From & nbspgeorge Dimitropoulos & nbsp && nbspAssociated press
Was published
•Updated earlier
Advertising
On Sunday, the Armed tribes of the Syrian tribes announced that they had been withdrawn from the Southern City of Suyid after a week of conflict, according to the ceasefire agreement reached by the mediation of the United States.
The conflicts between the religious minority of friends and the Sunni Muslim tribes killed hundreds and threatened to dismantle the already fragile post of Syria. Israel also launched dozens of air raids in the province of Suyid, where most friends aimed at government forces, which were essentially from the Bedouins.
The resonance series caused conflicts in various cities and villages in the province, which later spread to the city.
Government forces were ceased to stop the updated battles that erupted on Thursday before resigning again.
The Syrian temporary president Ahmed al-Sarae, who was more compassionate to the Bedouins, tried to contact his friend’s community, remaining critical for militias. He later called on Bedouin to leave the city, saying that “they could not replace the role of the state in managing the country’s affairs and restoring security.”
“We thank the Bedouins for their heroic positions, but we demand that they be fully committed to the ceasefire and execute state commands,” he said in a speech that was broadcast on Saturday.
The seizure of the Bedouins brought cautious calm to this area, and the humanitarian phalanxes, allegedly, were sent there. On Sunday, the Syrian red crescent said that he was sending 32 trucks to a superstar loaded with food, medicine, water, fuel and other help after the battle left the province with power outages and a lack. The Syrian sangs of the media reported that the Ministry of Health is also sending a Phalanx truck.
Dozens of Druzov citizens were killed in a series of targeted attacks in the city with the hands of fighters and government forces. The video also appeared on the Internet, and the fighters destroyed portraits of religious officials and outstanding houses and a brey of the mustache of the elderly, who are considered an insult to culture and traditions. Police Druzo in the loss of attacked areas with most Bedouins on the outskirts of the province, forcing families to flee to the neighboring province of Daraa.
More than half of about 1 million friends around the world live in Syria. Most of the other Druzov lives in Lebanon and Israel, including the maximums of Golan, which Israel occupied Syria in the Middle Eastern War in 1967 and annexed in 1981.
The Syrian Druiso noted the fall of the Assad family, which ended in the decades of the tyrannical administration. While they had concerns about the de facto Islamist sovereignty al-Sharaa, a large number wanted to approach diplomatic issues. Nevertheless, recent conflicts have made an increasing number of dragons in the region more skeptical of the new leadership of Damascus and are more careful with peaceful coexistence.