September 26, 2012 01:18 AM | ||||
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HOMS, Syria: Pro-regime militias in Syria’s most shell-shocked city used to offer fellow minority Alawites protection out of solidarity. Now, security comes at a price: About $300 a month. Alawite residents in Homs say they are being coerced into helping fund the war effort of the shabbiha, brutal militias supporting President Bashar Assad’s crackdown on an 18-month-old rebellion. “The shabbiha exploit our fear. Every time, there is some excuse – they need food or ammunition. But it’s basically a silent understanding now that each month the wealthier families pay,” says Farid, a graying surgeon who lives with his family in Zahra, an Alawite district of Homs. The cost of war is rising at the site of the longest-running battle between Assad’s forces and the rebels. Farid fears his children could be kidnapped for ransom if he doesn’t pay the pro-Assad militiamen what they call “protection money.” The militias are formed mostly from members of Assad’s own Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. They have been the fiercest enforcers of a bloody crackdown on the uprising led by Syria’s majority Sunni Muslims, even accused of massacres. The disgust some Alawites have at the idea of paying for them symbolizes a greater inner conflict many in their sect are struggling with: Do they risk rejecting the crackdown by their Alawite-led government and its brutal militias? Or do they buy in, literally, to the pro-regime argument that this is a fight for existence against Sunnis determined to take revenge? “I’m not comfortable with it, it seems wrong. But I have no choice,” says Said, 40, a balding engineer in a slick black suit. “If I didn’t pay, I could be at risk. These guys are dangerous.” After months of fighting, only the pro-regime militia-guarded Alawite enclaves like Zahra are relatively unscathed. Zahra has swelled to nearly 200,000 Alawites in recent months. The neighborhoods belonging to Homs’ large Sunni population have become graveyards of bombed buildings and shattered streets. Very few families remain. With jobs and money drying up due to the unrest, the $300 fee is no small sum. But Alawites in Zahra say that while they know the money they pay is extortion, and that loyalists’ violence toward Sunnis puts them more at risk, they are regularly reminded of how precarious their fate is. As the sound of crashing mortars in the distance shakes the silverware on his dining room table, Farid stops his rant against Assad’s loyalists and sighs. “Some days, I think we really do need them to protect us,” the elderly doctor says, surveying his four children silently eating their meal. The fight for Homs has fallen off the front pages as battles erupt in Syria’s bigger cities, Damascus and Aleppo, but it has not eased. Gunfire perpetually rings in the background. Buildings are collapsing in the daily hail of mortars and rocket-propelled grenades. Pro-Assad gangs used to rake in money by looting rebellious Sunni districts in Homs after the army raided them. But now that source of cash has run dry. Asking for “protection money” may be a way to make up for that. The groups have become well organized in Homs. They have divided Zahra into six regions, each with a local “boss.” In each area, the boss sends young men with shaved heads and camouflage pants to monitor, strutting about with their rifles in hand. The army stays out, only manning road blocks on the outskirts of the district. “There is no state presence in Zahra any more, even though it is surrounded by Sunni areas. Yet it is the safest place in Syria,” says Said, reluctantly giving the militiamen their due. One improvement residents say their donations funded is the building of two 20-meter high blast walls towering over Zahra’s main square. The street had once been within easy range of rebel gunmen atop buildings in neighboring districts. “This used to be the deadliest spot in Zahra,” says Manhal, the surgeon Farid’s son, as he walks behind the two massive white-washed walls. Instead of seeing residents scurrying below, all gunmen nearby can see now is a giant poster that pro-Assad militiamen plastered over the wall: A portrait of former President Hafez Assad, Bashar’s father, who ruled for nearly 30 years until his death. Not far from Farid’s family home, Wael “the accountant” combs a thick glob of hair cream into his dark hair and gets on his motorbike to make the monthly rounds for his boss. “In my area we have 15 families. I get the money for the boss whenever there is a need: weapons, gas, car repairs, food for our boys,” says the 25-year-old tough. Wael doesn’t think what he does is exploitative. He sees it as a service that residents need to pay to maintain. Unhappy residents can leave Homs if they want, he argues. “We even arrange convoys to help them get out – that costs 10,000 lira ($120).” There is no end in sight to the war in Syria. International powers are too deadlocked to negotiate. Fighters show no interest in laying down their arms. Meanwhile, groups like the Alawites feel more vulnerable, and the pro-Assad gangs have taken advantage. Umm Hani, a mother of two in Zahra, noticed the trend after a stunning bomb attack in July that killed four top security officials in Damascus. “After that, the regime was shaken. And the shabbiha started to take more power, they started to demand more money. Without saying a word, they made their message clear: We are the ones responsible for you. Pay up.” There are deep wrinkles around Umm Hani’s blue eyes after months of anxiety. Alawites like her feel trapped. She doesn’t have enough savings to leave Syria. She feels she would be unsafe in the mostly Sunni refugee camps on the borders. Paying is the only choice. “Where can we go? Who would accept us? So we stay, and we deal with our new little pharaohs.” |
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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on September 26, 2012, on page 8. |
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