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Syrians return to ruined homes in city that became Hezbollah hub

Syrians queue to buy bread from a bakery in the town of in Qusayr in Syria's central Homs province on December 14, 2024. (AFP)
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Syrians queue to buy bread from a bakery in the town of in Qusayr in Syria's central Homs province on December 14, 2024. (AFP)
Syrians return to ruined homes in city that became Hezbollah hub
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This aerial view shows a building reportedly used by Lebanon's Hezbollah group, in the town of in Qusayr in Syria's central Homs province on December 15, 2024. (AFP)
Syrians return to ruined homes in city that became Hezbollah hub
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Syrians queue to buy bread from a bakery in the town of in Qusayr in Syria's central Homs province on December 14, 2024. (AFP)
Syrians return to ruined homes in city that became Hezbollah hub
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Syrians sit in the back of a truck as it drives in the town of in Qusayr in Syria's central Homs province on December 14, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 16 December 2024

Syrians return to ruined homes in city that became Hezbollah hub

Syrians queue to buy bread from a bakery in the town of in Qusayr in Syria's central Homs province on December 14, 2024. (AFP)
  • Qusayr had been used by rebels as a transit point for weapons and fighters from Lebanon, and was strategically vital for the Syrian government because it is close to a major road linking Damascus to the coast

AL-QUSAYR, Syria: Residents of Qusayr in central Syria are finally returning home after the departure of Hezbollah fighters, who helped Bashar Assad’s forces seize the city a decade ago and left with his fall.
Many of the houses are now in ruins, after years under the control of the Lebanese armed group, a key Assad ally which had set up a military base and training camp there.
“Most areas in the city of Qusayr were off-limits to us,” said 22-year-old resident Ali Khleif.
“Even the local residents who owned shops and establishments there were prohibited from entering.”
Syria’s military retook Qusayr, near the Lebanese border, in June 2013 after a blistering assault led by Hezbollah fighters.
Qusayr had been used by rebels as a transit point for weapons and fighters from Lebanon, and was strategically vital for the Syrian government because it is close to a major road linking Damascus to the coast.
Hezbollah used the buildings “as warehouses for weapons and ammunition,” said Khleif.
“After the liberation, the residents returned to their shops and land” and have reclaimed them, he said.
“We will begin rebuilding them.”
Hezbollah acknowledged in 2013 that it was fighting in Syria in support of Damascus, two years after war erupted when Assad brutally repressed a pro-democracy uprising.
Now in Qusayr, former Hezbollah posts have been ransacked.
Images of the group’s former chief Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in September in a huge Israeli strike on Beirut’s southern suburbs, have been slashed up and destroyed.
The 2013 battle for Qusayr forced thousands to flee, including many Lebanese residents of the area, which maintains close ties to Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley across the border.
Hezbollah fighters abandoned the area with the fall of Assad last week, after Islamist-led rebels pressed a lightning offensive, taking the capital on December 8.
Lawyer Ayman Soweid, 30, said that “during Hezbollah’s occupation of Qusayr, our city was regarded as a land bridge for transporting weapons, specifically from Syria and Iran, via Iraq, passing through us to Lebanon.”
Israeli strikes have also repeatedly hit the Qusayr area.
Israel, which has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria since 2011, mainly targeting the army and Iran-backed groups including Hezbollah, has rarely commented on individual raids but has repeatedly said it would not allow Iran to expand its presence in the country.
Elsewhere in Qusayr, Samar Harfouch, 38, was surveying piles of rubble.
She said she had returned on Saturday only to find her home destroyed.
“This is my home, and these are the homes of my husband’s brothers — three homes,” she told AFP, also indicating more relatives’ homes nearby.
“All destroyed,” she said.
“Twelve homes reduced to rubble.”


Palestinians return for prayers in West Bank mosque after attack

Palestinians return for prayers in West Bank mosque after attack
Updated 50 sec ago

Palestinians return for prayers in West Bank mosque after attack

Palestinians return for prayers in West Bank mosque after attack
  • Home to 2.7 million Palestinians, the West Bank has long been at the heart of their aspirations to a future independent state, but successive Israeli governments have expanded settlements there, fragmenting the territory

JERUSALEM: Palestinians in a village in the Israeli-occupied West Bank held weekly community prayers after clearing insulting graffiti, broken glass, and burn marks from a mosque they say was targeted by Jewish settlers amid a spike in attacks.
Villagers in Deir Istiya who cleaned up the mosque said that settlers had smashed windows, sprayed slogans, and tried to torch the building in an assault on Wednesday night.
Reuters video of the mosque showed the graffiti as well as shattered glass, charred internal walls and furniture.
Israel’s military said security forces had arrived at the mosque after hearing reports of the attack but had not identified or arrested any suspects.
It said in a statement that it “condemns any force of violence and will continue to operate to safeguard the security and order in the area.”
Settler attacks have proliferated in the West Bank, according to the UN, which recorded at least 264 attacks against Palestinians in October, the highest monthly total since it began tracking such incidents in 2006.
“It’s an attempt by them (the settlers) to take control of lands in the West Bank. But we remain steadfast and rooted in our land,” said Raed Salman, a leader of the main Palestinian political party, Fatah.
Home to 2.7 million Palestinians, the West Bank has long been at the heart of their aspirations to a future independent state, but successive Israeli governments have expanded settlements there, fragmenting the territory.
The UN, Palestinians and most countries regard settlements as illegal under international law.
Palestinians say Israeli forces do not protect them from settler violence. The Israeli military says soldiers are often dispatched to deal with any trouble.
“We are here for Friday prayer because it’s an Islamic holy site. We want to show Netanyahu and his allies that this mosque was fixed in 24 hours, and we will put back the carpets soon,” said worshipper Wadee’ Salman, referring to the Israeli prime minister.