Exclusive: A Call for Empowerment of Women to Exit Idlib ‘Hell’

A woman makes her way through the rubble of damaged buildings after airstrikes by pro-Syrian regime forces in the rebel held town of Dael, in Daraa Governorate, Syria February 12, 2016. (photo credit: REUTERS)
A woman makes her way through the rubble of damaged buildings after airstrikes by pro-Syrian regime forces in the rebel held town of Dael, in Daraa Governorate, Syria February 12, 2016. (photo credit: REUTERS)
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Exclusive: A Call for Empowerment of Women to Exit Idlib ‘Hell’

A woman makes her way through the rubble of damaged buildings after airstrikes by pro-Syrian regime forces in the rebel held town of Dael, in Daraa Governorate, Syria February 12, 2016. (photo credit: REUTERS)
A woman makes her way through the rubble of damaged buildings after airstrikes by pro-Syrian regime forces in the rebel held town of Dael, in Daraa Governorate, Syria February 12, 2016. (photo credit: REUTERS)

Living in the countryside of Idlib, Syria, the love of a mother for her two children could not stop her from insisting on getting a divorce with a husband she labels a ‘brute’.

The 25-year-old Umm Mohammed shudders when describing the ‘hell’ she lived with a savage man who was not shy to abuse her in every way imaginable.

“He would beat me for the slightest reason. He hits me with anything that falls within sight, mostly coarse leather belts. My skin was blue. I no longer trust men," says Um Mohammed with tears welling up in her eyes.

Women in Syria’s northwestern governorate of Idlib suffer from gender-based violence. Some call for social and religious reforms, and others urge for a women's revolution aimed at liberating women, while conservatives, especially sheikhs, object.  

About 2 million people live in Idlib and are under the control of the armed Islamic opposition.

There are no statistics on violence against women, but lawyer Abeer al-Hashash, a lecturer on human rights in the Idlib governorate and an activist in the program of the Free Syrian Lawyers' Union, says that women’s rights abuses is present in most homes, if not all.

Estimates published by the World Health Organization indicate that 35 percent of women worldwide are subjected to violence by their partners or to foreign violence.

Article 1 of the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women, adopted by the United Nations since 1993, defines violence against women as any act of gender-based violence that results in or is likely to cause harm or inflict suffering onto women, whether physical, sexual or psychological. Abuse is taken also whether in public or private.

Researchers distinguish between multiple forms of gender-based violence against women: Physical violence, such as the beating of a wife or sister; social violence, such as preventing women from visiting friends and traveling; verbal violence, such as the demonization of women and inappropriate characterization; sexual violence, such as harassment of women and the marriage of minors; And political violence, such as preventing women from exercising their right to vote and run for office and political office.

Hashash calls for the elimination of all forms of violence. She says violence reflects ignorance, lack of awareness and social and moral backwardness, and describes Syrian society as a "pro-male society that views women as inferior, and regards them as property of men only."

Hashash regrets the contribution of women to gender-bias in society.

"It is women who first rejoice in the birth of a male more than the birth of the female, the first to distinguish between the education of the boy and the girl in favor of the male child, the first to allow the brother to suppress his sister or deprive her inheritance if she is sterile or does not give birth to a male," says the attorney.

Hashash calls for social and religious reforms that move Syrians forward into a free and enlightened society.

She believes that society will rise "when women rise” and that lectures and seminars limited to female presence are not enough to achieve the desired renaissance.

Hashash called for supportive media campaigns and that men receive a fuller and comprehensive education on women's rights.

The armed opposition imposed its hard-line view of religion on political, social and human rights in Idlib and disrupted laws.

Hashash calls for “the enactment of new laws that combat the oppression of women and back gender equality.”

"Islam is with freedom," said activist Khadija al-Zaidan, describing men who abuse women as "arrogant".

“They consider women to have a lesser mind … They say her place is her house behind the kitchen counter, and she is weak and needs protection.”

