Popular Rage Blankets Syria’s Sweida, Military Tensions Spike in Daraa

Popular anger has swept over the southern Syrian province of Sweida after news broke out on a senior security official having offended a spiritual leader of the Druze community.
“Across Sweida, activists have monitored
growing popular discontent against the background of the head of military
intelligence in Syria’s south, Brigadier General Luay Al-Ali, insulting
spiritual leader of the Druze sect Hikmat al-Hijri,” the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights reported.
According to the UK-based watchdog, some
individuals reacted to the news by tearing down posters of Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad despite ongoing efforts to defuse the tension.
Several prominent regime officials have
apologized to Hijri, the Observatory said, adding that large crowds have
flocked to visit the cleric’s residence in Sweida’s countryside in a show of
support.
Visitors turned up from different Syrian
regions, including Damascus and Quneitra.
Based on reports of Ali verbally insulting
Hijri during a phone conversation, many are demanding that the intelligence
director is dismissed.
A few days ago, Observatory sources
reported that local factions in Sweida set up a checkpoint on the
Damascus-Sweida highway and arrested a regime officer.
This came in reaction to regime forces
having arbitrarily arrested a villager from the rural Sweida countryside
earlier.
In the neighboring Daraa province, a
powerful local body of former opposition fighters rejected conditions laid out
by the Syrian regime to abort all attacks against Tafas town and Daraa’s
western countryside.
During negotiations, regime representatives
tied halting assaults to the Central Daraa Committee expelling six wanted
former opposition leaders to Idlib in Syria’s north.
The Committee, for its part, made a
counteroffer in which local tribes guarantee that the wanted individuals do not
pursue any action against the Syrian regime.
Rejecting the regime’s conditions increases
the likelihood of a confrontation.
Daraa has been rocked by instability since the regime's 2018 takeover, with regular assassinations of militia leaders, regime troops, former opposition figures, and civilians.