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SYRIA DEEPLY

Sectarian Cleansing In Syria: More Than Meets The Eye

As the war in Syria enters its seventh year, the widespread displacement of Syria’s majority Sunni population is fueling fears of sectarian cleansing. Syrian researcher Aymenn al-Tamimi explains why that may not be the full picture.

Syrian refugees on the border between Syria and Jordan
Syrian refugees on the border between Syria and Jordan
Aymenn al-Tamimi*

QUNEITRA — Perhaps one of the most controversial aspects of the Syrian conflict is the concept of "demographic change": the allegation that the Syrian government, with the support and participation of its ally Iran, is trying to engineer a new sectarian balance. According to this argument, featured prominently in a wide range of​ media outlets, the government is trying to reduce the proportion of Sunnis who may pose a threat to its rule, and repopulate majority-Sunni areas with foreign and/or native Shia families — alongside Iranian efforts to pursue broader "Shiafication": that is, conversions to Shia Islam among the wider population.

Some allegations used to prove this theory, such as those of sectarian cleansing and "Shiafication", are rooted in empirical reality. But on their own, they are not enough to prove a deliberately engineered population change policy and there may be alternative explanations. Other claims — for example, that the government is resettling Sunni areas with Shia — do more closely support the narrative, but are not as well supported by the evidence. Some cases, such as those of population transfer agreements, reflect an overlap of these two strands.

First, the concrete points. Sectarian cleansing — the displacement of Sunni Arab populations from multiple — has been a part of the war since at least 2012. Iran's property purchases in Syria, and the establishment of recruitment offices for Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Lebanese Hezbollah, also speak to the narrative of broader demographic change.

Within this context emerged Syrian Hezbollah, a group of Syrian Shia militias tied to Iran that operate like Lebanese Hezbollah. It is most apparent in existing Syrian Shia communities, such as the villages of Nubl and Zahara" north of Aleppo city, areas of Homs province and Homs city and some neighborhoods of Damascus city. One example tying Syrian Hezbollah to the broader goal of "Shiafication" is the creation of Liwa al-Baqir, a militia that claims 3,000 fighters and traces its origins to 2012. Rooted in Bekara tribesmen who have converted to Shia Islam, the militia has played an important role in the Aleppo fighting and received training from the IRGC and Hezbollah.

Hezbollah has also recruited Syrians in predominantly non-Shia areas, even in eastern Deir Ez-zor province, where the so-called Islamic State has been trying to take the last government-held outposts. In January 2017, at least two Syrians from Deir Ez-zor were killed fighting in Hezbollah's ranks while pushing back the ISIS offensive. There is also a Syrian Hezbollah group in Deir Ez-zor under the name of Liwa al-Imam Zain al-Abidin. In a conversation in early February, Abu Aboud, the group's military leader and a petroleum engineer by profession, confirmed that the militia is still fighting in the province.

The development of "Syrian Hezbollah" and the integration of foreign militias do reflect Iranian aims in Syria but do not necessarily point to demographic change.

Some Iran-backed foreign militias have even integrated into the apparatus of local forces: The Iraqi group Liwa Dhu al-Fiqar, for example, is a part of Dir" al-Watan, a set of militias affiliated with the al-Bustan Association, a charity organization bankrolled by Syrian president Bashar al-Assad's maternal cousin Rami Makhlouf. The militia's leader, Hayder al-Juburi, assumes a military command role in Dir" al-Watan. Another Iraqi Shia militia, Liwa al-Imam al-Hussein, overlaps with the 4th Armored Division, an elite Syrian army unit. Some Iraqi groups have also formed close working relations with the private militia Suqur al-Sahara and operated in its ranks.

However, even when combined, these facts do not definitively illustrate a plan of demographic change. The sectarian cleansing has mostly taken place along Alawite-Sunni lines. The Alawites are the minority sect from which Assad comes, but contrary to popular perception, they are distinct from the Shia. Alawite militiamen have engaged in sectarian cleansing in places such as Homs and Baniyas. But this was more because they saw rebellious Sunni populations as a security threat to key Alawite areas, rather than to engineer a broader Iranian-backed demographic shift.

The development of "Syrian Hezbollah" and the integration of foreign militias do reflect Iranian aims in Syria but do not necessarily point to demographic change. Both developments give Iran lasting leverage in Syria's security affairs, thus reducing the risk that Syrians will resent what they perceive as an occupation by foreign forces. Logically, Iran will want to establish a long-term or permanent presence in Syria — particularly for the estimated several thousand personnel in the Afghan Shia units of the Fatemiyoun Brigade, the majority of whom were refugees living in harsh conditions in Iran before the IRGC recruited them. At least four contingents of the Fatemiyoun Brigade were manning the front line in the area around Palmyra when ISIS retook it last December; it's possible Iran may even plan to establish large bases there, integrated with Syria's armed forces, that will amount to settlements for these fighters.

The rise of Syrian Hezbollah among existing Syrian Shia communities and the resultant affinities with Iran undoubtedly fit in with Tehran's desire to promote its ideology among Shia communities and position itself as their protector and guarantor of their interests. However, the clearest example of "Shiafication", in the case of Liwa al-Baqir, is actually not a wartime phenomenon: Conversions among Bekara tribesmen, driven by Iranian-backed proselytization, were already occurring before the war. These conversion initiatives were successful partly because of the connection drawn between the tribe's origins and the fifth Shia imam, Imam Muhammad al-Baqir.

Other examples cited to support the narrative of demographic change better fit the argument but are less substantiated. One such case is the Damascus suburb of Darayya. Four years of government siege saw a significant drop in the suburb's original population, culminating in a final evacuation agreement for the remaining rebels and civilians in August 2016. The Guardian claimed that the government then resettled "more than 300 Iraqi Shia families' in Darayya, which is home to a Shia shrine. The Guardian attributed its claim to Syria's "state media." But while this claim is a staple of Saudi-funded media outlets such as Asharq al-Awsat — avowed enemies of the Syrian government and Iran — a search of Syria's pro-government media revealed only a report by Damascus Now. It mentions the arrival in Damascus — not Darayya — of Iraqi families fleeing the Islamic State in Mosul. It does not specify their sect.

Speaking to Syria Deeply in January 2017, Damascus Now denied that Darayya had any inhabitants at the time. Abu Haydar al-Harbi, an Iraqi member of Hezbollah forces in Syria, corroborated this claim, describing the area as a military zone. According to open-source evidence, there are reportedly ongoing discussions within government circles about the return of civilians to Darayya, with some steps taken toward allowing farmers to go to agricultural areas for the purpose of agriculture only.

Despite certain misconceptions, no agreement was made.

Discussions of demographic change frequently turn to the "Four Towns' agreement, which binds the fate of the Shia towns of Fou'a and Kafraya in northern Idlib to the Sunni towns of Zabadani and Madaya, west of Damascus near the border with Lebanon. Rebels have largely kept Fou'a and Kafraya under siege since expelling government forces from most of Idlib province in the spring and summer of 2015. Meanwhile, government forces and their allies — including Hezbollah — have besieged Zabadani and Madaya since July 2015. Under the terms of a cease-fire agreement dating back to September 2015, humanitarian aid can enter one town only if simultaneous deliveries are made to the others.

In the initial negotiations, Iran reportedly proposed a population swap that would see the people of Fou'a and Kafraya go to government-held areas, and the people of Zabadani and Madaya go to rebel-held areas. Though this proposal is certainly interesting, it does not necessarily support a demographic change argument. Rather, it can be tied to Iran's aforementioned interest in promoting itself as the protector and upholder of the interests of Shia communities.

The proposal also reportedly came up again as the last residents and rebels of east Aleppo were being evacuated in December 2016, but, despite certain misconceptions, no agreement was made. Speaking privately to Syria Deeply between Jan. 18 and 19, organizers of the Facebook page "Besieged al-Fu'a and Kafariya News Network" denied that there was any plan to evacuate residents of the two villages, whose original population stood at 20,000 civilians. Only 1,000 people had been allowed to leave by that point, as part of an agreement to evacuate 4,000 women, children, wounded and ill.

Even if all the inhabitants were evacuated, it is unclear how such numbers could bring about a meaningful demographic change in Syria. It is more likely that, rather than a full evacuation of Fou'a and Kafraya, government forces and their allies will try to break the siege by advancing into Idlib province, a theory discussed by Iran-backed Shia militias. There have also been repeated demonstrations calling to break the siege of Fou'a and Kafraya.

In broader terms, the demographic change narrative does not account for the government's multifaceted approach to retaking and managing rebel-controlled areas, which varies according to circumstance and need. What's more, the government is not in a position to ignore the fact that Syria has a Sunni Arab majority. As it seeks to regain more territory, and particularly as it struggles with manpower deficiencies in the face of widespread army draft evasion and desertion, the government will need some level of consent and participation from the Sunni majority. Therefore, the recent increase of militias seeking to recruit locals in re-conquered areas and the pursuit of "reconciliation" deals in opposition-held areas is not surprising.

In this regard, The Guardian"s claim that Syria and Iran don't want Sunnis along the border with Lebanon from Damascus to — based solely on quotes from an anonymous Lebanese official — does not stand up to scrutiny. It does not account for the pro-government militias in the Qalamoun area that have been recruiting in areas with Sunni populations since the beginning of 2014. More recently, as the government seeks to retake the last rebel-held areas in the countryside west of Damascus around Mt. Hermon, near the borders with Lebanon and the occupied Golan Heights, it has established the Hermon Regiment militia to recruit locals — including former rebels — in the villages that have agreed to its "reconciliation" deals.

If the government continues to gain ground and remains on the path of political ascendancy, nuanced analysis of events and trends inside government-held territory will become more important than ever. The narrative of demographic change may seem tempting at first, but it ultimately fails to stand up to in-depth examination.



*Aymenn al-Tamimi is a research fellow at the Middle East Forum, a U.S. think-tank.

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Geopolitics

Senegal's Democratic Unrest And The Ghosts Of French Colonialism

The violence that erupted following the sentencing of opposition politician Ousmane Sonko to two years in prison left 16 people dead and 500 arrested. This reveals deep fractures in Senegalese democracy that has traces to France's colonial past.

Image of Senegalese ​Protesters celebrating Sonko being set free by the court, March 2021

Protesters celebrate Sonko being set free by the court, March 2021

Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

PARIS — For a long time, Senegal had the glowing image of one of Africa's rare democracies. The reality was more complicated than that, even in the days of the poet-president Léopold Sedar Senghor, who also had his dark side.

But for years, the country has been moving down what Senegalese intellectual Felwine Sarr describes as the "gentle slope of... the weakening and corrosion of the gains of Senegalese democracy."

This has been demonstrated once again over the last few days, with a wave of violence that has left 16 people dead, 500 arrested, the internet censored, and a tense situation with troubling consequences. The trigger? The sentencing last Thursday of opposition politician Ousmane Sonko to two years in prison, which could exclude him from the 2024 presidential elections.

Young people took to the streets when the verdict was announced, accusing the justice system of having become a political tool. Ousmane Sonko had been accused of rape but was convicted of "corruption of youth," a change that rendered the decision incomprehensible.

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