“They are oblivious and ignorant to the fact that women represent half the society we live in, and are partners with men, not slaves,” she said with a smile.

Zaidan believes women can excel in all areas, and calls on them to unite and take on fields of work, and urges them to "wage a massive women's uprising against outdated customs and traditions ... against an alpha male society".



Fans and Family Honor 'Palestinian Pele' Killed in Gaza

Doaa, the widow of late soccer player Suleiman Al-Obeid, known as the "Palestinian Pele," who was killed by an Israeli strike targeting people waiting for humanitarian aid, according to the Palestine Football Association, looks at his picture while holding his shorts, as her son sits beside her inside their tent in Gaza City August 9, 2025. REUTERS/Ebrahim Hajjaj
Doaa, the widow of late soccer player Suleiman Al-Obeid, known as the "Palestinian Pele," who was killed by an Israeli strike targeting people waiting for humanitarian aid, according to the Palestine Football Association, looks at his picture while holding his shorts, as her son sits beside her inside their tent in Gaza City August 9, 2025. REUTERS/Ebrahim Hajjaj
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Fans and Family Honor 'Palestinian Pele' Killed in Gaza

Doaa, the widow of late soccer player Suleiman Al-Obeid, known as the "Palestinian Pele," who was killed by an Israeli strike targeting people waiting for humanitarian aid, according to the Palestine Football Association, looks at his picture while holding his shorts, as her son sits beside her inside their tent in Gaza City August 9, 2025. REUTERS/Ebrahim Hajjaj
Doaa, the widow of late soccer player Suleiman Al-Obeid, known as the "Palestinian Pele," who was killed by an Israeli strike targeting people waiting for humanitarian aid, according to the Palestine Football Association, looks at his picture while holding his shorts, as her son sits beside her inside their tent in Gaza City August 9, 2025. REUTERS/Ebrahim Hajjaj

The "Pele" of Palestinian soccer hoped to keep scoring goals until he was 50. An Israeli tank shell dashed that dream a decade early, his family said, killing Suleiman al-Obeid as he queued in southern Gaza this week to collect food.

Obeid's widow Doaa al-Obeid now clutches the blue-and-white number 10 shorts he wore for his Gaza club, Al-Shati, one of the only mementos she has of her late husband, as she and her five children mourn the revered 41-year-old striker.

"This is the most precious thing left behind by him," she said, Reuters reported.

The family have few other belongings of Obeid, whose home was destroyed in a bombardment earlier this year. They now live in a tent among the ruins of a neighborhood of Gaza City.

Obeid, likened by fans to Brazilian great Pele for his skills and goalscoring, hit headlines this week after Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah criticized a tribute to Obeid by Europe's governing body UEFA that did not mention the cause of death.

"Can you tell us how he died, where, and why?" wrote Salah.

The Palestinian Football Association said Obeid was killed in an attack by the Israeli military in southern Gaza while waiting to collect aid at a distribution point.

His family said it was a tank shell that killed him.

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment and has not publicly commented on Obeid's death.

Obeid, who had played for the Palestinian national team, was still playing for his club in Gaza when the war between Israel and Hamas began in October 2023.

'THIS PLAYER WAS A GAZELLE'

Obeid kept playing throughout the hardship, his widow Doaa said.

"He used to go training every day and never stopped, not a single day. Even during the crisis of war, in the midst of rockets, shelling and mass killing, he would go play. He used to gather his friends and loved ones and go play with them," she said.

The Palestinian Football Association says hundreds of athletes and sports officials are among those killed by Israel's assault, with most sports facilities now destroyed.

Palestinian soccer fans say they will focus not on Obeid's violent death but his legacy.

"Children called him the Henry and Pele of Palestine," said Hassan al-Balawi, a barber in Gaza City, in a comparison also with French great Thierry Henry.

"This player was a gazelle - when we stepped onto the pitch, we enjoyed watching him. All Palestinian soccer fans enjoyed Captain Suleiman al-Obeid."