Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Syrian town begins a return to civilian life
Syrian town begins a return to civilian life
Jul 15, 2025 5:21 PM

  Asem Halaq sits in a war-damaged, colonial-era building in central Azaz and looks at the pile of dossiers stacked atop his desk. Just down the road in Aleppo, war is raging.

  Yet here in Syria's relatively safe opposition-controlled north, a semblance of normality is taking hold and civilian-organized judicial systems are beginning to emerge. In the case of Azaz, such structures are replacing armed rule.

  Sitting in an unheated office, Halaq says he and a few other local lawyers established a civil court system in September, working with a civilian police force, and hearing cases, many of which have involved allegations against regime insiders who seized property before the uprising began.

  "Every day we have 15 cases like this, worth perhaps 500,000 Syrian Pounds ($7,000) in all," he says, pointing to the pile of cases sat atop his huge desk. "Some people try to cheat, though, and claim more," he adds.

  "The court grew out of necessity in an environment of disorder, filling a judicial vacuum, while highlighting people's desire for accountable institutions. "

  Azaz was brutalized in July, as regime forces and three opposition brigades slugged it out for control of the town, important given its proximity to the Turkish frontier and the nearby Bab al-Salameh border crossing.

  Shelled, rocketed and bombed during the regime's siege, swathes of the town's infrastructure sits in ruin. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has employed a kind of "scorched earth" policy while attempting to suppress the 21-month revolt. Attack helicopters featured prominently in the assault on Azaz.

  The revolution’s battalions that took control of Azaz after the ousting of government forces are still around but are only responsible for external security. Authority has been vested in a local council, established to provide public services.

  Local councils have reportedly mushroomed in all 14 Syrian provinces and are linked to the Syrian National Council, recently formed in Doha. These provide the skeletal rudiments of a state, to be built upon if Bashar al-Assad falls.

  Halaq, who serves as the court's chief judge, says it is experimenting with alternative punishments instead of jail time, such as community service and apologies, and is answerable to the council.

  "There was one man who forged a cheque. He will now go to jail for a few days and then we'll see," he says.

  The court grew out of necessity in an environment of disorder, filling a judicial vacuum, while highlighting people's desire for accountable institutions.

  But problems abound.

  The court's offices have no electricity or water. It is resource poor and the judges are unpaid - a stipend of 100 Syrian Pounds ($1.40) per case covers some costs associated with hearings.

  Meanwhile, the fear of government airstrikes is constant and tensions between Azaz and several nearby Kurdish villages persist.

  For, Halaq, however, the most acute challenge is to establish precedents breaking with judicial corruption, building a fair justice system.

  "Before the revolution, you needed to bribe the court just to get your case heard," he says.

  "Now, no-one decides but the court; before the revolution everything was decided by the security services."

  Each case is heard by four judges, all lawyers before the uprising began, who base their decisions upon the Syrian Civil Code. A separate court, handling domestic disputes, relies on Islamic, or Sharia, law.

  The town's residents who spoke to Al Jazeera raised no complaints about the new court or the local council. But winter has set in, and as Syria's long war grinds on, people are running out of money. Shops are poorly stocked. The town is intermittently shelled and the howl of Assad's warplanes can occasionally be heard high above. Life is difficult.

  "There is no bread, no power - maybe one hour a day - no diesel. A cylinder of cooking gas costs 3,500SYP ($50). There is no work," says Mohammed Shahud, a local pharmacist.

  "My stock is down to 10 percent because supply was cut off. There are no nappies, no baby milk, no medicine for blood pressure. There are refugees here from Aleppo and some of them have nothing, they just sleep on the school's floor."

  Alarming facts

  The UN estimates that the Syrian conflict has sent upward of 700,000 refugees fleeing into neighboring countries, with at least 2.5 million persons displaced within the country's borders.

  The World Food Programme recently warned that it would be unable to reach 1 million of those who are internally displaced because of a lack of fuel and the continued fighting raging throughout the country.

  The Azaz court works in parallel with a civilian police force. Untrained and dressed in jet-black jackets and jeans, the force's 50 officers - all volunteers with no salary except a small stipend and some food - seem little more than men with assault rifles, not too dissimilar from the militia they replaced.

  Revolution’s brigades left Azaz for other fronts, including Aleppo, following the battle for the town. One of the opposition’s groups, the Northern Storm Brigade, is headed by an alleged former smuggler named Ammar al-Dadikhli, also known as Abu Ibrahim.

