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- More than 300 people have been killed since the clashes erupted on Thursday along the country’s western coast, which followed other deadly incidents in the area earlier this week, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said
- The violence has shaken interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa’s efforts to consolidate control as his administration struggles to get US sanctions lifted
DAMASCUS: Syria’s leader Ahmed Al-Sharaa on Friday urged insurgents from ousted president Bashar Assad’s Alawite minority to lay down their arms or face the consequences after the fiercest attacks on the war-torn country’s new rulers yet.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that “311 Alawite civilians were killed in the coastal region... by security forces and allied groups” since the clashes began on Thursday.
“You attacked all Syrians and made an unforgivable mistake. The riposte has come, and you have not been able to withstand it,” Sharaa warned in a speech broadcast on Telegram by the Syrian presidency.
“Lay down your weapons and surrender before it’s too late.”
More than 300 people have been killed since the clashes erupted on Thursday along the country’s western coast, which followed other deadly incidents in the area earlier this week, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Restoring security has been one of the most complex tasks for Syria’s new authorities, installed after Islamist-led forces ousted Assad in a lightning offensive in December.
In his Friday address Sharaa, who headed the Islamist-led coalition which ousted Assad, also vowed to keep working toward “monopolising weapons in the hands of the state.”
“There will be no more unregulated weapons,” he pledged.
Western powers and Syria’s neighbors have emphasized the need for unity in the new Syria, which is seeking funds for reconstructing a nation ravaged by years of war under Assad.
“The vast majority of the victims were summarily executed by elements affiliated to the Ministry of Defense and the Interior,” both under the Islamist-led authorities’ control, the rights group announced.
The Observatory and activists released footage showing dozens of bodies in civilian clothing piled in the yard of a house, with blood stains nearby and women wailing.
Other videos appeared to show men in military garb shooting people at close range.
AFP could not independently verify the images.
The United Nations envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, decried “very troubling reports of civilian casualties.”
He called on all sides to refrain from actions which could “destabilize Syria, and jeopardize a credible and inclusive political transition.”
An interior ministry source quoted by official news agency SANA said isolated incidents had occurred on the coast and pledged to put a stop to them.
After Thursday’s clashes, which according to the Observatory left 78 dead — about half security force members and the other half gunmen, plus seven civilians — the authorities launched a sweeping security operation.
Mustafa Kneifati, a security official in Latakia, said that in “a well-planned and premeditated attack, several groups of Assad militia remnants attacked our positions and checkpoints, targeting many of our patrols” around the coastal town of Jableh.
A curfew was imposed until Saturday in the coastal provinces of Latakia and Tartus, heartland of the ousted president’s Alawite religious minority, and authorities on Friday announced a security sweep in the Jableh area, between Latakia and Tartus.
Officials blamed “sabotage” for a power outage that affected much of Latakia province.
A curfew has also been imposed in Syria’s confessionally divided third city Homs.
The security operation “targeted remnants of Assad’s militias and those who supported them,” an official cited by SANA said, as he called on civilians to stay in their homes.
On Friday SANA said a security operation was launched in Assad’s hometown of Qardaha, near Latakia, “against loyalists of the former regime.”
SANA said that during their operation, security forces detained Ibrahim Huweija, a general who was “accused of hundreds of assassinations” under Assad’s father and predecessor, Hafez Assad.
Ali, a farmer living in Jableh, told AFP he saw urban battles and street fighting.
“All night, we heard the sounds of gunfire and explosions,” he said.
“Everyone’s afraid... we are trapped at home and we can’t go out.”
Earlier in the week the Observatory reported four civilians killed in a security operation in the Latakia area, where state media had said “militia remnants” supporting Assad killed two security personnel in an ambush.
“Both sides feel like they’re under attack, both sides have suffered horrific abuses at the hands of the other side, and both sides are armed,” Syria expert Aron Lund, a fellow at the Century International think tank, told AFP.
Forces led by Sharaa’s Islamist group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham launched the offensive that toppled Assad on December 8, when he fled to Russia with his family.
Syria’s new security forces have since carried out extensive campaigns seeking to root out Assad loyalists from his former bastions.
During those campaigns, residents and organizations have reported executions and other violations, which the authorities have described as “isolated incidents.”
Russia, Assad’s main backer that helped turn the tide of the war in his favor before he was toppled, called on Syrian authorities to “do their utmost to put an end to the bloodshed as soon as possible.”
The foreign ministry of Iran, another major ally of Assad, said it strongly opposes “harming innocent Syrian people from any group and tribe, and considers it to be paving the ground for the spread of instability in the region.”
Saudi Arabia and Turkiye reaffirmed their support for the new authorities, while Jordan condemned “attempts to drive Syria toward anarchy.”
Germany meanwhile urged Syria’s authorities to avoid a “spiral of violence.”