UK One News

Syria could descend into chaos. But some are cautiously optimistic about rebel group’s initial moves

Syria could descend into chaos. But some are cautiously optimistic about rebel group’s initial moves

The ouster of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has prompted concerns and warnings that the war-torn country may not be able to avoid the chaos that ensued among some of its regional neighbours when their governments were overthrown.

However, while still very early, some observers say there have been some positive signs, suggesting the country may not descend into a free-for-all domestic conflict similar to those that followed the toppling of Moammar Gadhafi in Libya or Saddam Hussein in Iraq.

“I think that the Syrian people have shown that they are careful enough about their own country that they do care about building a future, a better Syria,” Qutaiba Idlbi, a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center and Middle East Programs told CBCs Power & Politics.

“And that’s why you haven’t seen a lot of … massive scenes of looting and destruction, which is a very positive sign for how Syria is going to deal with their future state,” he said.

WATCH | What could happen next for Syria?: 

What’s next for Syrians as the Assad regime falls?

10 hours ago

Duration 12:12

Power & Politics hears from Syrian-Canadian MP Omar Alghabra on the collapse of the Assad regime in Syria. Plus, the Atlantic Council’s Qutaiba Idlbi, who was imprisoned twice by the Assad regime, discusses what could happen next in the region.

Assad fled to Moscow on the weekend and received asylum from his longtime ally hours after a stunning rebel advance seized control of Damascus and ended his family’s 50 years of iron rule.

Yet not everyone is so optimistic about Syria’s future. With multiple groups and external actors in Syria, the more likely scenario for Syria’s future “unfortunately, is a culmination of the same societal and religious-ethnic cleavages that have been witnessed across the Middle East,” wrote Daniel E. Mouton, a nonresident senior fellow at the Scowcroft Middle East Security Initiative of the Atlantic Council’s Middle East Programs.

“Syria may follow the path of Libya and descend into chaos. Competition for power among Syria’s different armed groups would create havoc for the Levant region,” Moulton wrote on the Atlantic Council’s website.

‘A political vacuum’

Syria is a political vacuum with no clear roadmap of how it will develop post-Assad, Sajjan M. Gohel, international security director at the Asia-Pacific Foundation in London, said in an email to CBC News.

“All the different factions have competing agendas, interests and ideologies. There is no clarity over what a transition government looks like, how elections will be held. We are entering uncharted territory.”

Syria is divided into various sects and ethnic groups, each with its own regional power base. It’s home to a mult-ifaith and multi-ethnic population in which the country’s Sunni Muslims, Shia Alawites, Christians and ethnic Kurds have often been pitted against each, whether by Assad’s rule or a 14-year civil war.

The rebel alliance that is now in control of much of the country is led by Abu Mohammed Al-Golani, the leader of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which is designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S. and the UN. Al-Golani is a former senior al-Qaeda militant who severed ties with the extremist group years ago and has promised representative government and religious tolerance.

Rebel leader Abu Mohammed Al-Golani speaks at the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus on Sunday. Al-Golani leads the rebel alliance that is now in control of much of the country. (AP)

Many of the rebel groups comprise a broad ideological spectrum, and each one is vying for supremacy, according to Abdelaziz al-Sager, director of the Gulf Research Center.

“Each one thinks they can be Bashar al-Assad, and each one has allegiance to a foreign party funding his group,” he told Reuters. “They will clash unless there is an effort by the UN and some regional countries with influence to unify them.”

Worry about revenge killings

Meanwhile, there are also some fears that lawlessness in Syria could allow the flourishing of extremist groups like Islamic State (IS), which in 2014 swept through large swathes of Syria and Iraq and established an Islamic caliphate before it was driven out by a U.S.-led coalition by 2019.

As well, some worry about revenge killings following the civil war, whether against former figures of Assad’s state or whole communities seen as backing the old system.

“We saw what happened when Moammar Gadhafi was removed from power in Libya. It created a massive power vacuum,” Gohel told CBC News Network. “Civil war, conflict. There was rampant human rights abuses, civil liberties being undermined. Misogyny, attacks on minorities. And one really does have to express those similar concerns about what may transpire in Syria.”

There is a risk that internal fractures within the HTS-led umbrella movement may become more salient in the weeks and months to come, according to Burcu Ozcelik of the Royal United Services Institute think tank in the U.K., who told ABC News that could lead to discord and threaten Syrian stability.

“A new transitional Syrian administration will soon need to take on the task of state-building, including the rebuilding of a national Syrian security force and a constitution-building process, as the Syrian state has been painfully hallowed out by the Assad regime,” Ozcelik said.

Still, allowing the incumbent Prime Minister Mohammed Ghazi al-Jalali and his cabinet to continue governing is certainly a good sign, Hussain Abdul-Hussain, a research fellow at the Foundation of Defense Democracies, wrote on the organization’s website.

Declared nightly curfew

Abdul-Hussain also pointed out that Syria’s new rulers took over government buildings in an orderly manner, did not break or burn government facilities — such as the state-owned TV broadcaster — but rather rebranded them and used them to plead with Syrians not to loot state property.

They also declared a nightly curfew in Damascus, perhaps aware that security remains the cornerstone of any functioning state, he said.

“All these signs indicate that those who toppled Assad understand global fears, that the sudden disappearance of the ruling regime may lead to lawlessness,” he wrote “Whether they will manage to maintain security, stability, and basic government — in the short and medium term — remains to be seen.”

Some key government services had shut down on Monday after state workers ignored calls to go back to their jobs.

WATCH | What Assad’s fall means for the Middle East: 

The Breakdown | What Assad’s fall means for Syria and the Middle East

1 day ago
Duration 19:42

As Syrian rebels outline their vision for the future of the country, The National breaks down what reignited the fighting, and what the stunning collapse of the decades-old Assad regime means for Syria, the region, and the world.

In an interview with CBC News, Abdul-Hussain said that one of the key differences between the situation in Iraq following the fall of Saddam and Syria today is that Iraq failed in part because Iran was empowered but is now weak.

The other big difference is that the rebels taking over seem aware of the mistakes and the pitfalls of the other change processes that occurred within countries  like Libya, Iraq or Yemen, he said. 

Rebels become more organized

“What you like to see now is that if the government keeps on running affairs, you will have minimum government services, which is essential to keep civil peace,” Abdul-Hussain said. 

A Syrian man burns a picture of Assad in Damascus on Monday. Assad fled to Moscow on the weekend and received asylum from his longtime ally hours after a stunning rebel advance seized control of Damascus and ended his family’s 50 years of iron rule. (AP)

Idlbi, from the Atlantic Council, said that the rebels have become more organized and, on a military and security level, are showing co-ordination and co-operation.

“We’ve seen a very high level of outreach to minority communities to ensure the protection of different ethnic and religious minority communities — Christians, Alawites, Shias and others — which is very hopeful, I think, for the future of Syria and the ability of those different groups to work together,” he said.

But the problem, he added, is looking at what governing structure would be put in place and how inclusive it is.

“So there’s definitely a question to look at what the conduct of HTS would be and how inclusive it is of everyone in Syria, not only the rebels themselves, but … all the different ethnic, sectarian or religious groups all across Syria,” Idlbi said.

For the next two years,”we should expect that there is a lot of organization that needs to be done just to figure out how to stabilize the situation in Syria,” he said.

Published at Sat, 07 Dec 2024 15:44:10 +0000

‘There’s a diaper crisis in Gaza’: Palestinian mothers can’t find diapers for their babies

From her tent made up of blankets, tarps and wood beams, Asala Shehata, 32, lays her three-year-old daughter Heba down on a mat on the ground to change her diaper. What used to be a simple routine has stretched into a complex undertaking, another aspect of life that over a year of war has altered in Gaza. 

She starts by placing a towel on the child and wrapping it in a plastic bag around her waist. Then, she puts the diaper on Heba. This way, she can wash and reuse the diaper for a few more weeks, because it only gets a little soiled. 

The cost of diapers has skyrocketed — and that’s if they’re available when the mother of four goes out to buy them. A pack of 30, which once cost 13 shekels ($5 Cdn), can now run up to 70 shekels ($28 Cdn), an increase of over 400 per cent.

Heba, who is three, wears a towel and a plastic bag before being wrapped in a diaper so that her mother can reuse the same diaper for many days. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC News)

The Israeli government said that it’s given the green light to allow aid trucks into the area, but says much of the aid is looted before it reaches the civilians it’s meant to help. Last week, UNRWA also halted shipments of aid into Gaza after more trucks were looted

But that leaves mothers like Shehata, who is living in Khan Younis on what was once the campus of Al-Aqsa University, desperate for diapers, and having to turn to alternatives as they wait for more supplies to come in.  

“We buy a diaper, we keep it and wash it for maybe two weeks until it breaks down,” Shehata told CBC freelance videographer Mohamed El Saife. 

“Diapers are very expensive and are scarce in the market.” 

All-day waits for diapers

It’s noon at the Al-Buhaisi shopping centre in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, and a large crowd has gathered, pushing and shoving each other in an attempt to reach the shop’s window. 

People hold pink packs high in their arms — they’re the lucky ones who have managed to snag a few diapers for their kids this time around. 

Shehata says supplies of diapers in Gaza are low, and when they are available, the price is too expensive so she reuses diapers sometimes for up to two weeks to get around the issue. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC News)

Umm Aseel, 55, had been in line since 8 a.m., but didn’t manage to get any diapers for her grandchildren. Their father, her son, has been in jail for 17 years, leaving her and the children’s mother to watch over the quadruplets. 

“I sold their mother’s bracelets so I could buy them diapers … and I still couldn’t get them,” she told El Saife. 

In a report published in December, UNICEF said children in Gaza are facing a “deepening catastrophe” as access to essential goods and services continue to dwindle. 

“Everyday supplies parents need to keep their children healthy are either unavailable or too expensive for families to afford,” it read. 

WATCH | Looters and gangs target aid trucks in Gaza: 

Gaza slips into lawlessness as Hamas’s grip on power fades

11 days ago

Duration 3:58

More than 14 months into the Israel-Hamas war, Gaza is slipping into lawlessness and aid groups say the breakdown is threatening the survivial of up to two million people.

While the Rafah border crossing bordering Egypt is still closed, the only other option for aid to enter the strip is through the Kerem Shalom border, which connects Gaza with Israel and Egypt.

But issues with crossing the border, coupled with images of trucks lined up ready to cross with aid from international organizations, have caused an uproar among the international community. Israel has previously claimed that Hamas was stealing the aid, while the group in turn claimed Israel was purposely stopping it at the border. 

Now, as the war continues into its second year, and Hamas loses its control over the territory, lawlessness has taken over. Looters and gangs have targeted aid trucks and sold much of those supplies to desperate civilians, which then drives up the cost. 

Truck drivers told El Saife earlier in December that as they crossed the Kerem Shalom border, looters would shoot at their trucks, targeting their tires and windshields, sometimes forcing drivers to go to undisclosed locations to drop their loads rather than international organizations’ warehouses. 

Hala Abdel Ghani, 34, was also in line all day for diapers at the shopping centre and left empty-handed. 

“I want to leave but I can’t because I didn’t get anything for my son,” she told El Saife. “There’s a diaper crisis.” 

Abdel Ghani says she runs through a pack of diapers a day for her three-year-old son, who has liver issues. Their rising cost makes them difficult to get, and even more difficult to maintain a supply. 

The Israel-Hamas war began after a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on Oct.7 killed some 1,200 people and saw 250 hostages taken into Gaza, according to Israeli figures. Israel’s responding incursion into Gaza has killed over 44,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. 

Used diapers cause rashes, sores

Back in her tent in Khan Younis, Shehata places the diapers in a basin along with some other laundry. With a soapbar, she begins to clean the diaper and then hangs it on a line in the space between the tents. 

“The children had rashes, allergic reactions, infections, sores,” she said. “They’ve been exposed to so much but I try my best to disinfect the area.” 

Nearby, little Heba walks off with a smile and a baby bottle of water in hand. Her mother has changed her into a Mickey Mouse sweatsuit and tied her hair up in pigtails. On the outside, the child looks to be living a normal life — unaware of what her mother goes through to secure something as simple as a diaper for her.

Published at Tue, 10 Dec 2024 09:00:00 +0000

Exit mobile version