Source: Human Rights Watch
Armed Clashes Cause Mass Displacement of Minorities
(New York) – Armed opposition groups appeared to have deliberately destroyed religious sites in mixed areas of Northern Syria, in November and December 2012, Human Rights Watch said following
investigations in Latakia and Idlib governorates. An armed opposition
group destroyed a Shia place of worship in Idlib governorate, and two
Christian churches in Latakia governorate were looted. In all three
cases evidence examined by Human Rights Watch suggests, and witnesses
stated, that the attacks took place after the area fell to opposition
control and government forces had left the area.
While some opposition leaders have pledged to protect all Syrians, in
practice the opposition has failed to properly address the unjustified
attacks against minority places of worship, Human Rights Watch said. The
opposition also has failed to rein in gunmen engaging in looting and
other criminal activities, like kidnappings. Human Rights Watch urged
armed opposition groups to protect all religious sites in areas under
their control and to discipline members who loot or kidnap.
Human Rights Watch has previously documented the destruction and vandalization of a mosque in Taftanaz, Idlib by Syrian government forces.
“The destruction of religious sites is furthering sectarian fears and
compounding the tragedies of the country, with tens of thousands
killed,” said Sarah Leah Whitson,
Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Syria will lose its rich
cultural and religious diversity if armed groups do not respect places
of worship. Leaders on both sides should send a message that those who
attack these sites will be held accountable.”
Under international humanitarian law, parties in an armed conflict have
a responsibility not to intentionally attack religious buildings that
are not being used for military purposes. They are prohibited from
seizing, destroying, or doing willful damageto religious buildings or
institutions and from theft, pillage, or vandalism directed against
important cultural property. Deliberate attacks on religious sites that
are not military objectives are war crimes.
Human Rights Watch researchers conducted a four day investigation in
the Latakia and Idlib countryside in opposition-controlled areas into
abuses by both government and opposition fighters in Sunni, Alawite,
Christian, and mixed sect villages. In three villages – Zarzour,
Ghasaniyeh, and Jdeideh – Human Rights Watch found evidence of attacks
against religious minority sites after the areas fell under the control
of armed opposition groups and government forces had left the area.
Residents also told Human Rights Watch that armed opposition gunmen
looted some homes after taking control of the town and kidnapped two
local villagers in Ghasaniyeh and Jdeideh. Human Rights Watch was unable
to determine whether the looting and kidnapping were religious attacks.
Media reports also indicate that looting and kidnapping of Sunni
residents has taken place in opposition controlled areas.
In all three villages, religious minorities had either all fled or left
their homes in large numbers. Residents in Zarzour, a predominantly
Sunni village with a small Shia population, told Human Rights Watch that
their Shia neighbors had fled because they feared retaliation by
opposition forces because, in their opinion, the local Shias had been
supportive of government forces.
These residents said this perceived support was reflected in alleged
preferential treatment that government forces gave to Shia residents
when the government forces were in the village. In Ghasaniyeh and
Jdeideh, two Christian villages in Latakia, residents told Human Rights
Watch that many of their neighbors fled because of dire humanitarian
conditions, fear of armed opposition fighters in their area, and fear of
air and artillery strikes by government forces.
All parties to the conflict should promote conditions that would allow
civilian populations to remain in their homes, Human Rights Watch said.
The Syrian government should stop deliberate and indiscriminate air and
artillery strikes against civilians, and opposition leadership should
protect all civilians in their areas, including members of religious
minorities, from any retaliatory attack or criminal activity. All
parties should facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance to
areas under their authority.
Attack on Zarzour Husseiniya
Human Rights Watch researchers observed what appeared to be deliberate damage to the local husseiniya,
a Shia place of worship, caused by opposition fighters after they had
taken control of Zarzour village on December 11. Local opposition
fighters who spoke to Human Rights Watch said that Syrian government
forces caused the damage in the husseiniya before they left the
town, but two local residents said that the armed opposition started
the fire in the mosque when they took control of the city. Other
evidence observed by Human Rights Watch researchers indicated that the
damage was deliberate. The husseiniya windows were broken,
prayer stones littered the floor, two of the interior walls were
blackened from flames, and a religious poster had been torn off of the
wall, with remnants of the poster left behind. Human Rights Watch
researchers also saw remnants of burned posters and papers, and what
appeared to be the remnants of a burned prayer rug in the building.
Burned items were lying together on the floor, appearing to indicate
they were piled on top of one another and deliberately set on fire.
A video published on YouTube on December 12 taken in front of the husseiniyashowed
opposition fighters celebrating their victory in the town as a fire
burns in the mosque in the background. The video supports the claim that
the damage was intentionally inflicted after the government forces had
left the area, Human Rights Watch said. In the video, one man who
appears to be an opposition fighter announces the “destruction of the
dens of the Shias and the Rafida,” a derogatory term used to refer to
Shias. He identifies himself as a member of the Amr bin Ma’ad Yakrib
al-Zubaydi Brigade. The video also shows graffiti on the wall in front
of the mosque, which exclaims, “No, and a thousand nos, to sectarian
strife.” By the time Human Rights Watch researchers were in Zarzour one
week later, this graffiti had been written over.
One resident told Human Rights Watch that while the Syrian army was in the village, they used the husseiniyaas
barracks. According to him however, the army withdrew from the building
after Shias in the village complained and before the opposition
attacked. Two residents said that an army sniper remained on top of the
building after that, but withdrew before the opposition forces attacked
the building. Human Rights Watch observed several sandbags on top of the
mosque, appearing to corroborate the claim that a sniper was positioned
there.
Human Rights Watch condemns the Syrian government’s use of the husseiniya
for military purposes before the opposition took control of the
village. The use by any party to a conflict of property of great
importance to the cultural heritage of any people for purposes that are
likely to expose it to destruction or damage is prohibited, unless
imperatively required by military necessity. However, such behavior does
not absolve the opposition of the obligation not to inflict intentional
damage to the husseiniya once it was no longer a military object.
Looting of Churches in Ghasaniyeh and Jdeideh
Local residents told Human Rights Watch that armed gunmen
operating “in the name of the opposition” also broke into and stole from
Christian churches in the villages of Ghasaniyeh and Jdeideh, in
Latakia governorate, after the villages fell under opposition control.
A Jdeideh resident told Human Rights Watch that after the armed
opposition took control of the village on December 11 and government
forces had fled, gunmen broke into and stole from the village church and
fired numerous shots inside, causing structural damage. Human Rights
Watch visited the church on December 18 and observed that the doors bore
signs of forced entry, and the windows were shattered. The church doors
had been welded shut since the attack to protect against further
attack.
The resident said that opposition forces also used the priests’
quarters next to the church to shoot at a neighboring village where
government forces were present. In the process, the windows of the
priests’ quarters were broken. He also told Human Rights Watch that
people acting “in the name of the opposition” had stolen medicine from a
clinic belonging to the church, looted homes, and kidnapped civilians.
In one kidnapping during the summer of 2012, before opposition fighters
controlled the village, he said that a family paid three million Syrian
pounds (approximately US$42,250) to free their relative.
A Ghasaniyeh resident told Human Rights Watch that after armed gunmen
operating “in the name of the opposition” came into the village in late
November they broke into the local church and stole the gas and diesel
fuel there. On December 15, Human Rights Watch visited the church, and
observed that the church doors had been forced open. A cross had been
left on the floor of the church, but the church otherwise appeared
undamaged.
The resident also told Human Rights Watch that opposition fighters
had looted homes and kidnapped one resident, who remained missing. Two
men from a local opposition group took the kidnapped man, a civilian
whom he knew personally, from his home after opposition forces had taken
control of the village. Despite his family’s efforts to secure his
release by communicating with the kidnappers and the opposition
fighters’ leader, they had not freed him as of December 15.
But the resident who spoke to Human Rights Watch said that people in
the town had good relationships with many opposition fighters. Armed
opposition fighters with whom Human Rights Watch spoke in the village
maintained that they were not responsible for the attack on the church.
While the motivation for the church break-ins may have been theft
rather than a religious attack, opposition fighters have a
responsibility to protect religious sites in areas under their control
from willful damage and theft, Human Rights Watch said.
“The opposition in Syria should back up its claims that it will uphold
minority rights by protecting places of worship, and more generally
ensuring that gunmen acting in its name respect civilians and civilian
properties,” Whitson said.