From ‘Jabal al-Sayyida’ to ‘Sheikh Maqsoud,’ Ashrafieh’s Syriac Roots

From the civil protest movement in Aleppo’s Ashrafieh district in 2013, which brought together Arabs and Kurds (Aqil Hussein archive)
From the civil protest movement in Aleppo’s Ashrafieh district in 2013, which brought together Arabs and Kurds (Aqil Hussein archive)
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From ‘Jabal al-Sayyida’ to ‘Sheikh Maqsoud,’ Ashrafieh’s Syriac Roots

From the civil protest movement in Aleppo’s Ashrafieh district in 2013, which brought together Arabs and Kurds (Aqil Hussein archive)
From the civil protest movement in Aleppo’s Ashrafieh district in 2013, which brought together Arabs and Kurds (Aqil Hussein archive)

Aqil Hussein, a Syrian activist and journalist from Aleppo, reflects on his ties to the neighborhoods of Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh, now the scene of fighting in and around them between the Syrian Democratic Forces and the Syrian government.

He was involved in the civil protest movement that erupted with the Syrian uprising in March 2011 and reported from the ground, particularly in the eastern districts of the city, which later came under intense bombardment and suffered widespread destruction at the hands of forces loyal to then president Bashar al-Assad.

This is the testimony of the young man who was recently elected to parliament for Aleppo province. Contrary to claims promoted by supporters of the Syrian Democratic Forces, Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh are home to an Arab majority, not a Kurdish one.

The two neighborhoods that have become known as Kurdish in recent years were, 50 years ago, little more than small residential clusters inhabited by a limited number of poor Christians, mainly Syriacs and Armenians.

Over time, people from the northern and eastern countryside of Aleppo, including residents of Afrin, Jandaris and Ain al-Arab (Kobani), moved there in search of better opportunities in the city, drawn by relatively affordable living costs and proximity to industrial zones.

What led many to label the neighborhoods as Kurdish was the rare and unprecedented concentration of Kurds in one area of Aleppo.

Until the 1970s, Aleppans knew Sheikh Maqsoud as Jabal al-Sayyida, named after the Virgin Mary. After a mosque bearing the name of a Kurdish Sufi sheikh, Sheikh Maqsoud, was built at the site where Kurds had begun to gather, the new name became widely used.

The neighboring Ashrafieh district emerged around the same time as an unplanned extension of the Syriac Christian quarter.

Aleppans did not view the two neighborhoods as Kurdish strongholds in a political sense until 2004, when Kurds in Syria’s Jazira region rose up in what became known as the Qamishli events.

Ashrafieh and Sheikh Maqsoud then witnessed clashes between cadres of Kurdish political parties and security forces.

Before that, the most visible Kurdish presence in the two districts appeared during Nowruz celebrations, which were previously banned in Syria and often accompanied by skirmishes with the authorities, especially involving elements of the Kurdistan Workers Party, which the Assad government had used since the 1980s to control any anti-government Kurdish political activity.

After the popular uprising against Assad began in 2011 and as the government sought to keep Kurds out of the protest movement, Syrian intelligence handed the two neighborhoods to the Kurdish self-administration in 2012.

They gradually slipped out of state control before authority settled in the hands of the Syrian Democratic Forces, through their security arm known as the Internal Security Forces, or Asayish, in the same manner applied in majority Kurdish cities in the country’s northeast.

Initially, Ashrafieh saw a civil protest movement led by local activists under the banner of the Brotherhood Coordination, which brought together prominent Arab and Kurdish figures and stood out as a peaceful revolutionary initiative.

Its members later found themselves pursued by the Kurdistan Workers Party’s Syrian branch, which cracked down on any activity linked to the uprising in areas it took over from the government, establishing security and police bodies as well as military recruitment centers that exercised full control. This further entrenched the perception of the neighborhoods as Kurdish.

The most severe blow to relations between the Kurdistan Workers Party and Syria’s opposition came at the end of 2016, when the Syrian Democratic Forces cooperated with Assad’s forces in taking control of eastern Aleppo. The operation resulted in the displacement of most residents and the destruction of large parts of the area.

Later, the Syrian Democratic Forces joined forces with Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps in seizing Sunni Arab towns and villages in the northern Aleppo countryside, especially the town of Tal Rifaat, whose residents were almost entirely displaced at the time.

Supporters of the Kurdish region in Syria then began describing it as a Kurdish area as well.

Today, as Aleppo faces renewed tension over the Syrian Democratic Forces’ refusal to hand over Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh to the Syrian government’s administration, supporters of the group are waging a fresh media campaign to assert the Kurdish identity of the two neighborhoods.

Tens of thousands of Arabs live there, particularly members of the Baggara tribe and the Batoush clan, alongside a significant Kurdish presence whose weight cannot be denied.

