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MONDAY, 20 MAY 2013
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Syrian border town lives under Al-Qaeda rules
Reuters
A Syrian shouts slogans against the regime in front of a Nusra Front flag during a demonstration in Aleppo.
A Syrian shouts slogans against the regime in front of a Nusra Front flag during a demonstration in Aleppo.
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MAYADIN, Syria: In a small town in Syria’s east, Islamist militants have taken unclothed mannequins they see as sexually enticing out of the shops.

Members of the Nusra Front, Al-Qaeda’s Syria affiliate, have also prevented women from wearing trousers, preferring that they adopt the shapeless head-to-toe black veil.

The town of 54,000 on the Euphrates river offers a snapshot of what life could be like if Islamist rebels take control of significant areas of Syria as President Bashar Assad loses further ground.

Of all the hundreds of rebel units, the Nusra Front is considered the most effective. Its fighters, who seek out death in battle as a form of martyrdom, have achieved victories in attacks on several military bases across the country. The Front still represent a small fraction of the armed anti-Assad groups fighting in Syria but are growing in size and influence.

Their militants, bolstered by veteran Iraqis who battled U.S. forces, fought alongside rebel units from the Free Syrian Army, an umbrella group of rebels ranging from those who say they are fighting for democracy to hard-line Islamists, to take Mayadin.

Government forces left the town in November and half its inhabitants fled during the fighting.

The Nusra Front, the FSA, local militia and tribal groups have now carved the town into fiefdoms. Residents say there are around 8,000 armed men in total.

Insurgents with long beards patrol the streets enforcing a strict interpretation of Islam. Alcohol is removed from shops. Daily religious teaching is provided for Mayadin’s children, who get free loaves of bread if they attend.

One young boy who attends these classes said that pupils are taught about praying, the role of women, the place of polygamy in marriage and jihad against “Assad’s Alawite regime.”

Syria’s civil war grew out of a popular revolt against the four-decade dynastic rule of the Assads. Street protests, inspired by other Arab revolts, took hold in March 2011 and quickly spread across the police state.

However, Assad’s forces cracked down hard, shooting at demonstrators and arresting thousands. An armed revolt was born and 60,000 have since been killed.

Nearly two years later the revolt has turned sectarian, with majority Sunnis fighting Assad’s army, of which the top generals are mostly Alawite, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. Assad, himself an Alawite, has framed the revolt as a foreign-backed terrorist conspiracy and blames the West and Sunni Gulf states.

Moderate rebel groups find themselves increasingly overshadowed by extremist units and peaceful opposition activists say they now have little say in the war.

Fighters from the Nusra Front present a threat to those who want democracy in Syria. Instead, they envision a caliphate and a return to the lifestyle of the seventh century. Shops are forcibly closed at prayer times and people are rounded up in the streets five times daily to go to mosques.

Liberal residents try to continue life as normal but are feeling the day-to-day effects of strict Islamist rule. Many stocked up on arak when they heard that Nusra Front fighters were closing down the shops. A bottle of arak can now be bought in Mayadin for five times the price in Damascus, but the transaction must be done in secret.

Nusra Front militants have been shrewd. They took control of the nearby Al-Ward oil and gas field and also went straight for the grain silos. They control the resources, which gives them power.

In the streets of Mayadin, oil can be bought at marked up prices and the Nusra Front will even trade with the enemy if it means extra cash.

Residents of Mayadin said that the Front has been transporting crude oil in large tankers to Deir al-Zor, 45 kilometers to the north, where the government still has a presence.

They say that the local authorities in Deir al-Zor are so stretched that even they will buy oil off the group Damascus says are terrorists.

Assad has lost huge areas of land, especially in the north and the east. Rebels have pushed into most major cities but the army has dug in and a military stalemate has ensued.

But the government has been punishing Mayadin for the rebel presence. Civilians stay away from the Front and other rebel brigades as they are targets for aerial strikes and long-range artillery from government positions to the north.

Damascus still controls the electricity supply and cuts it off regularly, residents say.

There is little bread and water, no telephone or Internet services and schools have closed. People eat weeds from the Euphrates and some will make the journey to Deir al-Zor to buy food, risking arrest or death as they cross enemy lines.

Order has broken down in Mayadin and residents say looting and theft are rampant. The streets empty after dark.

Still, residents say the Nusra Front is gaining support in Syria’s east. Militants have set up checkpoints at the entrances to the city where they try to recruit men and teenage boys.

“I will follow anyone who is fighting the regime,” said 19-year-old Mohammad, a law student who grew up in Mayadin. He agrees that Nusra fighters present a distorted moral framework, but says they have managed to battle back against Assad’s forces – his No. 1 aim.

The group’s members refused to be interviewed by a female reporter but rebel fighters working with them talk of a strict hierarchy and coordination.

Hussein, a 28-year-old fighter from the Osama Ibn Ziad brigade of the FSA, sees a strategic benefit from the Nusra Front, whose fighters are well armed and include foreign fighters who can advise on guerrilla warfare.

“The guys from Nusra are good people. We have to fight this regime and they are very well organized with strong fighters,” he said.

But Abu Mahmoud, a 55-year-old laborer and father, says he fears his kids will be drawn into the group.

“We don’t go out unless it is absolutely necessary. I sent my young children to a relative in Hasaka because I don’t want them to be armed,” he said, referring to the northern city near the border with Turkey.

Others hope that the tribal system of the arid desert east will prevent an Islamist takeover. “I don’t think Nusra will be able to do what they want. We have our traditions and tribes won’t let them,” said Imad, 22, a student of engineering.

But many residents have organized demonstrations against rebel groups, including the Front, whom they see as thieves. Across the country, rebels have taken over schools and hospitals to use as bases and take medical supplies and equipment for their war.

“The government abandoned us and there is nothing here; no life and no services. The bad situation will make all our young men join Nusra,” said Yamen, a 20-year-old mathematics student. “They want to fight the regime and see Nusra as the last solution for Syria.”

Many feel helpless.

“We lost our city and our children and now we will lose our future,” said Fadia, a 22-year-old housewife. “There is nothing here. I hate all sides: the regime, the opposition, the Free Syrian Army and Nusra, because none of them cares about civilians.”

 
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on January 31, 2013, on page 8.
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Mayadin / Nusra Front / Free Syrian Army / Syria
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Story Summary
In a small town in Syria's east, Islamist militants have taken unclothed mannequins they see as sexually enticing out of the shops.

The town of 54,000 on the Euphrates river offers a snapshot of what life could be like if Islamist rebels take control of significant areas of Syria as President Bashar Assad loses further ground.

Of all the hundreds of rebel units, the Nusra Front is considered the most effective. Its fighters, who seek out death in battle as a form of martyrdom, have achieved victories in attacks on several military bases across the country. The Front still represent a small fraction of the armed anti-Assad groups fighting in Syria but are growing in size and influence.

The Nusra Front, the FSA, local militia and tribal groups have now carved the town into fiefdoms.

Fighters from the Nusra Front present a threat to those who want democracy in Syria.

Still, residents say the Nusra Front is gaining support in Syria's east.

Hussein, a 28-year-old fighter from the Osama Ibn Ziad brigade of the FSA, sees a strategic benefit from the Nusra Front, whose fighters are well armed and include foreign fighters who can advise on guerrilla warfare.
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