Orla GuerinSenior Worldwide Correspondent in Syria
BBC/Goktay KoraltanThe killer got here by evening – a masked man on a motorcycle who struck with out warning after which sped away. It is develop into a well-recognized sample in some corners of the brand new Syria in latest months, because the nation’s fragile unity is eroded by revenge assaults and sectarian killings.
The primary targets are Alawites, the sect of the ousted Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad. However this time, on 1 October, the victims have been Christians – Wissam and Shafiq Mansour, cousins who have been each 39, and have been as shut as brothers. As they chatted with a good friend over espresso and cigarettes, they have been hit by a hail of bullets.
The killings occurred within the village of Anaz in Wadi al-Nasara, or the Valley of the Christians – an space of rolling hills in rural Homs province in western Syria. Locals say the gunman got here from the route of a close-by Sunni Muslim village.
Sitting a brief distance from Wissam’s coffin, his father George, railed towards the authorities, saying Christians within the valley had been left defenceless.
BBC/Goktay Koraltan“Weapons have been taken from us however left within the arms of a rival (Sunni) village,” he stated. “We wish to carry arms towards them. They do not know something about faith or love or peace. Immediately it is Wissam, tomorrow it might be anybody.”
Many within the valley are feeling weak as of late. Earlier than the regime fell, they backed Assad, and he backed them. Many Christian communities seemed to him for cover. Wissam was a part of a pro-Assad militia, defending his village. Some locals say that is why he was focused.
BBC/Goktay KoraltanWas it a revenge assault, or a sectarian killing? We will not make certain, however nothing will convey Wissam again to his spouse Leen. She bent over his coffin for a final goodbye, then slumped again, ashen-faced.
Her husband and his cousin have been taken for burial – their white coffins carried by black-clad mourners by means of streets brimming with grief. The group chanted “Christian blood is valuable” as they handed the scene of the assault.
The neighborhood right here is certain collectively by religion, and by worry that Syria’s new Islamist management – which overthrew Assad in December final yr – might not defend them.
The lone survivor of the assault does not intend to attend to search out out. He was shot within the hand and broke his ankle making his getaway. He does not wish to be named.
BBC/Goktay KoraltanAfter the autumn of the regime, the 36-year-old had come again to Syria, from Lebanon, with excessive hopes.
“All of us got here again dwelling,” he stated, “wanting to begin new companies. However what we have been promised about safety, and a future for Syria, we don’t see it. My dearest buddies are lifeless. I must depart the nation once more. There are lots of extremist teams. I do not know the place Syria goes.”
Lower than an hour’s drive away, within the metropolis of Homs, there are virtually every day experiences of kidnappings and drive by shootings. We discovered a sample of lethal assaults on Alawites, killings that occur quietly, and entice little response.
The town has loads of battle scars; a few of its bustling streets are lined with ruins and rubble. Having survived the battle, some Alawites now marvel if they’ll survive the peace.
BBC/Goktay KoraltanIn the course of the Assad period, belonging to this sect – an offshoot of Shia Islam – may convey advantages.
Now it is a curse, and for Shaaban Al Ezzeldin, 46, it was a demise sentence.
The shopkeeper was shot 3 times on 28 September as he locked up the household enterprise at evening. As soon as once more, the killer was a masked man, on a motorcycle.
We meet his brother Adnan in a constructing owned by their household since 1970. He’s bearded, carrying black, and weighed down by grief. In contrast to many, he dares to talk out.
“Persons are being killed simply because they’re Alawites,” he advised me, “no extra, no much less. My brother was cherished by everybody within the space, by all our neighbours, by all sects. A few of our neighbours used to come back to the store and revel in evenings with him. He by no means bothered or harmed anybody.”
He says Shaaban used to take a seat and chat with safety forces at a checkpoint proper outdoors the store. After the checkpoint was eliminated, he was shot lifeless.
I requested why he thinks the checkpoint was taken away. He says he doesn’t know and stresses the household are “not accusing anybody”.
BBC/Goktay KoraltanAdnan says two different Alawites have been killed on the identical day as his brother, including that the bloodletting has a goal. “What’s occurring proper now could be the seed for pressured emigration,” he says. “It is just the start. Somebody is making an attempt to destabilise the state of affairs, and oppose co-existence, although now we have been dwelling collectively for lots of of years.”
He hopes Syria’s mosaic of religions and sects can maintain collectively. However then he provides: “I misplaced my brother, and others misplaced their family members too. If we’re all going to get killed, it is higher we flee.”
Syria’s interim authorities has promised to guard all its residents, not simply the bulk inhabitants of Sunni Muslims. The nation’s Justice Minister, Mazhar al-Wais, says there can be public trials for these accused of involvement in giant scale sectarian violence earlier this yr.
Greater than 1,400 folks have been killed in March when authorities forces and allied teams have been accused of finishing up abstract executions, after an assault by Assad loyalists. Many of the victims have been Alawite civilians.
About 2,000 folks – combatants and civilians — have been killed in July in one other outbreak of sectarian violence. Right here too authorities forces have been accused of executions. Many of the lifeless have been from the Druze minority.
The size of the latest killings is tough to evaluate. The assaults are normally remoted and infrequently shrouded in silence. Many households are afraid to speak.
By cross checking data from native media experiences, contacts on the bottom and human rights teams, we estimate that at the least 40 Alawites have been killed in Homs in separate assaults between 5 June and 31 October. The lifeless included a pupil, a farmer, a taxi driver, a trainer killed in a grenade assault on a faculty bus, and one other shot lifeless in entrance of her class.
The Syrian Community for Human Rights (SNHR) says there are escalating incidents of homicide and kidnapping in Homs province, with Alawite-majority areas probably the most affected. Most assaults are acts of revenge, it says, towards former members of the regime, or these suspected of collaborating.
Alawites account for about 10% of Syria’s inhabitants, however underneath Assad – the daddy and the son – they crammed many roles within the navy, safety and intelligence businesses.
Whether or not they supported the regime or not – and never all of them did – Alawites at the moment are in danger.

In a modest dwelling in a blended neighbourhood of Homs, a pink-walled bed room has develop into a shrine. A replica of the Quran rests on a pillow. College books and letters from buddies are piled on a desk. That is the place a mom – who doesn’t wish to be named – involves be near her beloved daughter. “Her soul remains to be hanging over the place,” she says. “Her buddies come each few days. Nobody absolutely grasps the concept that she is now lifeless.”
Ghina, 14, was on the balcony of her dwelling on 19 August when a gunman on a motorcycle drove previous and opened fireplace. She died in her mom’s arms, surrounded by neighbours who had come to rejoice her examination outcomes.
Ghina was “the perfect of daughters” her mom says, “so sensible, so good at college, hooked on learning, with so many plans.” {The teenager} cherished basketball, and wished to journey and to check legislation.
BBC/Goktay KoraltanHer youthful brothers now not go to high school. Their mom is just too frightened to allow them to.
“Alawite households began leaving the realm, they promote their homes and go. We thought it could get higher (after the autumn of Assad). They stated it was liberation; folks would dwell freely. Now we worry every thing. We’re scared after we hear a motorcycle.”
Ghina’s face stares out from a big photograph, her heat smile framed by lengthy darkish hair. “She was smiling for the reason that day she was born,” her mom says. “She cherished life a lot.”
Her mom doesn’t speculate on who killed her. “There are dangerous folks round,” she says, “they sow seeds of sedition. In all probability they aren’t linked with the authorities or the state. I actually do not know.”
However she is bound of 1 factor – why her household was focused. Was it since you are Alawite, I ask?
“Sure”, she replies, with out hesitation.
On the identical day we met Ghina’s mom, one other Alawite household have been burying a cherished one who had been kidnapped and killed. After we visited their dwelling, they obtained us politely however have been too frightened to talk.
Nobody has been charged with Ghina’s killing. The killings within the Valley of the Christians are additionally unsolved.
Extra reporting by Lana Antaki, Wietske Burema, Goktay Koraltan and Aref Alkrez.

















































