Security Forces To Curb Fuel Smuggling from Syria to Lebanon

A picture taken on December 14, 2017 shows a general view of people standing at the Al-Qaa border crossing in Lebanon and Jussiyeh in Syria. [STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images]
A picture taken on December 14, 2017 shows a general view of people standing at the Al-Qaa border crossing in Lebanon and Jussiyeh in Syria. [STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images]
TT

Security Forces To Curb Fuel Smuggling from Syria to Lebanon

A picture taken on December 14, 2017 shows a general view of people standing at the Al-Qaa border crossing in Lebanon and Jussiyeh in Syria. [STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images]
A picture taken on December 14, 2017 shows a general view of people standing at the Al-Qaa border crossing in Lebanon and Jussiyeh in Syria. [STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images]

Syrian authorities have closed the smuggling crossings along the border with northeastern Lebanon, in an effort to curb increasing smuggling of fuel, vegetables and livestock from Syria.

Smuggling activities from Syrian territory to Lebanon have increased over the past months due to the difference in the prices of basic commodities.

Twenty liters of diesel fuel costs about LBP 250,000 in Syria, compared to LBP 350,000 in Lebanon where the material is scarce and has been lately sold in the black market.

The Syrian military tightened its control over the Syrian side of the border, closing the illegal routes and adopting strict security measures to prevent the crossing of Lebanese vehicles into Syrian villages inhabited by Lebanese in the countryside of Al-Qosair (southwest of Homs). It also prevented cars from crossing the border into Lebanon.

The measures “led to a complete cessation of smuggling operations from both sides at the illegal crossings in the northern Bekaa,” field sources in Hermel told Asharq Al-Awsat.

The closure included all smuggling routes in the Hermel area, adjacent to the Syrian territory.

The source said the new measures came as a result of “revived smuggling from Syria to Lebanon,” explaining that the opposite-smuggling wave “increased with the decline in prices in Syria and their rise in Lebanon.”

The Syrian measures come in parallel to efforts by the Lebanese security forces to combat smuggling and to chase car-stealing gangs.

A Lebanese military source told Asharq Al-Awsat that the Lebanese Army’s Second Land Border Regiment has intensified its security measures on the Lebanese-Syrian border, arresting gangs involved in smuggling and transporting stolen cars from Lebanon into Syria.



Erdogan: Kurdish Militia in Syria Will Be Buried If They Do Not Lay Down Arms

A Syrian Kurd waves the flag of YPG (People's Protection Units) near Qamishli's airport in northeastern Syria on December 8, 2024, following the fall of the capital Damascus to anti-government fighters. (Photo by Delil SOULEIMAN / AFP)
A Syrian Kurd waves the flag of YPG (People's Protection Units) near Qamishli's airport in northeastern Syria on December 8, 2024, following the fall of the capital Damascus to anti-government fighters. (Photo by Delil SOULEIMAN / AFP)
TT

Erdogan: Kurdish Militia in Syria Will Be Buried If They Do Not Lay Down Arms

A Syrian Kurd waves the flag of YPG (People's Protection Units) near Qamishli's airport in northeastern Syria on December 8, 2024, following the fall of the capital Damascus to anti-government fighters. (Photo by Delil SOULEIMAN / AFP)
A Syrian Kurd waves the flag of YPG (People's Protection Units) near Qamishli's airport in northeastern Syria on December 8, 2024, following the fall of the capital Damascus to anti-government fighters. (Photo by Delil SOULEIMAN / AFP)

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday that Kurdish fighters in Syria will either lay down their weapons or "be buried", amid hostilities between Türkiye-backed Syrian fighters and the militants since the fall of Bashar al-Assad this month.
Following Assad's departure, Ankara has repeatedly insisted that the Kurdish YPG group must disband, asserting that the group has no place in Syria's future. The change in Syria's leadership has left the country's main Kurdish factions on the back foot.
"The separatist murderers will either bid farewell to their weapons, or they will be buried in Syrian lands along with their weapons," Erdogan told lawmakers from his ruling AK Party in parliament.
"We will eradicate the terrorist organization that is trying to weave a wall of blood between us and our Kurdish siblings," he added.
Türkiye views the Kurdish YPG group- the main component of the US-allied Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) - as an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militia, which has waged an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984.
The PKK is designated a terrorist organization by Türkiye, the United States and the European Union. Ankara has repeatedly called on its NATO ally Washington and others to stop supporting the YPG.
Earlier, Türkiye's defense ministry said the armed forces had killed 21 YPG-PKK militants in northern Syria and Iraq.
In a Reuters interview last week, SDF commander Mazloum Abdi acknowledged the presence of PKK fighters in Syria for the first time, saying they had helped battle ISIS and would return home if a total ceasefire was agreed with Türkiye, a core demand from Ankara.
He denied any organizational ties with the PKK.
Erdogan also said Türkiye would soon open its consulate in Aleppo, and added Ankara expected an increase in traffic at its borders in the summer of next year, as some of the millions of Syrian migrants it hosts begin returning.