 



Syrian Interior Ministry Airs Confessions of ‘Saraya al-Jawad’ Members

The February operation targeted hideouts in the villages of Beit Alouni and Basniya in Latakia province. (SANA)
The February operation targeted hideouts in the villages of Beit Alouni and Basniya in Latakia province. (SANA)
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Syrian Interior Ministry Airs Confessions of ‘Saraya al-Jawad’ Members

The February operation targeted hideouts in the villages of Beit Alouni and Basniya in Latakia province. (SANA)
The February operation targeted hideouts in the villages of Beit Alouni and Basniya in Latakia province. (SANA)

The Syrian Interior Ministry released a video showing confessions from members of the "Saraya al-Jawad" armed group, nearly two weeks after announcing a raid on one of its main strongholds in the countryside of Jableh in the Latakia province.

According to the ministry, the February 23 operation targeted hideouts in the villages of Beit Alouni and Basniya in Latakia province. The raid killed the group’s coastal leader Bashar Abdullah Abu Ruqayya and two other commanders, and led to the arrest of six members.

The video released Monday includes footage from the twin operation carried out by the Interior Ministry’s Internal Security Directorate.

Authorities said the raid followed several days of surveillance and resulted in the destruction of a weapons depot and explosives storage site belonging to the group.

One member of the Syrian special task forces was killed and another was lightly wounded during the operation.

In the recorded confessions, detainees said they took part in attacks along the Syrian coast in March 2025. One suspect admitted to ambushing a General Security patrol and killing one officer during a clash.

The confessions also described the establishment of an operations room in a residential house that doubled as an arms depot. According to the detainees, the group received financial support from businessmen Ayman Jaber and Mohammad Jaber, while supplies were smuggled in from Lebanon.

Mohammad Jaber, a businessman close to the former government of Bashar al-Assad and a commander in the Desert Hawks militia founded by his brother Ayman, previously appeared in a television interview acknowledging his role in organizing attacks by pro-regime remnants along the Syrian coast on March 6, 2025.

Documents and recordings obtained by Al Jazeera’s investigative program Al-Mutahari suggested that senior figures linked to the former government sought to form armed groups to carry out attacks on Syrian security forces and the army.

The Interior Ministry said it is pursuing members of those networks and attempting to curb their activities.

Saraya al-Jawad has been active in Syria’s coastal region — particularly in Latakia, Jableh and Tartus — since August 2025, when activists circulated a video showing a car bomb targeting a General Security vehicle in rural Jableh.

Earlier this month, security forces in Tartus also arrested three suspects — Ali Zuhair Idris, Ammar Madin Youssef and Mousa Mazhar Mia — accused of planning attacks targeting the province’s security and civilians.

Officials said intelligence showed the group had received explosives training abroad before infiltrating back into Syria.


Hezbollah Pressure on Military Court Undermines Lebanon’s Weapons Ban

Blankets are distributed at a school converted into a shelter in Beirut, where a banner displaying images of leaders and members of Hezbollah can be seen (EPA). 
Blankets are distributed at a school converted into a shelter in Beirut, where a banner displaying images of leaders and members of Hezbollah can be seen (EPA). 
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Hezbollah Pressure on Military Court Undermines Lebanon’s Weapons Ban

Blankets are distributed at a school converted into a shelter in Beirut, where a banner displaying images of leaders and members of Hezbollah can be seen (EPA). 
Blankets are distributed at a school converted into a shelter in Beirut, where a banner displaying images of leaders and members of Hezbollah can be seen (EPA). 

Lebanon’s government decision to prohibit any military or security activity by Hezbollah has yet to translate into meaningful enforcement.

Hezbollah has continued to escalate its military operations, launching rockets and drones toward Israeli territory, while signs of deteriorating security have appeared inside Lebanon, particularly among displaced residents who have fled southern Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs.

Security agencies have struggled to identify those responsible for launching rockets toward Israel. However, Lebanese forces recently recorded a notable development with the arrest of around 30 individuals affiliated with or supportive of Hezbollah.

The detainees were apprehended while fleeing alongside civilians from southern areas and the southern suburbs of Beirut after being found carrying individual weapons, including assault rifles, pistols and grenades.

The arrests appeared to signal a tentative shift in how Lebanon’s security and judicial institutions handle the issue of illegal weapons. Yet the move quickly ran up against what officials say is Hezbollah’s continuing influence over judicial decisions.

Last week, the military court tried three Hezbollah members detained days earlier. The court imposed a fine of 900,000 Lebanese pounds —about $10 — on each of them for possessing unlicensed military weapons and waived any prison sentence.

The ruling diverges sharply from typical sentences in similar cases, where possession or transport of unlicensed weapons usually carries at least a one-month prison term.

