Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Glimpse of Syria's Qubayr massacre
Glimpse of Syria's Qubayr massacre
Nov 21, 2025 11:10 AM

  A young man describes how his town became the latest horrific headline to emerge from Syria.

  Mohammad, a 20-year-old from a small village in Hama province, left for work on Wednesday morning not knowing that he would find most residents of his town dead when he returned.

  When Mohammad came back to his house that night, he found the burned corpses of his mother, father, two sisters and one brother on the floor of his charred home.

  "I lost all my family members, with the exception of my grandfather. I found him in his home unconscious. His house was partially destroyed from the shelling," Mohammad told Al Jazeera.

  The reported massacre of at least 70 people in al-Qubayr was the second mass killing to emerge from Syria in less than two weeks, following the apparent murder of around 100 civilians in the town of Houla in Homs province.

  Mohammad and opposition activists blamed government-backed militia, known as shabiha, for killing the residents of al-Qubayr and burning their houses afterwards. The Syrian government has said "terrorists" are responsible.

  Mohammad's grandfather, who was transferred to nearby hospital, told him that supporters of President Bashar al-Assad from the nearby towns of Tal Sikkeen and Aseelah had attacked him.

  "I usually return home at 4pm, but there was heavy shelling in the area, so I stayed out until 8:30pm. When I returned, I saw what I saw," he said.

  “My grandfather was beaten on his head with a heavy object. They did not know he was still alive. If they knew they would have killed him too.”

  Heavy shelling on Wednesday reportedly targeted the villages of Jerjees and Maarzaf, where activists told Al Jazeera they suspected the army was trying to quell opposition fighters. Al-Qubayr, with a population of around 150 people, was close enough to take some of the artillery fire as well.

  “After the shelling, the army withdrew and shabiha entered the town and slaughtered people,” Mohammad said.

  Tal Sikkeen and Aseelah, where activists claimed the shabiha came from, are inhabited mainly by members of the Alawite sect, the offshoot of Shia to which Assad's family and many high-ranking government officials belong.

  Al-Qubayr is a town inhabited mainly by Sunni Muslims, and Mousab al-Hamadee, an activist in Hama, said he believed the acts of the shabiha were motivated by sectarian feelings.

  "The shabiha took advantage of the fact that this town is remote and isolated to attack it," he said.

  SANA, the state news agency, said only that nine people were killed in "cold blood". Hamadee put the death toll at 78.

  The figures remained unverified, as UN observers sent to al-Qubayr were stopped and turned away at Syrian army checkpoints on Thursday. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said some of the observers had come under small arms fire, while the UN commander on the ground said others had been warned that their safety was at risk if they came to the area.

  Mohammad said he had no idea why his town was targeted.

  “There are no armed resistance fighters in Qubayr. Residents of this town did not participate in anti-government protests,” he told Al Jazeera. “We are farmers. My dad grew wheat. We had nothing to do with politics.”

  Mohammad has left and is now staying at his friend’s house in a nearby village. He said he would not return.

  “What town?" he asked. "There is no town anymore."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  This image made from amateur video released by Shaam News Network and accessed Friday, June 8, 2012, purports to show explosions in the Khaldiyeh area of Homs, Syria.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

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
Salvaging bodies: A doctor's everyday reality in Syria
  Trauma surgeon Shazeer Majeed has worked for Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Yemen, South Sudan and Iraq. He is now working in northern Syria, a region gripped by instability, and shares his day-to-day reality of trying to keep victims of war alive.   "We usually think of the remnants of war...
Palestinian minors arrested by Israel 'suffer abuse'
  Mohammed, 14, was with his friends riding horses in a park in Jerusalem's Old City when the Yassam, a special patrol unit of the Israeli police, arrived at the scene.   Sound grenades were fired at the teenagers. One landed near Mohammed's feet. He picked up a rock and threw it...
Amnesty: All sides violated international law in Mosul
  Amnesty International has said it had identified a pattern of attacks by Iraqi forces and the US-led military coalition backing them that violated international humanitarian law and may amount to war crimes.   It also said that fighters from ISIS group flagrantly violated that same law by deliberately putting civilians in...
Jerusalem cameras 'more dangerous than metal detectors'
  Palestinians have vowed to continue protests and confrontations with Israeli forces in occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank, in rejection of new surveillance cameras installed at the gates to al-Aqsa Mosque compound.   "Above all else, this is an issue of control and power. It is as if they are...
'They killed him because he was an Arab'
  The family of a young Palestinian man fatally shot by Israeli police in Jaffa are demanding justice for what they believe was a "cold-blooded killing".   Mahdi al-Saadi, a 22-year-old Palestinian citizen of Israel, was shot in the chest and killed in the early hours of Saturday morning. Israeli police also...
How Syria continued to gas its people as the world looked on
  In the spring of 2015 a Syrian major general escorted a small team of chemical weapons inspectors to a warehouse outside the Syrian capital Damascus. The international experts wanted to examine the site, but were kept waiting outside in their car for around an hour, according to several people briefed...
Palestinians grieve loved ones killed at Friday prayers
  From the main street that runs through Wadi Qadum in occupied East Jerusalem, the Sharaf family home is hidden by a primary school and the bright, multicolored stone wall of its playground.   Tied to the wire mesh above the painted wall, a single poster shows a young man wearing a...
Israel closes Palestinian media groups in West Bank
  The Israeli army closed several Palestinian media companies in the occupied West Bank in a wave of raids overnight Tuesday, drawing criticism from the Palestinian Authority (PA).   The Israeli military authority in the occupied territories, COGAT, said in a statement that they raided eight Palestinian companies, accusing them of inciting...
Gaza: Children suffer from war trauma three years on
  As Gaza marks three years since the Israeli assault that devastated the Strip and left more than 2,200 Palestinians killed, the psychological effects of the violence linger on.   Children were among the most affected groups; in the 50-day onslaught, the Israeli army killed 500 children. The bombing campaign, which started...
How Israel is disabling Palestinian teenagers
  In the Dheisheh refugee camp, it is common to see Palestinian teenagers with deep scars dotting the length of their legs, while posters and murals of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces adorn the concrete walls - testaments to a disturbing reality of routine Israeli violence in the camp.   International law...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved