Syria, Druze and Bedouin
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DAMASCUS (Reuters) -Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa accused Israel of trying to fracture Syria and promised to protect its Druze minority on Thursday after U.S. intervention to help achieve a truce in fighting between government forces and Druze fighters.
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U.S. Envoy to Syria Tom Barrack said early Saturday that Israel and Syria had agreed to a cease-fire, following Israel’s intervention this week in fighting between Syrian government forces and
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Fighting resumed in earnest in southern Syria after a massive army of Bedouin tribes launched a new offensive.
Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa yesterday urged Sunni Muslim Bedouin groups to “fully commit” to a ceasefire aimed at ending clashes with Druze-linked militias that have left hundreds dead and threatened to unravel the country’s post-war transition.
Israel didn’t give permits to these Bedouin villages to build bomb shelters. So they built their own
When the sirens wail in the southern Israeli desert to herald an incoming missile, Ahmad Abu Ganima’s family scrambles outside.
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Al Jazeera on MSNIsrael reportedly targets Bedouin convoy in Syria in wake of strikesA Bedouin military commander told the Reuters news agency that the truce only applied to government forces and not to them, adding that the fighters were seeking to free Bedouins