Judicial sources say the unusually lenient sentence reflects pressure exerted by Hezbollah on the military court to secure the release of its detained members.

According to the sources, the group sought their release last Thursday and pushed for their trial to be held the following day. The military prosecutor’s office objected, resulting in the hearing being postponed until Monday.

The verdict also drew criticism from the government commissioner to the military court, Judge Claude Ghanem, who promptly appealed the ruling before the Military Court of Cassation, requesting tougher penalties.

A judicial source told Asharq Al-Awsat that the ruling was “extremely lenient and failed to account for all the legal provisions under which the suspects were charged.” The source added that the commissioner had received preliminary investigation files concerning four additional detainees and was preparing to file charges against them in the coming hours while seeking stricter sentences.

Only hours after the verdict was issued, Lebanese Justice Minister Adel Nassar ordered that the civilian adviser to the military tribunal, Judge Abbas Jaha, be referred to the Judicial Inspection Authority for investigation.

A Justice Ministry source told Asharq Al-Awsat that the referral stemmed from “the circumstances surrounding the trial and his failure to object to this suspicious ruling.” The source noted that another member of the court panel, a military officer, had opposed the decision while Jaha approved it without reservation.

Weapons and rising tensions in host communities

Legally, the arrest of armed Hezbollah members represents a direct application of the government decision banning any military or security activity by the group. In principle, the ruling applies to anyone carrying weapons outside state authority and places them under threat of prosecution.

The more pressing challenge, however, lies in dealing with armed individuals among displaced populations.

Several neighborhoods in Beirut, including Hamra, Ras Beirut, Sakiat al-Janzir and Ain al-Remmaneh, as well as the towns of Aramoun and Kfarshima in Mount Lebanon, have witnessed repeated incidents involving gunfire, displays of weapons and confrontations with local residents.

Videos circulating on social media show armed men threatening residents, including footage recorded Sunday in Aramoun.

These incidents have heightened anxiety among host communities already grappling with mounting social and economic pressures.

Some residents say the security measures in place remain “below the required level,” arguing that the absence of deterrent action risks encouraging further incidents and creating the impression that the law is applied hesitantly when those involved are linked to Hezbollah.

A Lebanese security source, however, insisted that authorities treat all security incidents seriously. Delays in reaching certain locations, the source said, often result from limited personnel and the difficulty of maintaining coverage across all displacement areas.

Security forces maintain a near-permanent presence at the entrances of schools and facilities housing displaced people, the source added, while most incidents occur in nearby streets and neighborhoods. Patrols respond immediately to reports of gunfire or clashes, detaining suspects or pursuing them if they leave the scene.

Nevertheless, the official acknowledged that the continued incidents could lead to broader friction between displaced populations and local residents — particularly in densely populated areas — at a time when host communities are already under severe economic strain and displacement is expected to continue for months.

 

 


Iraq PM Tells Rubio Iraqi Airspace Must Not Be Used Against Neighbors

13 January 2023, Berlin: Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani speaks during a press conference. (dpa)
13 January 2023, Berlin: Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani speaks during a press conference. (dpa)
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Iraq PM Tells Rubio Iraqi Airspace Must Not Be Used Against Neighbors

13 January 2023, Berlin: Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani speaks during a press conference. (dpa)
13 January 2023, Berlin: Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani speaks during a press conference. (dpa)

Iraq's Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani told US Secretary of State Marco Rubio Tuesday that Iraq should not be used as a launch pad for attacks in the Middle East war.

Iraq neighbors Iran, against which the United States and Israel launched massive strikes on February 28, as well as the Gulf, which Tehran has hit with missile and drone attacks.

Within hours of the start of the war, fighter jets and missiles coming from every direction filled Iraq's airspace.

Sudani stressed in a phone call with Rubio "the importance of ensuring that Iraqi airspace, territory, and waters are not used for any military action targeting neighboring countries or the region," the prime minister's media office said.

Sudani rejected "any attempt to drag the country into ongoing conflicts," as well as "violations of its airspace by any party."

Iraq, long a proxy battleground between Washington and Tehran, was drawn into the war from the outset, with strikes blamed on the US and Israel targeting Iran-backed groups, which in turn have since claimed attacks on US bases in Iraq and the wider region.

State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said that Rubio "strongly condemned terrorist attacks by Iran and Iran-aligned terrorist militia groups in Iraq," including the Kurdistan region.

He urged Iraq to take "all possible measures to safeguard US diplomatic personnel and facilities."

On Saturday, air defense systems intercepted rockets fired at the US embassy in Baghdad.

US air defenses now intercept drones almost daily over Erbil, the capital of Kurdistan, which also hosts a US consulate complex.