Under
the black flag of al-Qaeda, the Syrian city ruled by gangs of
extremists
"All these guys came in with guns and wearing masks and with handcuffs,” said Nagham, 19, a civil engineering student. “They started searching everything, and shouting.
The
black flag of al-Qaeda flies high over Raqqa’s main square in front
of the smart new governor’s palace, its former occupant last seen
in their prison. Their fighters, clad also in black, patrol the
streets, or set up positions behind sandbags.
13
May, 2013
The
Islamists smashed up one of the two shops that sold alcohol. That
much was pretty inevitable, the locals agreed. The other off-licence
had already closed, as had the casino on the outskirts of town.
They
brought in a radical cleric from Egypt to preach Friday prayers, and
set up a sharia court in the city’s new sports centre with the
support of other brigades.
They had their fiefdom — an entire city to run only 60 miles from Nato’S border.
They had their fiefdom — an entire city to run only 60 miles from Nato’S border.
Then,
one night, 10 men came for Nagham and Nour al-Rifaie, two teenage
sisters from a well-known liberal family. They were at home with a
family friend, Yusra Omran, 30, and their male cousin, 32.
"All these guys came in with guns and wearing masks and with handcuffs,” said Nagham, 19, a civil engineering student. “They started searching everything, and shouting.
“They
were saying, 'Put on more clothes than you are wearing, put on a
headscarf.’ I just said I’m wearing clothes and I’m not putting
on a headscarf’.”
The
men took them to the sports centre. There the girls were charged with
being alone with a man and interrogated
“The
guy with us was so mean,” Miss Rifaie said. “He was speaking in a
horrible way, as if he was disgusted to be with us.”
In
Raqqa, a once conservative but by all accounts not religious city,
the triumph of al-Qaeda’s Syrian arm,
Jabhat al-Nusra, would seem to be complete.
The town is largely under the control of Jabhat al-Nusra, affiliated to al-Qaeda (David Rose for the Telegraph)
Little
known a year ago but suspected of having being founded by al-Qaeda in
Iraq, they have grown in stature, leading many of the rebels’ most
successful recent battles. Last month they publicly declared their
loyalty to al-Qaeda’s supreme leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri.
Their
new-found power is such that it is changing international
calculations over the conflict. After first being discouraged from
action by their presence in rebel ranks, Britain now has a revised
diplomatic strategy.
David
Cameron put it to Russia’s president Vladimir Putin on Friday and
will discuss it this week with a nervous President Obama in
Washington.
Mr
Cameron’s officials now feel Jabhat al-Nusra has to be defeated by
actively supporting the less militant rebels, including with arms.
Many of Jabhat’s rival militias are being marginalised in cities
like Raqqa across the north. On Tuesday, Britain will seek to have
Jabhat al-Nusra added to an official list of sanctions at the United
Nations.
Destroyed buildings near the Ahrar al-Sham Brigade Headquarters in the centre of Al Raqqa. The base was targeted by a regime airstrike last week (David Rose for the Telegraph)
In
taking Raqqa two months ago al-Qaeda achieved its greatest coup in
the war to date: it was the first provincial capital to fall outright
to the rebels, and allowed Jabhat to assume a leadership role over a
large swathe of north-eastern Syria, to the Iraqi border.
To
many in it is a welcome development. “Jabhat are excellent for us,”
said Abdullah Mohammed, a man from the nearby village of Mansoura.
“They deal with us according to Islamic rules, so there are no
problems. They are honest and they run everything pretty well.”
As
a police officer, Mr Mohammed said he was in a position to know the
difference between life under al-Qaeda and the Assad regime. He was
in prison when the revolution broke out – he had stopped a car for
jumping a red light and found to his cost it was being driven by a
regime official.
He
said he was in a cell with four members of President Bashar
al-Assad’s Alawite minority sect, and when the protests started the
guards were taken away to fight and the Alawite prisoners turned into
guards.
Other
locals too, particularly shopkeepers, say the all-pervasive
corruption of the Assad era has vanished with the regime’s men. “I
like Jabhat,” said Ahmed al-Hindy, who runs an optician’s shop.
“They are better than the regime, at any rate.”
An
Islamic militant in the centre of Al Raqqa (David Rose for the
Telegraph)
Part
of it is money. Jabhat al-Nusra has always been well-funded compared
to other militias – most people assume due to wealthy backers in
the Gulf, though few have been able to track down the lines of the
money supply.
Now
they have control of good sources of income and can pay salaries.
From the city’s main flour mill, they supply the all-important
bakeries, and they have seized some of them too. At night, long
queues of women form to buy their daily ration under the watchful
eyes of Jabhat guards.
They
have also taken the oilfields in neighbouring Deir al-Zour province.
Production is hardly booming, but they are able to sell enough on the
local market to keep cash rolling in.
It
is not all plain sailing, though. Even in Raqqa, no single militia is
all-powerful, even Jabhat, and they depend on an alliance with Ahrar
al-Sham, another radical Islamist group.
They
also have to deal with a slew of other brigades with a variety of
ideologies.
The
dynamic of Jabhat’s rise is being challenged out of both envy and
fear, leading to clashes.
Two
senior rival militiamen have been assassinated in the last 10 days:
Abu Awad of the Farouq Brigade, and, on Thursday, the head of the
Ahfad al-Rasool, Abu al-Zein. In both cases the method was the same –
three men in black and masks drove up to the victims’ cars, shot
them, then sped off.
Some
say it could be a leftover squad of Assad’s Shabiha, but members of
their militias point out both were known for support for a civil
state, not an Islamic one.
Another
militia leader, Abu Deeb of the Lions of Islam, was arrested after a
fight on Tuesday with Jabhat al-Nusra that brought the city to a
brief standstill. Different explanations have been given, but
Abdullah al-Khalil, the civilian who heads the town’s interim
administration, said it was over control of the town’s largest
bakery.
“After
Assad falls, there will be a second revolution, against Jabhat
al-Nusra,” said Amar Abu Yasser, a battalion leader with the Farouq
Brigade. The Farouq was once the most famous brigade in the Syrian
revolution, spreading its power from its base in Homs across the
north of the country, where it still operates several of the border
crossings to Turkey, including Tal Abyad, the nearest to Raqqa.
But
its power and influence has been severely curbed by Jabhat al-Nusra.
Abu Azzam, the Farouq head at Tal Abyad, survived an assassination
attempt when a bomb was placed under his car.
The
flag of Jabhat al-Nusra flying over the Governer's Palace (David Rose
for the Telegraph)
“The
problem is due to ideology,” said Mr Abu Yasser, until two years
ago a student of Arabic literature, now a tough, bearded warrior in
fatigues and a black turban. “There is a conflict between the black
flag and the revolutionary flag.” The green, white and black banner
with three red stars made famous by the revolution still flies in
Raqqa, but in a secondary place.
“It
is not wise to try to make an Islamic state here,” he went on.
“There are Christians, Alawites, Druze living here. It will just be
a big problem.”
He
also said Jabhat al-Nusra was not as honest and Muslim as it seemed.
He claimed it had stripped the town’s factories and smuggled their
goods, including nearly 200 tons of sugar, to Turkey for profit.
Jabhat
has withdrawn into itself as tensions rise, and particularly since
the declaration of obedience to al-Qaeda was issued, which confirmed
its status as an internationally proscribed terrorist group.
It
no longer gives interviews or defends itself from such allegations,
and has banned its men from talking to foreign journalists.
Those
its men stop at checkpoints in the city are accused of being “foreign
spies”.
Graffiti
is painted on a wall by members of Civic Society, one of the more
liberal youth organizations in Al Raqqa (David Rose for the
Telegraph)
Some
locals regarded as fanciful the idea that Farouq and other group
would ever again have the strength to rise up and throw out Jabhat.
But most proclaimed defiantly that Syria would not become a radical
Islamic state.
“This
is all just for the war,” said Mr al-Khalil, the town leader, who
is happy to cooperate with Jabhat as he tries to re-establish schools
and keep the water running.
A
former human rights lawyer once jailed by the regime, he said he
could tolerate the black flags for now. “But I think the modern
Islamic project will win in the end,” he added, using a phrase
commonly used to refer to a civil state with a Muslim ethos, like
booming Turkey next door. He added a refrain repeated now across
rebel Syria: it will be harder to keep the Islamists out if the West
does not come to the aid of this “modern” project.
As
a follower of Abu Deeb, the arrested militia leader put it: “This
is a pact with the devil. We would rather ally with Obama than
Jabhat.”
At
first glance, Jabhat have tried to play safe. A small but visible
minority of women go without the hijab, or headscarf. The town’s
handful of Christian families have stayed put, for now: the churches
are closed, but untouched.
But
it may have made a major strategic error with its announcement of
loyalty to al-Qaeda. It did not cause a big stir in the West, where
the link had been assumed, but it shocked many who had begun to
tolerate Jabhat’s presence.
Their
main Islamist allies, Ahrar al-Sham, immediately denounced it. “It
was like a thunderbolt,” said Abu Abdullah, 40, an Ahrar al-Sham
fighter outside their main base, largely abandoned after being hit by
Assad missiles. “It really surprised me and is unacceptable. Our
goal is just to liberate Syria. We don’t care about other countries
– we don’t want to go and fight in Iraq or anywhere.”
Then
there was the arrest of Nagham al-Rifaie, Nour, 18, and their cousin
and friend. That was a “what the hell?” moment, said Mohammed
Shuaib, a student who has helped found a human rights discussion
group, Haquna. It led a 500-strong protest to the sharia court the
morning after the arrest.
But
by then the girls were already free. What happened is a glimmer of
hope to men like Mr Shuaib.
On
arrival at the court, the girls were told they would immediately face
two judges, local worthies brought in by the ruling Islamist
alliance. It was one o’clock in the morning. Nagham was told to put
a headscarf on. Again she refused.
“They
said to me, 'It’s a sharia court, you can’t go in without a
headscarf’. I said,
'That’s fine by me!’
“So
we stood before the court with no headscarves on.”
One
of the judges, a teacher called Mohammed al-Omar, referred them to
the charge sheet. “He said, 'It says you were alone with a man,
what do you say.’ I said, 'It is none of their business.’
“And
he said, 'I agree’.”
The
girls were freed immediately. They asked who the men who arrested
them were, but no one was able to provide an answer. Whether the rest
of Raqqa will escape so lightly, the girls could not say. “Things
will become difficult, that’s sure,” said Miss Rifaie, sitting in
a coffee shop last week with her father, himself a human rights
activist, the two girls the only women present. “The problem is
with the people. Because of the regime, if someone speaks to them who
has power, they just sit there. But my father has taught me to have
opinions. So I cannot stop.”
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