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02/15/14 12:20 AM

#218713 RE: fuagf #218707

In Egypt, a Welcome for Syrian Refugees Turns Bitter

.. the first one is old ..


Narciso Contreras for The New York Times

In “Little Damascus,” on the outskirts of Cairo, vendors and other refugees from Syria fill the sidewalks.

.. more photos ..
“Egypt was a calm country,” said a man from Syria who was stabbed here. “Now, there isn’t a calm country in the region.”

By SARAH MOUSA and KAREEM FAHIM
Published: September 7, 2013

CAIRO — Dozens of men with clubs and knives stormed a charity for Syrian refugees a few days after the Egyptian military ousted ..http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/04/world/middleeast/egypt.html .. President Mohamed Morsi — making it clear they were no longer welcome in Egypt.

Multimedia

Multimedia Feature The Refugees.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/09/05/world/middleeast/Syrian-Refugees-in-Lebanon.html?ref=middleeast

Related

Kerry and French Foreign Minister Appeal Together for Strike Against Syria (September 8, 2013)
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/08/world/europe/european-union-wants-un-report-before-any-military-action-in-syria.html?ref=middleeast

Obama’s Battle for Syria Votes, Taut and Uphill (September 8, 2013)
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/08/us/politics/obamas-battle-for-syria-votes-taut-and-uphill.html?ref=middleeast

.“You Syrians — you’re setting the country on fire,” the attackers yelled in July as they beat Raqan Abulkheir, who is originally from Homs in central Syria. He runs the refugee center out of an apartment in a Cairo suburb where thousands of Syrians have settled. His 25-year-old son was bludgeoned over the head and left in a coma.

During the two and a half years of civil war in Syria, more than two million people have fled the country, most of them taking up residence as refugees in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. But as many as 300,000 have eventually made their way to Egypt, where they were welcomed, including by Mr. Morsi and his Islamist allies, who were vocal backers of the rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad.

“The people here supported us,” said Mohamed Taher, a filmmaker from northern Syria. “Egyptians did what they could to help Syrians. They went out of their way to do more.”

But as public anger grew against Mr. Morsi leading up to his ouster, the Syrians were cast as his allies. And, along with other foreigners, they were made scapegoats as the military took power and warned of external plots to destabilize Egypt, unleashing a suffocating xenophobia in the news media and on the streets.

One former member of Parliament called for Syrians and other foreigners to be executed. A television host told the “real men” among the Syrians to “go back to your country and solve your problems there.”

The rising nationalism was sudden, and startling. Mohamed Abazid, 28, a refugee from Dara’a in southern Syria, grew fearful as he saw fliers being passed around. “My Egyptian brother, my Egyptian sister,” the fliers said. “Fight the Syrian occupation and defend your jobs.”

In recent weeks, some of the new government’s prominent supporters have publicly praised Mr. Assad’s military, in a jarring turn for the many refugees who felt safe in Egypt as dissidents.

Since the beating, Mr. Abulkheir has returned to work in this Cairo suburb, and his son, who had 40 stitches in his head, has recovered, he said. Other refugees said they had faced no problems, but stories like Mr. Abulkheir’s have made them nervous. Many Syrians have chosen to spend less time in public or to leave Egypt altogether for Lebanon, Turkey or Jordan, exacerbating the regional refugee crisis. Others take their chances with smugglers and flee by boat to Italy, refugee advocates say. And hundreds more Syrians have been arrested and deported.

Before Mr. Morsi’s ouster, it was difficult to find seats on flights to Cairo from the refugee hubs in Istanbul; Beirut, Lebanon; and Amman, Jordan. After the military-backed government took power, Syrians were required, for the first time in decades, to obtain visas. Over the last two months, “based on the information available, we’ve had almost no Syrians coming in,” said Edward Leposky, a spokesman for the United Nations refugee agency. The refugees have memorized outbound flight schedules.

While thousands of refugees already settled in Egypt have been registering with the United Nations in a desperate attempt to legalize their status, an increasing number have been closing their files with the agency, including about 820 refugees in August, an indication they were intending to leave, he said.

Since most Syrian refugees are not registered, their advocates say, the numbers of people leaving are certainly much higher. “There is increasing anxiety about the insecurity here, and the poor treatment they are receiving,” Mr. Leposky said, mentioning insults and threats, incitement in the news media and calls to boycott Syrian businesses.

The anxiety hums on the outskirts of Cairo, in the suburbs spotted with luxury neighborhoods and lower- and middle-class housing projects where many Syrians found cheap apartments.

In one of the Syrian apartment buildings, Mamoun, a man from Syria’s capital, Damascus, recovered from stab wounds he received when a man attacked him on a bus after Mamoun asked people to stop smoking.

He was not sure why he was attacked: Syrians say that these days, their accent is enough to invite hostility. The man who stabbed him accused him of belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood, Mr. Morsi’s Islamist party.

When he stumbled onto the pavement, bleeding, bystanders seemed afraid to approach him, and finally directed him to a pharmacy. Mamoun, who had lived with his family in Brooklyn for a time before moving back to Syria and then to Egypt, asked to be identified by only his first name for the family’s safety.

His story has circulated among his family and friends: At least 15 families he knows have fled to Italy, he said. Other relatives in Syria who were considering joining him in Egypt heard his story and decided to stay put.

“Egypt was a calm country,” Mamoun said. “Now, there isn’t a calm country in the region.”

In the nearby 6th of October City, parts of which have come to be known as Little Damascus, the refugees say the official hostility has amplified the frustrations of Egyptians with their own faltering economy, and Egypt’s chronic insecurity since the toppling of Hosni Mubarak in 2011.

“My Egyptian neighbors say: ‘You’re taking our jobs. We’re done with you,’ ” said a woman from the Ghouta region near Damascus, where hundreds of Syrians died last month in a suspected chemical weapons attack.

The woman, who lives alone, has changed the way she dresses to make herself less identifiable as a Syrian, and now peppers her speech with Egyptian colloquialisms.

“The people who came here were already damaged,” she said.

Refugees say their troubles have roots in a rally Mr. Morsi held in June in solidarity with the Syrian opposition, shocking many Egyptians, and cementing the link between the refugees and Mr. Morsi’s fate.

At the rally, one speaker approvingly compared the situation in Syria to the jihad in Afghanistan against the Soviet Union, while another insulted Shiite Muslims. Mr. Morsi said that he was severing diplomatic ties with Syria and, for the first time, spoke about his support for a no-fly zone.

Many Syrians saw the event as an attempt by the embattled president to rally support among Islamists and feared they would be tainted by his troubles. After the military took over and some Syrians were arrested protesting with Mr. Morsi’s supporters, it made matters much worse for the refugees.

“The Brotherhood played with the Syrian cause,” said Mr. Taher, the filmmaker. “We didn’t leave Syria to get involved in another war.”

On a recent evening, employees at the VIP Cafe in 6th of October City swept away shards from the storefront’s shattered glass. What started as a scuffle expanded when dozens of local thugs smashed the cafe’s front and some of the tables and chairs. The owner, Osama al-Loge, said that the police came hours later and did not bother to listen to his complaint.

“We were protected under the old regime,” said Mr. Loge, who said he found it simple to open his cafe when Mr. Morsi was president and the government seemed intent on easing life for the refugees. Now, he said, he goes to work and then home again, hoping he will not be noticed.

“At least in Damascus we know who our enemy is,” he said. “Here, we’re never sure. The government? Thugs? Police? The people?”

Asmaa Al Zohairy contributed reporting.

A version of this article appears in print on September 8, 2013, on page A10 of the New
York edition with the headline: In Egypt, a Welcome for Syrian Refugees Turns Bitter.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/08/world/middleeast/in-egypt-a-welcome-for-refugees-turns-bitter.html?_r=0&pagewanted=all

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So that allegedly was then, today? .. according to UNHCR there were 133,727 Syrian refugees in Cairo as of Feb. 12, 2014 ..
http://data.unhcr.org/syrianrefugees/country.php?id=8

I'll try to find more .. hmm, USA committed to giving 2000 Syrian refugees permanent residency .. Australia is missing from the list, ouch, yet no big surprise .. not a good look .. gee, this site is new and could be an interesting site for refugee information ..

Political Asylum & Refugees. Legal news and articles for February 11 - 14, 2014 .. http://news.legalhelpmate.com/immigration-law/political-asylum-refugees/2014/february ..

ok .. New Zealand is taking up to 100 .. http://twocircles.net/2014feb04/new_zealand_offers_home_syrian_refugees.html .. note: my Bing (haven't got to Google on Explorer, yet) search was "feb 2014 australia syrian refugees" and those are the top two .. scratchin' me 'ead .. :) .. 3rd down is Lebanon ..

Syrian Refugees in Lebanon: Daily Statistics (as of 06 February 2014)
http://reliefweb.int/report/lebanon/syrian-refugees-lebanon-daily-statistics-06-february-2014

4th down NZ again, and a mention of Australia's 'turn back the boats' program ..

NZ and refugees – Syria and Australia
http://blog.greens.org.nz/2014/02/05/nz-and-refugees-syria-and-australia/

Australia where are you? .. ok, 9th down, mumble, mumble why wasn't it the first?

Why should Australia help Syrian refugees?

Graeme McGregor, 22 January 2014, 02:26PM


Refugees crossing over the Syrian border into Jordan © Sweaters for Syria

As the world's leaders gather in Switzerland for the Geneva II peace conference .. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-24628442 .. on the Syria crisis, the international community must also take steps to help the country's 2.5 million refugees.

Why are people fleeing Syria?

The devastating impact of the Syrian conflict on the country's citizens is clear. The conflict has so far claimed the lives of over 100,000 people and driven 9.35 million people from their homes.

The conflict began in March 2011, when peaceful protests against President Bashar al-Assad's government were met with violence. Security forces detained, tortured and killed activists and their families, including children, and opened fire on protesters. Fighting and violence between government forces and armed rebel groups has continued to escalate ever since.

Innocent civilians are caught in the middle, enduring the shelling and bombing of whole towns and an alleged chemical weapons attack .. http://www.amnesty.org.au/news/comments/32548/ .. by government forces on the outskirts of Damascus last year. Those in opposition-held areas live in terrible conditions, often at the hands of rebel groups .. http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/10/10/syria-executions-hostage-taking-rebels , and are now facing starvation and a lack of medical supplies due to government blockades preventing aid from reaching them.

And the latest reports .. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-25836550 .. of the systematic torture and execution of some 11,000 detainees by the Syrian Government, since the start of the Syrian uprising, provide further proof, if needed, that those fleeing the country are in desperate need.

What are we doing about it?

The UN has described the effects of the Syrian conflict and the sheer number of refugees as 'the worst humanitarian crisis of our time' ..http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-23332527 , but what are we, as a country, doing about it?

Very little, it turns out.

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Find out more about the Syrian refugee crisis

In pictures: Syria accused of torture - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-25827122

Syria peace conference must prioritise human rights - http://www.amnesty.org.au/news/comments/33745/

Syria peace conference Geneva II begins in Switzerland - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-25836827
US and UN express horror at Syria torture report - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-25836550

Australia must act now for Syrian refugee crisis - http://www.amnesty.org.au/news/comments/33738/

Syria peace conference must end starvation - http://www.amnesty.org.au/news/comments/33721/
----

In fact, Syria's neighbours are bearing the brunt of the Syrian refugee situation, taking on 97% of the those who have fled. Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq are being overwhelmed by refugees but for the most part have welcomed them with open arms, saving lives and providing protection along the way.

Lebanon is currently hosting over a million Syrian refugees (more than a quarter of Lebanon's population) and Jordan holds more than 500,000.

However, the unprecedented number of Syrians fleeing to these countries, which are far from wealthy to begin with, adds a huge strain to basic infrastructure, schools and hospitals. Simply put, they can no longer cope. And that's where we, as a country, should step in. The international community – and that includes Australia – needs to share in this burden and increase the number of resettlement places worldwide.

Pitiful response

To that end, in September 2013 UNHCR put a call out asking the international community to help out Syria's neighbours. The request was met with a shamefully tepid response from wealthy countries like Australia, the UK, Canada, France, Italy and Spain.


Life goes on: we can help give hope to those forced to leave their homes © Sweaters for Syria

Just ten EU member states have offered to take in Syrian refugees and even then, the total number stands at just 12,000. Yes, that's 12,000 out of 2.5 million refugees and 6 million internally displaced people.

Australia has agreed to take just 500, a tiny 0.02%, of Syria's most vulnerable refugees. France has also pledged 500 places and Spain just 30.

Disappointingly, the UK and Italy have chosen not to resettle any Syrian refugees, opting to assist only through regional financial support.

Whilst financial assistance certainly has its place, particularly in providing food and medical aid to Syrians now facing starvation, and in relieving the economic burden on the country's neighbours, it is only part of the solution. As well as offering financial aid for the countries most impacted by Syria's refugee crisis, other states must also host the refugees.

Hindsight is always 20:20

It is clear that Australia's response, along with the broader international community, is massively insufficient considering its scale and urgency.

But what should we do? Australia should consider taking a leaf out of Germany's book – a country which has offered 10,000 places (a whopping 80% of the total pledges). This would mean Australia would have to increase the number of resettlement places for Syrian refugees to a more acceptable 7,500 – in addition to, not part of, our existing humanitarian
quota of 13,500.

As a wealthy country and a leader on the international stage, we have a very real and pressing responsibility to open the door to those fleeing torture, violence and death. We have also have a moral obligation to give Syrian refugees some hope, stability and space to rebuild their lives.

Hindsight is always 20:20. Who wants to look back years down the line and wish they’d done more?

Let's not put ourselves in that position. Let's show our humanity now and open that door a little wider.

Sign our petition calling on the government to resettle at least 7,500 Syrian refugees in Australia.
http://www.amnesty.org.au/action/action/33735/

http://www.amnesty.org.au/refugees/comments/33744/

PS: .. my search link ..
http://www.bing.com/search?q=feb+2014+australia+syrian+refugees&src=IE-SearchBox&FORM=IE8SRC

i don't know if it will be the same for us .. oops, just remembered i meant to get back to Cairo and
Syrian refugees today .. no, never got there .. hope it is better than painted in the first one back then ..
icon url

fuagf

02/17/14 12:55 AM

#218787 RE: fuagf #218707

Edit: How to Build a Perfect Refugee Camp

By MAC McCLELLANDFEB. 13, 2014


Kilis, a refugee camp in Turkey near the Syrian border. Tobias Hutzler for The New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/16/magazine/how-to-build-a-perfect-refugee-camp.html?ref=syria&_r=0

.. a heartwarming almost incredible read .. wow! .. on the face of the article Turkey has much to be proud of on the question of Syrian refugees ..

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The Problem with the 1951 Refugee Convention

Research Paper 5 2000-01
Adrienne Millbank
Social Policy Group
5 September 2000
http://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/rp/rp0001/01RP05

.. an Australian perspective ..

icon url

fuagf

02/23/14 3:46 AM

#219347 RE: fuagf #218707

Taking on al-Qaeda: Syria’s Uprising within an Uprising

By Juan Cole | Jan. 18, 2014 |

(By Rania Abouzeid)

It was bound to happen, this uprising within an uprising against the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), a transnational ultraconservative Islamist group that ostensibly fights alongside Syria’s disparate rebel groups but more often intimidates, antagonises, or opposes most of them, including other conservative Islamists.

Long brewing tensions between ISIS and many other rebel groups exploded on 3 January in fierce clashes that have quickly spread across northern and northeastern Syria. It’s a localised, extremely fluid fight, with some groups like Jabhat al-Nusra (JAN) opposing ISIS in some areas while trying to mediate between it and other rebels in different locations. The fight has rallied an unlikely motley group of rebel brigades against ISIS while also testing the cohesiveness of some groups.

ISIS has been a thorn in the Syrian revolution since the group’s inception in April 2013, when its leader, the Iraqi Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, announced the merger of his Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) with a group it spawned, Jabhat al-Nusra, headed by the Syrian Abu Mohammed al-Golani.

Golani rejected the union and instead affirmed his allegiance to al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. Zawahiri, in turn, ruled against the merger and ordered each group to stay in its separate arenas: the ISI in Iraq and al-Nusra in Syria – a ruling that Baghdadi ignored. Many of the foreign fighters, or muhajiroun, fighting with JAN sided with Baghdadi in the dispute and joined ISIS, leaving Nusra more Syrian almost by default.

In the months since, ISIS filled its jails with anyone who opposed or questioned it or was perceived as engaging in anti-Islamic activities. It detained activists, civilians, rebel commanders who identified themselves as Free Syrian Army (FSA), as well as others who belonged to Salafi Islamist groups, like Ahrar al-Sham and even JAN.

ISIS is known in Arabic as il-Dawla, the state, which is exactly what it hopes to replace, although its detractors refer to it as Daesh, its Arabic acronym and a term that the group considers derogatory and therefore punishable with 70 lashes.

Il-Dawla started to set up its state in territory that it controlled, either by pushing other rebel groups out of towns and cities or intimidating them into submission. It ignored the Qur’anic verse that “there is no compulsion in religion” and imposed its austere interpretation of Islam on the local Syrian populations in areas in which it was based, most notably in Raqqa city, the only one of Syria’s 14 provincial capitals to fall from the regime’s grip. A Jabhat al-Nusra contact I met in the city back in March told me that ISIS men would board buses heading into Raqqa and prevent the bus from entering the city if he saw any woman wearing make up or trousers. ISIS even detained and reportedly executed JAN’s emir, or leader, in Raqqa, Abu Saad al-Hadrame, in the midst of these recent clashes.

ISIS did, however, do some things in rebel-held Syria that even its detractors acknowledge were needed, like clearing out criminal gangs that had been exploiting the lawlessness, as well as some rebel brigades. An FSA commander in the east lamented that some of these now-routed rebel groups were so destructive to the revolution’s ideals that “some people started wishing for and lamenting the loss of Bashar’s [al-Assad] regime because of people like that”.

Over the past few months there has been a steady rumble of low-level but significant skirmishes between ISIS and other groups, most notably with Ahrar al-Sham in the Aleppan town of Maskana in December. ISIS has been picking fights, big and small. The last straw appears to be its detention, torture, and killing of Abu Rayyan, an Ahrar al-Sham commander and doctor. Pictures of his bloody, swollen, and disfigured corpse sparked anger and outrage across the political spectrum in the rebel-held north.

And so it was little surprise when clashes exploded on a larger scale earlier this month. The armed Syrian opposition, in all of its disparate glory, has long talked of a revolution after its revolution to unseat Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a period when scores would be settled between various anti-Assad groups. The fault lines depended on whom you talked to. Some insisted that they would be ideological, between less Islamist groups and ultraconservative Islamists like JAN or ISIS; others said that they would take on particular rebel commanders turned warlords or that the fight might be territorial or ethnic between the Kurds and Arabs. The list went on.

Elements of all of these various fault lines had become frontlines during isolated bouts of rebel infighting over the past year or more, but the decision by so many different groups to take on ISIS at the same time, and in so many locations, was surprising. What was also surprising was how quickly ISIS was initially routed from some areas.

“They were just cardboard cutouts”, one FSA commander in Idlib province said of the much-feared group. Perhaps, but this is just the beginning. It’s already clear that ISIS’ revenge will be vintage ISI – car bombs, assassinations, and possibly large-scale violence that is not restricted to combatants. Everybody I’ve talked to says the housecleaning, while necessary, also means that the situation in rebel-held Syria has now entered a much murkier, infinitely more dangerous phase, one in which it will be harder to differentiate friend from foe, especially given the localised nature of the fight. Foreign fighters in particular have borne the brunt of the anger directed at ISIS. There is anecdotal evidence that many are crossing back into Turkey with their families to flee the infighting. Many rebels interviewed in Turkey expressed hope that ISIS might be driven back to Iraq to wage Jihad against Nouri al-Maliki’s government given recent events in Fallajuh and elsewhere. ISIS, however, remains defiant and determined to continue its transnational jihad.

ISIS spokesperson Abu Mohammed al-Adnani recently issued an audio statement in which he lambasted rebel attacks on “those who left their homes [and] families to defend you and die so you wouldn’t have to die. Is this your reward for them?” He said that his opponents stabbed his group in the back “and attacked our bases when they were mainly empty”, adding ominously that ISIS had armies in Iraq and Syria “that drink blood and eat bones and find nothing tastier than the blood of sahawat”, invoking the “s” word to describe his group’s foes. Sahawat, or awakening, is a dirty word in much of rebel-held Syria due to its connotation of collaboration with the United States. It refers to the Iraqi tribal leaders who took on the ISI in their communities but who worked with the US military to do so.

So who has lined up against ISIS? Two coalitions in particular: the newly formed Mujahideen Army, which literally emerged at the start of the clashes, and the Syrian Revolutionary Front (SRF, formed in early December), comprised of the remnants of once-formidable FSA groups like Jamal Maarouf’s Syrian Martyrs’ Brigade and the Northern Farouq Brigades.

Maarouf, the most public face of the SRF, has declared war against ISIS, a move that has rehabilitated his image in the eyes of those who also describe themselves as FSA. By the end of 2013, he was looking like a spent force. Many of his colleagues had long taken to calling him Jamal Makhlouf, pinning him with the surname of Assad’s cousins who hold business monopolies in the country thanks to nepotistic corruption. Commanders frequently complained that Maarouf was more of a showman and warlord than a fighter, promising to participate in a particular battle, securing the funding for it from sponsors (mainly Saudi Arabia), and then withdrawing soon after the fight began, in addition to filming enough footage to upload to YouTube to boast of his group’s participation. It was a common complaint. Now, many of those same men speak with admiration of how Maarouf is personally fighting and how his men are pushing back ISIS with vigour.

Maarouf has always been in Saudi Arabia’s orbit, but to date the Saudis haven’t markedly stepped up their assistance to their people, according to a Syrian weapons distributor responsible for dishing out Saudi state-sponsored guns and money to rebels in the north. The SRF is a natural recipient, as is one of the components of the Islamic Front (IF), the Army of Islam, which is increasingly looked at by other Islamists as a Saudi project to potentially weaken more conservative Islamists.

Maarouf’s second wind, however, hasn’t won him many friends among the more hardcore Islamists, even those who have their quarrels with ISIS, like the IF and Jabhat al-Nusra. “Maarouf won’t live long”, a senior JAN fighter in Turkey said. “Everybody wants his head.”

The IF, for its part, is a formidable coalition of Islamist groups outside of the FSA umbrella (and openly derisive of it) that was formed in November. The seven member groups – Ahrar al-Sham, the Army of Islam, Suqoor al-Sham, Liwa al-Tawhid, Liwa al-Haq, Ansar al-Sham, and the Kurdish Islamic Front – are the main power on the ground, outside of ISIS and JAN.

While many in Western capitals continue to trumpet the near-defunct FSA’s Supreme Military Command Council, led by General Salim Idris, as a partner that they can work with, Idris has little more than the West’s ear; the IF has the fighting men on the ground who listen to its leaders.

Some think that the clashes with ISIS were purposely engineered to happen just before the much-publicised but likely irrelevant Geneva II peace talks set to begin on 22 January to push back against Assad’s narrative that a Syria without him would be ruled by Islamist extremists and to show international community that there were armed rebels that it could work with. It serves the interests of the members of the Syrian opposition heading to Geneva and some of the more secular armed groups who recognise the coalition but not the likes of the IF, according to a highly-placed source close to the IF’s leadership.

“Geneva II not only means nothing to us, we consider it hostile to us, and whoever wants to sit at the table with the regime is an enemy of the Syrians inside Syria”, he said. “We will take names and they will be tried in our courts as traitors.”

The IF, in addition to JAN, is likely to benefit the most from ISIS’ likely temporary loss of territories (ISIS has already regained some areas that it was initially forced back from), because they are far stronger and more disciplined than other armed rebels. ISIS’ overreach and brutal methods have also made the al-Qaeda-linked Nusra seem quite moderate by comparison. Before ISIS emerged, much of the talk in rebel circles about an uprising after the uprising fingered Nusra as a target.

Instead, Nusra has soaked up foreign fighters fleeing ISIS and has projected itself as peacemaker. Nusra leader Golani, in an audio recording released the same day as the ISIS’ Adnani, said that the ISIS’ “wrong policies” had ignited this conflict, and he offered to mediate an end to the fighting, even as some Nusra groups were fighting against ISIS. He, like Ahrar al-Sham’s leader, warned against targeting foreign fighters, and both men have offered their bases as sanctuaries for fleeing muhajiroun.

Still, the IF’s various components haven’t exactly responded with one voice regarding the ongoing clashes with ISIS. It is no surprise that the Army of Islam has been the most outspoken group within the Front to criticise ISIS. The group’s leader, Zahran Alloush, has described ISIS as “tyrannical” and “deviant”. The Army of Islam is Salafi-light compared to the other components, which initially took a more nuanced approach, criticising ISIS for its heavy-handed arrogance and for considering itself a state rather than an armed faction just like the rest, but they stopped short of declaring all-out war against it. In some cases, discipline within units started to fray over the issue. Some units within Liwa al-Tawheed, for example, attacked ISIS, while others disavowed themselves from those battalions.

The highly-placed source close to the IF’s leadership said that ISIS was neither an enemy nor a friend to the group and that the units of the front fighting against ISIS were engaged in self-defence. “We have strong objections against [ISIS]”, he said. “We would wish that they weren’t present in Syria but we are not prepared to open a war and spill the blood of mujahideen [holy warriors], ours and theirs, in the interests of the West or others”.

The localised nature of the fight, with some components of the IF fighting ISIS in some places and not in others, was a reflection of how ISIS was behaving in a particular area, the source said. “Il-Dawla didn’t harm us in Homs, so Liwa al-Haq hasn’t participated. It hasn’t harmed us in Damascus, so the Army of Islam, even though Zahran Alloush is speaking harshly of the Dawla, isn’t fighting it in Damascus till now”.

It’s unclear how much exactly unites the seven groups that form the IF and if the unity will hold. Ideologically they are all Sunni Islamists, but the Salafis among them follow different strains of Salafism, and some groups aren’t Salafi. Their individual sources of funding are also not the same. Although it is widely reported in the media as Saudi-backed, it’s not clear that it is. The Army of Islam is backed by Saudi Arabia, which in general has opposed most Islamist jihadi armed groups, including some that are part of the IF (the Army of Islam follows a strain of Salafi Islam that gels with Saudi Arabia and that stresses obedience to Muslim leaders, while other groups like Ahrar al-Sham do not). These latter groups were more traditionally backed by Qatar, Kuwaiti donors with links to the state, as well as private sponsors from other Gulf countries.

The senior IF source acknowledged the disputes and differences within the IF but said that they were political more than ideological. “What I mean is some want to create the [Islamic] state through weapons, others through politics. It’s about political questions”, he said.

At the moment, the IF looks like a political alliance aimed at getting things from the Supreme Military Command Council that it openly despises, and its political parent, the National Coalition, that the IF doesn’t recognise as a legitimate representative of the Syrian opposition. It wants the council restructured “so that it has a completely different political orientation than the coalition”, according to a member of Ahrar al-Sham’s political office. “Either the international community helps us the way we want, or we don’t want anything from it”, he said.

That’s a difficult demand for the West to accept, but with Geneva II talks looming and in the unlikely event that some sort of agreement is reached in the negotiations, it will mean little without the IF’s buy in. Some Western diplomats understand this and are reaching out to the IF.

Senior representatives from Suqoor al-Sham, Ahrar al-Sham, and the Army of Islam met with the pro-opposition Friends of Syria grouping in Ankara, Turkey late last year according to diplomats and rebels who attended the meeting, but the IF later very publicly spurned what would have been a second round of talks with US Syria envoy Robert Ford in mid-December. American diplomats are still keen to speak with them, because, as one said, “the Islamic Front has been the most successful political move on the opposition side, as sad as that may be”.

The IF source said “in terms of meeting with Americans or the West or the East, there are many of us in the Front in leadership positions who don’t have a problem sitting with anybody except the regime, the enemy that is killing us”. The problem, he said, was that they don’t trust the Americans and don’t want to be viewed as Western collaborators, regularly meeting with Western officials. “They’re liars”, he said. “They’ve been lying to us since the beginning of the revolution and they continue to lie. We didn’t get real support from them, all of the promises were lies, and the little American support that came didn’t come to us”.

Ahrar al-Sham said that it is drawing the components of the IF toward its worldview; others think that the Army of Islam (with a strong Saudi push) is trying to do the same. Meanwhile, several members of the IF have said that the seven groups hoped to eventually completely merge and do away with their individual identities. It is a long-term strategy, and an ambitious one at that, given differences between the leaders of each group and their outlooks and their various sources of funding. The senior IF source said that there was talk of creating a “common pot” that would funnel all funding and weapons – from external and internal sources, including armaments obtained as war booty – that would then be divvied up.

JAN, meanwhile, is trying to walk a fine line between ISIS and the other armed groups. The senior JAN fighter acknowledged that the IF was the biggest power on the ground, but said that it lacked ideological cohesion and strength. It’s “ink on paper, united only by its fear of Daesh”, he said, using the derogatory acronym for ISIS.

“The number one war in Syria is ideological”, he said, “and Daesh is strongest ideologically. I’m not talking about if their ideology is right or wrong, but they’re convinced of it”. Some ISIS men even called their counterparts in Nusra unprincipled, he added.

“Killing Daesh isn’t easy. I don’t say that out of fear, but there is no fatwa to do so”. He declined to say who might issue that fatwa but recalled an episode that he witnessed a few weeks earlier to highlight how fiercely ISIS would fight for what it wants.

The senior JAN fighter said that he was present at a meeting between a Nusra emir and an ISIS emir in the eastern city of Deir Ezzor. The three Syrian men had all known each other for years and were friends. The fighter said that the ISIS emir told the Nusra emir: “If it comes to it, I will kill you, and then I will cry for you”.

This round of infighting in rebel-held Syria has only just begun.

Rania Abouzeid is a visiting fellow with the European Council on Foreign Relation’s MENA Programme.

Mirrored from The European Council on Foreign Relations

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Related video (added by Juan Cole)

Reuters reports http://youtu.be/oaiOiHmxXP8 , ” ”



http://www.juancole.com/2014/01/taking-uprising-within.html