  Illustrating the need for accountable civil institutions, Abu Ibrahim's brigade was notorious for having kidnapped ten Lebanese Shia pilgrims in the summer, detaining a Lebanese journalist for days, and engaging in bloody combat with a major Kurdish faction that controls Kurd-majority areas near Azaz.

  "A few months ago the Free Syrian Army could, and sometimes would, just arrest people on the streets. There were also some show-offs among them and that caused some resentment [among the people] but that is now over," says Hisham Abu Ahad, the deputy police commander.

  The police guard the hospital, bakery, the court and the market, where they collect 25SYP per seller for costs of the new administration. Commanders say there is little crime and most of their work involves traffic accidents.

  While opposition brigades have recently taken swathes of land throughout Syria, the war - which the UN estimates has killed at least 60,000 people - appears to have no immediate end in sight.

  Yet Azaz's emerging civil structures offer a rare bright spot in Syria's bleak winter cold.

  Halaq, sitting in the court, concluded: "The important thing is for people to see that the justice system is working."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  People walk on the rubble of damaged buildings in Azaz, near the Syrian-Turkish border January 24, 2013.

  Source: Aljazeera.com

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
Massacre trial reopens old Afghan wounds
  Five months after a US soldier allegedly killed 16 people in Kandahar, Afghans say little has changed.   Having just completed his dawn prayer, Mullah Baran was rolling up his prayer mat when he received the phone call: “The Americans came last night," a voice on the other end told him....
The voices of Gaza's children
  The only protection the Awajaa family has against the Israeli rockets is a thin tarpaulin, stretched out over a small plot of land.   The tent, where they have been living on and off since their house was turned to rubble in the 2008-09 Israeli war on Gaza, is one of...
Syrian town takes strife in stride
  The center of Salkeen in northern Syria looked deceptively normal, just a day after the town came under lethal regime air strikes.   Shops were open for business. Residents strolled through the main square. Children could be seen playing in the narrow streets.   Yet a closer look at the streets of...
Gaza hospitals face dire supply shortages
  It's not yet been a week since the latest Israeli aggression in Gaza began, but already the casualties on the Palestinian side are proving to be overwhelming for overstretched hospitals.   Since the initial Israeli air strike that killed Ahmad Jabari, head of Hamas's Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, on November 14, Israel's...
US Military Detains More Than 200 Afghan Teens as 'Enemy Combatants'
  More than 200 Afghan teenagers have been captured and detained by the US military, the United States told the United Nations in a very troubling report distributed this week.   In recent years, the US has received criticism from a number of human rights organizations for failing to meet commitments to...
The tragedy of a targeted Gazan family
  "For a split second I thought it had struck our neighbor’s home. The next thing I know, I’m waking up in hospital," said 19-year-old Nour Hijazi, lying in a hospital bed in Jabaliya’s Kamal Edwan Hospital with a shattered spine.   The Hijazi family, consisting of six boys and two girls,...
Israeli Oppression, Palestinian Unity: the Rise of the Third Intifada?
  After a ceasefire was brokered to end Israel's eight day siege on Gaza earlier this month, Israel has continued to attack Palestinians in a number of ways: showing an unwillingness to give up its pursuit of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, withholding tax revenues indefinitely from the Palestinian Authority,...
Israel expansion threatens West Bank Bedouin
  On the dusty slopes leading to the Dead Sea, the red roof tiles of Israel's illegal settlements flicker in patches of sunlight as distant mosque minarets of nearby Palestinian villages peek through the hills.   Adjacent to this route linking Jerusalem with the Jordan Valley lie several Bedouin communities leading a...
Israeli wall isolates Palestinian communities
  Shops are shuttered, and their signs are slowly rusting. Most apartment windows are broken, while those that remain in their frames are covered in dust. A single mechanic's garage is operating, though cars seldom drive through the area.   This neighborhood once housed approximately 250 Palestinian families and dozens of bustling...
Yemen's Government Tries to Cover Up Death of Civilians by US Drones
  A rickety Toyota truck packed with 14 people rumbled down a desert road from the town of Radda. Suddenly a missile hurtled from the sky and flipped the vehicle over.   Within seconds, 11 of the passengers were dead, including a woman and her 7-year-old daughter. A 12-year-old boy also perished...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved