VOWS
OF ‘OCCUPATION UNTIL MARTYRDOM’
By FRANKLIN
LAMB
Homs
Palestinian Camp, Syria
Jihadists
are entering Syria at an accelerating pace, according to Syrian, UNWRA, and
Palestinian officials as well as residents in the refugee camps here. For the
now-estimated 7000 imported foreign fighters, Palestinian camps are seen as
optimal locales for setting up bases across Syria.
“Syria’s Palestinian camps have become theatres of war,” said UNWRA Commissioner Filippo Grandi.
The Syrian
people compassionately host 10 official, UN-mandated Palestinian camps, along
with three unofficial ones, whose populations total at least 230,000. Eight of
these are “Nakba (“catastrophe”) camps,” organized soon after Palestinians were
expelled from their homes in 1948, while two, Qabr Essit and Dera’a (emergency
camp), are “Naksa (“day of setback”) camps.” The latter were set up in 1967 as
a result of the internationally condemned Zionist-colonial aggression against
the two sister-Arab-nationalist regions ~ Palestine’s West Bank and Syria’s
Golan Heights.
And it was
on the Ides of March of the year 2011 we saw an explosion of violence near one
of these camps, the Dera’a camp established in 1950, in the south near the
Jordanian border.
But first,
perhaps a simple listing of the camps, along with their populations and dates
of establishment, would be in order here:
1950, Dera’a, 5,916
1967, Dera’a (Emergency), 5,536
1950, Hama, 7,597
1949, Homs, 13,825
1948, Jaramana, 5,007
1950, Khan Dunoun, 8,603
1949, Khan Eshieh, 15,731
1948, Neirab, 17,994
1967, Qabr Essit, 16,016
1948, Sbeineh, 19,624
1955-6, Latakia camp, 6,534 registered refugees
1957, Yarmouk Camp, 112,550 registered refugees
1962, Ein Al-Tal, 4,329 registered refugees
As of 8/8/13, seven of the camps ~ two in the north and five in the Damascus area and in the south of Syria ~ are presently with their throats under the jackboot of foreign Salafi-Jihadists.
These
jihadist cells moved against the camps early in the current crisis for purposes
of forced recruitment, to benefit from a supply of non-combatant human shields,
to shakedown the residents and take over UNWRA facilities, and to make use of
the erstwhile “refugee camp security zones.” All these steps were precursory to
the setting up of military bases from which to launch operations aimed at
toppling the current government of the Syrian Arab Republic.
ED Noor: Jordanian Salafi-Jihadi Abu Muhammad Al-Tahawi:
'We will enter Palestine from Jordan, Egypt, Lebanon, and Syria' to wage jihad and liberate it.”
HOW
DO THE JIHADISTS INFILTRATE THE CAMPS?
How is it possible that more than half of the Palestinian camps in Syria not only fell, but did so, regrettably, without all that much resistance, to the point at which we see them now ~ dominated by largely foreign jihadists who continue to impose their unwanted extremist religious beliefs on a largely progressive secular Palestinian community? It is a subject currently much discussed here.
This
observer has deduced from a number of conversations ~ with former and current
camp residents, as well as members of the Democratic Front for the Liberation
of Palestine, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, Palestinian
NGO’s, and also with academics ~ that there is a ‘model of occupation’
metastasizing in Syria in a manner strikingly similar to what we saw six years
ago at Nahr al Bared Palestinian camp near Tripoli Lebanon.
The stories
we hear today are quite similar to those from among the nearly 30,000 refugees
at Nahr al Bared who were forced to flee to the nearby Badawi camp or to
Lebanon’s ten other camps ~ reports related to this observer in visits to Nahr
al Bared in May of 2007.
What we hear
today in Syria bears an almost uncanny likeness. For instance one lady, whose
family is from Safad in occupied Palestine explained:
“First they (the intruders) appeared only a few in number. We noticed them and that some had ‘foreign’ accents and wore conservative clothes, most had beards. They were polite and friendly. Then more arrived, a few followed by women and children. They stayed to themselves at first and they began using the local mosque ~ even being welcomed at first by local sheiks who sometimes expressed admiration for the sincerity and devoutness. Then some of them began to preach their versions of the Koran, and at some point their gentle teaching became more strident, and soon these men were commenting on how some of the Palestinian women dressed in an un-Islamic fashion and even lectured young women about modesty and that they must change their ways, including stop smoking, and to leave public meetings if they were the only women present, and wear a full hijab.”
The lady’s
sister interrupted:
“Then guns appeared and some of the men appeared to be very skilled when they would use, for example, a school or playground to train. They were so serious and seemed to be in a trance of some kind. There was no possibility to talk or reason with them. All they seemed to want was martyrdom! Some actually believe that Syria was Palestine and they were here to liberate Al Quds!”
Upon some in
the camps it began to dawn that the newcomers intended imposing their ideas,
and that they fully intended that camp residents should submit to “pure Islam,”
as they view it. Some resistance began to jell from camp residents, but the
camp popular committees did not have the power to confront them, and a few
actually joined them.
The fighting with Syrian government troops accelerated the takeover process, and soon the camp residents were presented with a demand: join the gunmen and “liberate” the camps.
With respect
to Ahmad Jibril’s Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command
~ and no offense meant to them and their officials, with whom this observer met
in July and early August ~ but several of their best Palestinian patriot
commanders jumped ship in protest against the plan to “liberate” Yarmouk. ‘
At the same
time many of the PFLP-GC rank-and-file fighters split and joined the opposition
for various reasons, including better pay and wanting to be on the presumed
winning side. That being said, however, camp residents overwhelmingly rejected
the PFLP-GC “defense” project, and insisted that their camp was neutral, that
it was to be maintained as a safe zone for its residents, who were guests in
Syria pending their return to still-occupied Palestine.
Again, this
chain of events is singularly similar to what we saw (too late as it turned
out) in Lebanon’s Nahr al Bared, a process which, like the one unfolding now in
Syria, was accelerated by the civil war raging here.
There is
fear that the Syrian army will sooner or later attack and destroy the camps in
order to confront the rebel militias ~ similar to what the Lebanese army did
during the 75 days of shelling in 2007. At that time it took vengeance on the
camp and demolished it in an unjustifiable frenzy of shelling for the criminal
attack and killing of some Lebanese troops, an attack that had been carried out
by camp invaders, not Palestinians.
For Palestinians in Syria, it is the all too familiar fate of outsiders entering and seeking to control their camps, coupled with the threat of a host army attacking them to confront the invaders. The residents are once more killed or forced to flee and their homes are destroyed.
Here once
more comes to mind the cliché:
“Where is the Arab League, the Organization of Islamic Council, the EU or the UN? Where’s Waldo?
In order to
gain control of the camps in Syria, two main processes appear to be made use of
by the al Qaeda affiliates. One is what this observer labels the ‘Nahr al Bared
model”. A Popular Committee member from Yarmouk, who just barely escaped the
camp before his home was destroyed by a direct hit mortar round, put it this
way:
“Some come bearing gifts. They usually set up small problem solving centers. Maybe a little cash, offers of medical aid, bread distribution, pledges of camp security, these sorts of currently absent social services.”But the camps quickly become petri dishes, and the explosive growth of the foreign implantations is sometimes dazzling. By the time government supporters report the camp invaders it’s too late. And what can the government do anyhow?Guns appear everywhere, and suddenly it’s no longer ‘nicely nicely’ polite treatment from the Islamic brothers. Residents are told they must help liberate the camp from the Assad regime or face the wrath of Allah. Consequently, fleeing for one’s life becomes an utmost urgency, often literally as the snipers arrive and intense fighting, and rooftop targeting, ensues.
DODGING
THE SNIPERS
So what
happens next to the Palestinian camps in Syria? Is a hopeful, positive or
peaceful resolution possible? This observer’s 2-cents worth of analysis
suggests that the answer is no. The camps will stay largely under the
domination, militarily and socially, of the jihadist elements that continue
building fortifications and ‘digging in.’
What is
happening is a God-awful calamity, one being foisted upon those whose only
prayers and wishes are to leave Syria and return home to reclaim their stolen
lands.
A central
question is the precarious situation in Yarmouk and the fate of the 18-20
percent of its population still remaining. These are people risking their lives
daily trying to avoid snipers from both sides.
One can hear
speculation on the prospects that the Syrian Army, aided by Hezbollah, will
move on Yarmouk to try and expel the rebel militia. Some PLO officials with
offices inside the Yarmouk neighborhood claim that Ahmad Jibril’s PFLP-GC is
being beefed up and armed by the government with more than just AK47’s and
RPG’s.
Last winter,
some of Jibril’s forces were expelled when they tried to eject the foreign
militia, while others, as mentioned above, went over to the opposite side. At
the same time, three PFLP-GC commanders quit over tactics while questioning
Jibril’s decision to violate the camp’s neutrality, a decision leading to the
destruction of parts of Yarmouk.
As to
speculation on the possibility of the Syrian government and/or Hezbollah moving
to eject the foreign forces from Yarmouk, this observer does not give the
reports much credit.
The Syrian
Army has more urgent and prioritized battles being waged today, with others
being planned.
Hezbollah,
likewise, is facing challenges at present, and fighting in Yarmouk against
unknown numbers of rebel militia would surely add to them. Moreover, any force
invading a Palestinian camp faces being roundly condemned over violations of
the Cairo agreement forbidding host governments from entering UNRWA refugee
camps.
This
observer and contacts in the Palestinian community cannot verify the recent
report for a foreign media source that al Nusra has fled Yarmouk and is on the
run. On the run from whom? Currently they are not being seriously challenged.
On the contrary, the al-Qeada affiliates are busy digging more tunnels under
the camps to store weapons and move freely. Their ranks are growing not
dwindling.
Grim as it
sounds, they who reside in Syria’s camps, along with the 12 million Palestinian
refugees worldwide, will continue to be at the mercy of events they had no part
in creating. It is a fate they share at this moment with much of the rest of
Syria’s population, and things are not likely to improve in the immediate term.
But on a
more positive note, the Palestinians of Syria persist in their resistance and
opposition to the illegal occupation of their country. Theirs is a
determination to return to their homeland that simply will not fade or wither,
and speaking with Palestinian refugees these past several days in Damascus and
Homs has convinced this observer more than ever that on this they will not
retreat a single inch ~ and that in time they will liberate their country.
Off-topic Noor...but some good images in this thread today - http://boards.4chan.org/pol/res/18867163
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