Government and Rebels Negotiate Education, Utilities, and Reduction of
Violence Issues


Syria: Engaging the Opposition With More Than Weapons


by FRANKLIN LAMB

Tadmon and Kafr Sousa neighborhoods, Damascus.

To my knowledge this observer has never been-nor likely ever will be-accused
of being particularly astute and certainly not the least bit prescient.
Yet, the more Syrians I meet in Damascus neighborhoods –seemingly from a
fairly broad spectrum of political views, I am changing some earlier
assumptions and tentative judgments about ’”this interminable Syrian war.”
While any sort of a timetable to end this horror is not yet discernible, the
beginnings of putting much of it behind this ten millennia birthplace of
civilization may be fairly imminent.

Eighteen months ago, more than a dozen neighborhoods in the Damascus suburbs
were engaged in moderate to intense fighting between rebels and the Syrian
army. Today, only four neighborhoods are under fairly heavy fire, Jobar,
Daraya, al-Qabun and Yarmouk.  In most of the others, the government and
rebels appear to be seeking an accommodation of sorts.

Residents from Tadmon as well as some Damascus University students offered
this observer some examples of how both sides of the civil war are trying to
work positively with their sworn enemies despite the conflict approaching
its fourth year.

One major quality of life necessity is electricity in our homes. Supplying
power to its areas is a major concern of both sides in this conflict.
Frankly even the current Syrian system appears far better than in Lebanon
which regularly sees road blockades and burning of tires to protest the
nearly half century of incompetence and indifference of politicians in
delivering as few as six hours of daily electricity and that depending on
area and which confession control relevant cabinet ministries..  These days
of civil war in Syria the government delivers power two hours on and two
hours off and full power during the night from 10 pm to 10 a.m.  Not too bad
by Levant standards.  Even rebel groups in an increasingly number of
neighborhoods, and to a lesser extend in the countryside, get government
power. In some rebel neighborhoods electricity is being delivered to
residents 24/7.  This is achieved by militia stealing power via cables they
run to other neighborhoods.  They quite often seem to get away with it but
occasionally they fight among themselves as happened earlier this month in
Al Qudsayya when a dozen or so Nusra fighters routed around 50 FSA types
caught hooking up wires under neighborhood buildings. Nusra and the FSA
fight over a myriad of issues and especially over high-rise buildings.  Tall
buildings are at a premium for obvious reasons including being desirable for
sniper nests and mortar launchings.  Many neighborhood clashes occur in full
view of army checkpoints that control neighborhood egress.  Whether or not
the army has orders not to interfere or engage with militias, they
reportedly often do.  Militia and army commanders, if not on exactly
friendly terms, sometimes meet and parley as deemed necessary in an effort
to create and maintain neighborhood peace. This practice appears to work for
the benefit of both sides and is reportedly spreading, particularly around
Damascus.

When rebel factions fight one another, as they often do and endanger a
neighborhood, the army appears increasingly ready to will “mediate.”  If
their orders to end the residents endangering fight are not immediately
followed the army can and often does cut power to all sides until they
receive pledges to honor the governments ‘recommendations.”

Rebel and government “contracts” as the locals call them, cover many
subjects, some seemingly odd if not very bizarre.  One example. As news
reports suggest the government’s policy is to pacify the neighborhoods so
refugees can return and it has made remarkably progress around Damascus
despite an increase in rebel mortar firings into Damascus from approximately
6 per day a year ago to as many as 23 per day currently.

It is reported on good authority from eyewitnesses, that certain army
checkpoints  will actually allow armed militiamen to  pass through army
checkpoints freely if they will head to Jobar or Duraya or other ‘fighting
fields”  to challenge the army there and keep local peace in their local
community.  Some do.  Last week, according to a student who lives in
al-Qabun, there was a potentially serious problem but it was solved at one
of the periodic meetings between rebel leaders and army officers. The
unusual problem was that when a dozen or so rebels headed to the army
checkpoint to go fight the same army near Jobar they were observed carrying
two AK-47’s each.  The local army commander was livid because by the
expressed terms of an earlier agreement each rebel fighter could only safely
pass and return through the neighborhood army checkpoint if he was carrying
only one AK.  The rebels protested complaining that they need two, always
fight with two and it was no big deal for the army to let them pass. The
army insisted on only one AK-47 per rebel fighter and threatened to not only
stop rebels from exiting and entering their neighborhood but that if they
did not keep the earlier agreement the army would attack the rebel
positions, preassembly with artillery or airstrikes.  This caused panic
among the local civilians, many of whom have relatives in the FSA, Nusra,
and even Da’ish. Long story made short, the rebels listened to their parents
and relatives as well as to the reasoning of the army and finally agreed
that they would carry only one AK-47 each thru the army checkpoints on route
to fight the army a few kilometers away. According to two eyewitnesses to
these events, all sides shook hands at the checkpoint as the rebels handed
their second AK-47’s to the army for “safe keeping.”  An unwritten rule
between the army and their sworn enemies en route to try to kill them is
that if the rebel gets killed the army checkpoint guys gets to keep his
weapon. This is not to say the army and the rebels are in league, but the
Syrian government is working to secure the neighborhoods and does not want
to resort to bombing if they can obtain their objectives by other means. One
hears of many ‘contracts’ being made among sworn enemies around Syria in
order to try to end this slaughter.

Another brief example.  Last week saw the doors of 17,486 of Syria’s  22,192
public schools open their doors. This according to Dr. Farah al-Mutlak,
Deputy Minister of Education of the SAR, who generously gave this observer
his time to discuss the current challenges for children in Syria. The gap of
approximately 4,500 schools between the above figures is caused by the fact
that 2,613 of Syrian schools, as of opening day were controlled by rebels
including  Da’ish.  688 former schools are  now being used to house homeless
refugees, 1, 385 are war damaged and currently can’t be used. The figure was
higher but over the past year the government has been able to repair 435.
In addition, approximately 128,000 children are attending “school clubs” in
particularly volatile areas of Syria. This year alone, 72,000 children in
Syria and 587,000 child refugees have received psychosocial support.

Excited, and sometimes apprehensive children by the thousands are arriving
for the new school year and according to Janet Hasan, Principal of the
Salahedine Primary and Middle School in the Mezzeh neighborhood of central
Damascus which was among those this observer visited, her school which
normally teaches 600 girls now has 1,436.  According to Principal Hasan, due
to the crisis, attending school is enormously important for the children to
experience as least some love and normalcy with peers and authority figures
while learning about more than the just effects of war on their lives.

If militias are in control  of an area with a public school,  efforts are
being made by both parties to keep it peaceful and toward this goal the
government and the militia, “cooperate” with the exception of Da’ish (IS)
who have set up essentially Madrassas that do not teach anything  much at
all-but memorizing the Koran.  Da’ish forbids teaching music, dancing,
studying philosophy, western literature or other ‘secular subjects.’   Al
Nusra does not, unlike Da’ish, insist on a Madrassa type education in public
schools which so far are a big success this new year and working to the
benefit of the children and their exhausted and often destitute families.

Virtually every educator, government official and critic of the Assad regime
with whom this observer has discussed what the Syrian government is doing to
provide quality education for youngsters these days  have agreed that all
sides, except Da’ish, are trying at different levels to cooperate to help
Syria’s cherished youth. All also express abhorrence at what is happening to
Syrian school children forced to take refuge in Lebanon. In Lebanon, there’s
simply no space in many schools nor much political will left to help Syrian
or Palestinian refugees plus the education system is overwhelmed by the
sheer numbers of child refugees. Around 80 percent of Syrian refugee
children in Lebanon don’t attend school, according to Save the Children and
UNHCR.

One positive sign is that partly due to the Syrian Ministry of Education
seeking international help, more than $316m was pledged this week, according
to Dr. al-Mutlak, to support Syrian children affected by the conflict.  This
assistance is part of a UN-led initiative to alleviate the impact of the
crisis on young people. Despite this wonderful and much needed help a
funding gap of more than $ 200 million remains.

Another issue that both sides are trying to resolve at citizens request is
to open the neighbors on the weekends so resident can move around.
Currently in as many as a dozen Damascene neighbors the rebels prevent
residents from leaving their area on Friday because they believe they should
pray and stay at home.  Some militias close the neighborhoods they control
during both Friday and Saturday. Both sides have indicated that a mutually
agreed resolution may be near so residents can head to the beautiful parks
and old city for sightseeing or visit friends and family.

There is growing evidence here that the government and the rebels are trying
to collaborate in various ways in order to save and entire generation of
their children from being denied education due to the ravages of ongoing
civil war. This massive catastrophe for Syria and the region can be ended if
the above noted trend continues.

Franklin Lamb is a visiting Professor of International Law at the Faculty of
Law, Damascus University and volunteers with the Sabra-Shatila Scholarship
Program ( <http://sssp-lb.com/> sssp-lb.com).

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko"

 

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