Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
The battle for Homs
The battle for Homs
Mar 25, 2026 5:35 PM

  The Syrian city of Homs has been under attack for nearly a week, as government forces allied to President Bashar al-Assad try to regain control of opposition-held areas.

  The city, in the centre of the country, has emerged as the capital of the uprising and its Revolutionary Council runs a virtual state-within-a-state, providing services and fielding its own armed groups.

  This latest army offensive, which began on the night of February 3, was interpreted by leaders of Homs' uprising as a response to their recent gains.

  Members of the Revolutionary Council said fighters in the Homs province had taken advantage of the presence of Arab League monitors in December and January to reinforce themselves and bring supplies in from Lebanon, knowing the regime would be limited in its ability to obstruct them at that time.

  Fighters announced that they attacked security forces in Rastan, expelled them from Talbiseh, and took control of more territory in Homs city, launching two attacks on the State Security and Military Security headquarters.

  On February 3, the day government forces began their offensive, revolution fighters attacked at least three army checkpoints, including one at Homs’ Qahira roundabout, where they reportedly seized a large armored vehicle - either a personnel carrier or a tank.

  They also captured many Syrian soldiers and released a video of interviews with the officers of the captured unit.

  After the attack on the Qahira checkpoint, security forces shelled the neighborhood of Khaldiyeh. Revolution activists say shelling started around 8:30pm and lasted until 4am, with scores of civilians killed.

  Revolution leaders on the ground said up to 250 mortars landed in the area, and that most of the shells were shot from a citadel on high ground, and from the State Security headquarters located in the nearby Ghota district.

  The Revolutionary Council said there had been no exchange of gunfire on the ground, just shelling from locations where government forces could operate safely. This suggests they were unable to actually attack Khaldiyeh with ground troops.

  Increasing desperation

  "It was a massacre," said one senior leader of the uprising in Homs. "After many failed invasions, Assad's army stopped attempts to enter the area because of the strong resistance of the Free Syrian Army... So it started hitting it by mortars."

  "Many troops from the Free Syrian Army moved from Bab Sbaa and Bab Amr to Khaldiyeh to defend the area.

  "But they found no Assad troops or vehicles to shoot at. The cowards did not dare to face us in a fair battle. They just bombed the civilian buildings from a distance.

  "We were trying to provide blood bags and snipers were targeting us. Women and kids were crying. Doctors were dispirited. There was a catastrophe."

  The opposition leader went on to say that Assad's opponents in Homs had become increasingly desperate after the UN Security Council failed to pass a resolution condemning the violence in Syria.

  "People want to announce jihad ["struggle"]," he said. He added that he worried that the political leadership on the ground would lose control of the armed men.

  The Revolutionary Council later said it had documented the deaths of 105 civilians from the shelling. About 100 others were seriously wounded and 25 more missing or captured.

  One revolution fighter was reported killed and five others wounded.

  While the shelling focused on Khaldiyeh, there were also casualties reported by the opposition in the neighborhoods of Qusur, Jurt Ashayah, Inshaat, Karm al-Zeiton and Bab Tadmur.

  When some wounded and dead were taken to Jurt Ashayah, they were attacked by government forces in armored vehicles, according to opposition members.

  Some of the injured were reportedly captured, along with those trying to evacuate them.

  'Controlling most of Homs'

  After the initial assault on Khaldiyeh, more areas of Homs were hit by government forces in the following days, and opposition leaders reported that soldiers were shooting from some checkpoints.

  "They are afraid to move troops into the neighborhoods," one leader said, interpreting the indirect attacks as a sign of the regime’s weakness.

  "We ordered our armed groups to remain silent for now," he said. "We don’t want them to attack or engage with the army because we don’t have much ammunition."

  Homs has been under siege for months, and its opposition leaders fear they will run out of supplies within days. Internet, mobile phones and land lines are cut off in most of the city.

  Hama’s Revolutionary Council offered the Homs Revolutionary Council help with food, medicine, arms and ammunition.

  The two councils co-operate closely and the team from Hama, about 30km north of Homs, was waiting for an opening to provide help.

