebels and local opposition officials alike insist Dara’a’s fate will not resemble Ghouta’s, where a five-year siege had worn down rival rebel groups.

“We’re saying to the regime: Dara’a is not Ghouta. The armed opposition here is holding it together,” says Mohammad Al Masri, 60, a member of the local council .

 ??  ??
 ?? AFP ?? Opposition fighters in a rebel-held area of Dara’a. After the capture of Eastern Ghouta, the Syrian president has set his sights on border city of Dara’a.
AFP Opposition fighters in a rebel-held area of Dara’a. After the capture of Eastern Ghouta, the Syrian president has set his sights on border city of Dara’a.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates