TEHRAN – Hundreds of Alawian civilians were executed in cold blood by Syrian security forces along the West Coast.
Watch groups have sounded alarms and warned of potential genocide against minority groups as genocides continue to escalate in various cities.
In Baniya city in Tartas, Alawi residents have issued urgent pleas for help.
They are seeking rescue from widespread killings targeting families at the hands of armed extremists of the Turkestan group.
The report emerged from Syria says that “whether children or elderly people, Turkestan Islamic Party launched a sectarian cleansing operation in Baniya on Saturday morning.”
Residents urged security forces and those who could help intervene and halt the ongoing sect executions.
Local sources reported to local media that more than 400 civilians were killed in massacres and field executions in Syria’s coastal areas.
Other reports show that the number of victims and temptations could be thousands. A large number of videos are circulated online showing the execution of the summary and detention.
Experts point out that the Alawite community has not requested the return of the former government, but has begun to protest ongoing human rights abuses, including adductions.
Reports say at this time, security forces have not taken action to restore order in the area.
Residents are reportedly too afraid to leave their homes due to the continued murders of extremists in Turkestan, Chechnya and Syria.
Syrian Network for Syrian Human Rights documented the “performance of a large-scale sphere of men and young people without a clear distinction between civilians and combatants” in northwestern Syria.
The Syrian Human Rights Observatory reported on Saturday that more than 300 Alawi civilians have been killed since Thursday by Syrian security forces and alliance groups.
These deaths occurred during a security sweep and clash with a group of Alawians who took up weapons in coastal regions of western Syria.
The observatory said “311 Alawite civilians have been killed in coastal areas by security forces and alliance groups,” the AFP reported.
The observatory said these individuals were killed in “executions” carried out by security forces or alliance fighters, accompanied by “looting of homes and property.”
This will put the total number of deaths into the collisions to 524, including 213 fighters from both sides.
The observatory added that the death toll between “interior and Defense Forces” reached 93, and “120 armed fighters” were also killed.
Clashes between security forces and armed groups broke out in Latakia, a region with a large Alawite population on Thursday.
The observatory said the area experienced “relative calm” on Saturday, but security forces continued to “pursuing and coagulating operations in areas where extremists are hidden,” sending additional reinforcements.
On Saturday, the Syrian Human Rights Observatory confirmed that five massacres occurred in villages and towns on the Syrian coast on Friday, claiming the lives of 163 civilians killed in field executions by members of the Syrian Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Interior.
Ahmed Arshala, the head of the transitioning government, urged fighters on Friday night to surrender “before it’s too late.”
At the address of a television broadcast on the Syrian Presidential Telegram channel, Alshara warned:
“You attacked all Syrians. By doing so you have committed a serious and unforgivable sin. The response you are facing now is something you cannot stand. Give up your weapon and yourself before it’s too late.”
Since the collapse of the government at Bashar Al-Assad, new authorities have launched armed campaigns targeting what they call “remnants of the previous administration.”