  As shelling continued, the fighters expected an eventual ground assault. But despite the increased crackdown, leaders of the Homs Revolutionary Council insisted they had lost no ground.

  "We control most of Homs," one member of the council’s executive council said.

  'Crying and dancing'

  Government troops tried to enter the Inshaat neighborhood of Homs on Wednesday, in preparation for an attack on the adjacent opposition stronghold Bab Amr.

  Security forces reached Inshaat’s Hikma hospital but the Revolutionary Council said one of its armed groups halted the attack, destroying two tanks and three military vehicles.

  The council, which has a sophisticated documentation team, claimed that 559 people had been killed since the government offensive began, including 43 children and 16 women.

  "Today is terrible as usual but we are used to dying every day and dancing every day," one leader of the council said on Thursday.

  "We go to the funeral at noon, cry for our martyrs, and then we go at night to the demonstration and dance for a few minutes of freedom.

  "Homs will not surrender. They are bombing us from a distance, they don't dare to enter the city. They think they will destroy our will and resistance.

  "We are waiting for them and we will defeat them in our neighborhoods. Finally they will enter the city. We are waiting for them."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Map of Syria locating Homs

  By Nir Rosen

  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
UN Report: 346 Afghan children killed in 2009, mostly by NATO
  Largest portion of killings came in air strikes.   When the record 2009 civilian death toll began to emerge, NATO was quick to brag that they had actually killed fewer civilians than the Taliban. This appears to be the case still, though UN reports suggested the difference wasn’t nearly as dramatic...
Israel is accused of waging covert war across the Middle
  Israel is waging a covert assassination campaign across the Middle East.   They are also suspected of recent killings in Dubai, Damascus and Beirut. While Israel’s Mossad spy agency has been suspected of staging assassinations across the world since the 1970s, it does not officially acknowledge or admit its activities.   The...
Israeli companies violate West Bank construction freeze
  Israeli building companies are trying to circumvent a construction freeze in West Bank settlements, sometimes by laying the foundations to new apartments after dark or during the weekend, an Israeli human rights organization said Monday.   Peace Now, which monitors settlement growth, said that violations of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's 10-month...
Nigeria Muslims: 'Our homes were razed'
  Awalu Mohamed was one of the first to arrive in the mining village of Kuru Karama to discover burned human remains and corpses thrown into communal wells and sewage pits.   "There are so many, many corpses," says Mohamed, of the Jamatu Nasril Islam aid group.   He described how 62 corpses...
US Rocket System back in use days after killing 12 civilians
  The details of the Sunday rocket attack on a house full of women and children in Marjah remain shrouded in mystery, but one thing is certain: the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HiMARS), barred from use by NATO after the killings amid reports of failures, has been returned to duty....
US-led invasion ‘bogged down’ in Marjah
  US forces continue to press forward in the Marjah region of Afghanistan’s Helmand Province, but are said to be struggling mightily with home-made bombs and sniper fire, and were able to advance only 500 yards yesterday.   Despite the pretense that the battle is going “according to plans,” the promises of...
'A prescription for civil war'
  Abu Abdullah has never been charged with a crime, but he has been arrested by Palestinian security forces so many times in the past two years that he has lost count.   He has been arrested at work, in the market, on the street, and, more than once, during violent raids...
As Afghan civilian deaths rise, NATO says, 'Sorry.'
  In the Afghanistan war, NATO forces chief Gen. Stanley McChrystal publicly apologized Tuesday for 27 Afghan civilian deaths in a US airstrike. The coalition has begun saying 'sorry' more quickly to civilian deaths, as part of a new hearts and minds strategy.   In a video distributed Tuesday in Dari and...
Trial exposes Turkey's 'deep state'
  Turkey has always been a country haunted by conspiracy theories – and not without reason.   Western powers nearly succeeded in dividing Turkey between themselves at the end of the Ottoman Empire ... and after the rise of the Soviet Union, new Nato member Turkey was on the frontline of the...
Marjah civilians run out of food
  With a month of advance notice of the massive NATO invasion, Marjah’s civilian population had ample opportunity to slip away. But while a few thousand families managed to get out of the agricultural region, most stayed, apparently reassured by NATO’s urging to “stay put” through the offensive.   But those who...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved