The Jolani regime oppressing the people of the Syrian coast; living in fear and poverty’

The Jolani regime oppressing the people of the Syrian coast; living in fear and poverty’

While all attention has recently been focused on the crimes committed by terrorist elements affiliated with the government of Abu Muhammad al-Julani, head of the Syrian interim government, in the Druze-populated province of Sweida, the Syrian coastal region, where the same terrorists carried out bloody massacres and massacred thousands of innocent people a few months ago, continues to be in a sad state.

Yesterday, Tuesday, the Golani government released the results of the investigation committee it had formed into the crimes committed by its elements on the Syrian coast. As expected, it exonerated its elements and militias from these horrific crimes and justified the horrific massacre of Alawites and the crimes committed against them under the deceptive title of “survivors of the former regime.”

Ahmed, a 30-year-old young man living in one of the villages of Banias, where the most horrific massacres by Golani-affiliated terrorists took place in March, said: “My daughter is suffering from a high fever and I cannot afford the medicine she needs. Her medicine is foreign and expensive, and after being fired from my job, I can hardly afford a loaf of bread for my family.”

In an interview with the Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar, Ahmed not only recounted his suffering but also tried to speak for all those suffering from the severe oppression on the Syrian coast, saying: “I have not been able to find work for months and I do not have the strength to support my family. There is nothing to do in the coastal villages, and we do not dare to leave the village for fear of being killed, and we are forced to use the limited facilities that are available inside the village. We use the vegetables we grow in our fields and people help each other to alleviate hunger.

Ahmed’s situation is typical of all families in the Sahel who are experiencing a sad reality, especially in light of the unprecedented increase in poverty rates and the loss of income for thousands of families after the Jolani government dismissed their heads of household from their jobs. They are not even safe inside their villages and are at risk of attack at any moment by terrorists affiliated with the Jolani government, who have recently started burning large areas of agricultural land in the Syrian Sahel villages on which their residents depend for their livelihoods.

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