More Assassinations Reported in Syria’s Daraa

Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)
Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)
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More Assassinations Reported in Syria’s Daraa

Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)
Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)

Instability has reigned in Syria’s southern Daraa province with more than ten assassinations reported in the past two months, the Houran Free League said Tuesday.

Since the 2018 agreement reached between the opposition and the regime in the South, the group has registered 415 operations and assassination attempts in the province, including 277 against civilians and 133 against former leaders and members of the opposition, who struck “settlements and reconciliations” with the regime. These figures later became members of regime security services.

The group reported 48 attempts against former opposition members who refused to join the regime settlements and seven against former ISIS operatives.

The latest assassination took place Sunday when unidentified gunmen targeted two people in the city of Jassim in the Daraa countryside. The victims were Yasser al-Duneyfat (aka Abu Baker al-Hassan), a member of the Central Committee and former spokesman for the Revolution Army faction, and his cousin, Adnan.

Local sources said Duneyfat had survived an assassination attempt in 2019 when unknown gunmen tried to blow up his car while he was traveling along the Jassim-Ain al-Tineh highway in the northern Daraa countryside.

Also, unidentified gunmen opened fire on Mohammed al-Rifai, a soldier who had defected from regime forces, in the town of Um Walad in the Daraa countryside, killing him instantly.

On July 11, Rabih Faraj Abu Oreymesh, a Hezbollah member who hails from the Golan Heights, was found dead and his corpse dumped in Al-Yadoudah town in western Daraa.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said from June to date, the number of attacks and assassination attempts in various forms and methods by detonating IEDs, mines, booby-trapped vehicles and shootings has exceeded 559 attacks.



UN Races to Feed One Million Gazans after Truce

People walk past trucks loaded with aid waiting to cross into Gaza from the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing on January 19, 2025. (AFP)
People walk past trucks loaded with aid waiting to cross into Gaza from the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing on January 19, 2025. (AFP)
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UN Races to Feed One Million Gazans after Truce

People walk past trucks loaded with aid waiting to cross into Gaza from the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing on January 19, 2025. (AFP)
People walk past trucks loaded with aid waiting to cross into Gaza from the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing on January 19, 2025. (AFP)

The UN's World Food Program said Sunday it was moving full throttle to get food to as many Gazans as possible after border crossings reopened as part of a long-awaited ceasefire deal.

"We're trying to reach a million people within the shortest possible time," the WFP's Deputy Executive Director Carl Skau told AFP, as the Rome-based UN agency's trucks began rolling into the strip.

"We're moving in with wheat flour, ready to eat meals, and we will be working all fronts trying to restock the bakeries," Skau said, adding the agency would attempt to provide nutritional supplements to the most malnourished.

An initial 42-day truce between Israel and Hamas is meant to enable a surge of sorely needed humanitarian aid into the Palestinian territory after 15 months of war.

"The agreement is for 600 trucks a day... All the crossings will be open," Skau said.

The first WFP trucks entered Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing in the south and through the Zikim crossing in the north, the agency said in a statement, as it began trying to pull "the war-ravaged territory back from starvation".

"We have 150 trucks lined up for every day for the next at least 20 days," Skau said, adding that the WFP was "hopeful that the border crossings will be open and efficient".

There needs to be "an environment inside (Gaza) that is secure enough for our teams to move around," so that food "does not just get over the border but also gets into the hands of the people".

"It seems so far that things have been working relatively well.... We need to now sustain that over several days over weeks," he said.

Before the ceasefire came into effect, WFP was operating just five out of the 20 bakeries it partners with due to dwindling supplies of fuel and flour, as well as insecurity in northern Gaza.

"We're hoping that we will be up and running on all those bakeries as soon as possible," Skau said, stressing that it was "one of our top priorities" to get bread to "tens of thousands of people each day".

"It also has a psychological effect to be able to put warm bread into the hands of the people".

WFP also wants to "get the private sector and commercial goods in there as soon as possible," he said.

That would mean the UN agency could replace ready meals with vouchers and cash for people to buy their own food "to bring back some dignity" and allow them "frankly to start rebuilding their lives".

WFP said in a statement that it has enough food pre-positioned along the borders -- and on its way to Gaza -- to feed over a million people for three months.

Vast areas of Gaza have been devastated by Israel's retaliatory assault on the territory after the October 7 Hamas attack last year sparked the war.

The attack, the deadliest in Israel's history, resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

Israel's retaliatory campaign has killed at least 46,913 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory's health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.