Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Amid the ruins in Homs, Syrian anger burns
Amid the ruins in Homs, Syrian anger burns
Jul 14, 2025 7:07 PM

  Burnt houses, collapsed buildings and rubble line streets strewn with broken glass and spent shells in Homs' devastated neighborhoods, for months the front line in the revolution against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

  On a 10-minute drive through Baba Amr district on Thursday, as journalists accompanied United Nations truce observers, two elderly women were the only people to be seen. Buildings along the main street and nearby alleys were destroyed in the bombardment by the army.

  Homs, Syria's third largest city, is an important industrial center straddling the main north-south highway, near the border with Lebanon. The city and surrounding province have borne the heaviest loss of life in the 14-month-old uprising against Assad and tens of thousands of people have been displaced.

  In Inshaat neighborhood a woman said she had returned to the area last week with her family because they could not rely indefinitely on others to look after them.

  "What else can we do? The destruction is huge but we cannot continue living in other people's houses," she said.

  A soldier at a nearby checkpoint, brought in from the eastern city of Deir al-Zor to help the crackdown on the revolution, said he was taken aback when he arrived in Homs a month ago.

  "I was surprised to see all this destruction. I felt bad for the country and my people," he said. "But this is all because of the gunmen," he said, echoing the government accusation that the uprising is a “foreign-backed militant campaign”.

  "Your revolution is my arse" said less sympathetic graffiti scrawled on one of the walls. In Baba Amr, taunts on the walls in the opposition district praised the president - "We love you Bashar", "Assad for ever" and "We sacrifice ourselves for you".

  Flowers to mortars

  Like other troubled cities in Syria, Homs has areas of calm. Majority Sunni Muslims, who make up most of the protesters and the overwhelming majority of the revolution, say the districts which house Alawites - from the same sect as Assad's family - have enjoyed army protection while the rest of the city is bombarded.

  In Hamra district, home to the governor's residence, houses were untouched and trees and flowers line the streets.

  But in Khalidiya, where revolution fighters were still fighting Assad's forces, constant gunfire could be heard, as well as mortars and blasts which residents said were tank fire.

  Everything from burnt out shopping malls to the damage to the main Khalid ibn al-Walid mosque spoke of violence in Homs, and even as journalists waited for U.N. monitors to finish talks with opposition representatives, the body of a person killed in the province was brought for burial, wrapped in a bloodied blanket.

  Abdulrazzaq Tlas, leader of a main revolution Farouq Brigade, helped bring in the body and conduct the funeral.

  The presence of the monitors, who are supposed to be overseeing a ceasefire leading to talks and a political solution to Syria's crisis, did little to reassure people in Khalidiya, many of whom appeared to be revolution fighters.

  "The people of Homs don't expect much, even from the monitors. Now they are talking about dialogue - who said we want dialogue," said 24-year-old Ghanem. "We went to the street to topple Bashar al-Assad, not to talk to him."

  Others spoke angrily of lost homes and lost relatives.

  Sixty-two-year-old Mohammad Ezzedine said the army burnt down his house in the Homs district of Bayada, forcing his family to head for Damascus, leave the country, or move to another area of Homs. "Who's going to compensate me, and how do you bring back the dead?" he said.

  Mahmoud, 12, said many families were crammed into small quarters. "In my house we are nine people living in my house, and our house is very tiny."

  "There is no food and no clean water, nothing. There is no shop open and we only have one meal a day. Look around you - how can we live like that and survive?"

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Damaged buildings are seen in Homs April 24, 2012. Picture taken April 24, 2012.

  Source: Reuters

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Palestinians forced to demolish own homes
  For the past two months, Hamzah Abu Terr has slept on the floor of his home. He gave his bed to his three small children whose room he was forced to destroy earlier this year, to avoid large demolition fines issued by the Israeli municipality.   "I had no choice," said...
Children's rights ignored in Egypt crackdown
  Sara Atef was wearing her school uniform on the day she was arrested by riot police.   The 16-year-old had become a regular sight at anti-government rallies organized by Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups in her hometown of 6 October city, a sprawling satellite development an hour's drive from central Cairo.   Sara, who...
Report demands US probe Yemen drone strike
  US policy on drone strikes has been questioned by a rights group who say a strike on a wedding procession killed civilians, not al-Qaeda fighters, as previously claimed by US officials.   Rights group Human Rights Watch (HRW) published a 28-page report on Thursday that said all the victims of a...
Syrian refugees struggle in urban Jordan
  Three years after fleeing their war-torn country, more than half a million Syrian refugees living in Jordan’s urban centres have become more vulnerable and destitute, a new study has revealed.   A household assessment released by CARE International on Thursday found that urban Syrian refugees are struggling to cope with inadequate...
Israel locking up more children in isolation
  Jamil was only 16 years old when Israeli soldiers raided his Bir al-Basha home near Jenin late last year. It was a few hours before dawn when he was awakened by a hard nudge, blindfolded and handcuffed, then taken away in his pyjamas and house slippers.   His ordeal took place...
UN: Syria drought to deepen food crisis
  The United Nations has warned that a looming drought in Syria could push millions more people into hunger and exacerbate a refugee crisis caused by the three-year conflict.   Syria's breadbasket northwestern region has received less than half of the average rainfall since September and, if it stays dry up to...
Egypt's human rights situation is going from ugly to uglier
  Egypt's deteriorating human rights situation in the past three years has had something of a boiled frog effect to it - things have gotten worse just gradually enough that the country's unfolding problems have been pushed to the margins.   But the severe abuses meted out to Egyptian citizens are crushing...
Civilian carnage surges in Afghanistan
  Wheeling himself out of the children's ward of Kabul's Emergency Surgical Centre for War Victims, Qasem appeared unmoved by the autumn sun and flowers he turned his wheelchair to face.   "I'll never get better," the seven-year-old from Ghazni province said as his left leg protruded from the red-and-black wheelchair he...
Displaced Syrians battle for online lifeline
  Yousef sat on the navy couch with his arms wrapped tightly around his legs, and rocked back and forth.   It's a position he has become all too familiar with over the past year. He turned on his laptop and waited fitfully for Skype to load.   "Without Skype I wouldn't be...
UN: Clashes in Iraq's Anbar displaced 300,000
  Violence in Iraq's Sunni-dominated Anbar province, where armed groups fully control one city and parts of another, has displaced up to 300,000 people in six weeks, the United Nations has said.   The province has been hit by a surge in fighting between pro- and anti-government forces that began at the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved