Al-Qaeda's
Syrian wing takes over the oilfields that once belonged to Assad:
Telegraph
Al-Qaeda's
Syrian wing is helping to finance its activities by selling the
product of oilfields that once helped to prop up the regime of Bashar
al-Assad.
16
May, 2013
Up
to 380,000 barrels of crude oil were previously produced by wells
around the city of Raqqa and in the desert region to its east that
are now in rebel hands - in particular Jabhat al-Nusra, the al-Qaeda
off-shoot which is the strongest faction in this part of the country.
Now
the violently anti-Western jihadist group, which has been steadily
extending its control in the region, is selling the crude oil to
local entrepreneurs, who use home-made refineries to produce
low-grade petrol and other fuels for Syrians facing acute shortages.
The
ability of Jabhat al-Nusra to profit from the oil locally, despite
international sanctions which have hindered its sale abroad, will be
particularly worrying to the European Union, which has voted to ease
the embargo but at the same time wants to marginalise the extremist
group within the opposition.
In
the battle for the future of the rebel cause, the oil-fields may
begin to play an increasingly strategic role. All are in the three
provinces closest to Iraq - Hasakeh, Deir al-Zour, and Raqqa, while
the Iraqi border regions are the homeland of the Islamic State of
Iraq, as al-Qaeda's branch in the country calls itself
It
was fighters from Islamic State of Iraq, both Iraqi and Syrian, who
are thought to have founded Jabhat al-Nusra as the protests against
the rule of President Assad turned into civil war.
Because
of sanctions, Jabhat's oil is largely shipped to thousands of
home-built mini-refineries that have sprung up across the north of
the country. The crude is distilled in hand-welded vats dug into the
ground and heated with burning oil residue.
The
Jabhat Al Nusra, a proscribed islamic militant group control the oil
fields and cannot export due to sanctions, so this provides some cash
flow to the rebel cause as well as much needed fuel for Northern
Syria
It
is not clear how much money is being channelled back to the group.
But all those buying the raw product were aware that Jabhat was
profiting.
"Jabhat
do not ask for taxes or charges for this trade," said one of
them, Omar Mahmoud, from Raqqa province. "But we are buying the
oil from them so they do not need to."
Syria's
oil output, never as great as that of some of Syria's Arab
neighbours, fell to about 130,000 barrels a day after the outbreak of
the revolution against the Assad regime.
However,
Jabhat al-Nusra are now putting that to good use. The homes
refineries are turning out poor quality but usable – and
much-needed - petrol and kerosene for cooking and home stoves.
Their
product might not meet the quality, and certainly the health and
safety standards, demanded by Shell or ExxonMobil, but it provides a
living to thousands of blackened figures willing to risk the
business's inherent dangers.
In
parts of north-east Syria, the stills are set up by every road-side,
the produce sold like fruit from lay-bys to drivers as they pass. But
the unquestioned centre of the industry is the desert outside the
small town of Mansoura, a few miles west of Raqqa city and on the
other side of the Euphrates River.
Here,
the entire horizon is a blighted scene of billowing clouds out of
which dark figures occasionally emerge on foot or roaring
motor-bikes. Near the road sit oil tankers carrying the raw product.
"I
make 3000 Syrian pounds (about £15) a day," said Adel Hantoush,
19, his legs dripping with crude, a filthy headscarf wrapped around
his face. A building site casual labourer in better times, he helps
support his father, mother and nine brothers and sisters.
Black
smoke blew past his head as colleagues poured fuel into the burning
pit under their tank. "The last thing I think about is my
health," he said. "If I don't do this, my family will die."
The
amateur production process is quite simple, and easily explained in
school text books.
The
oil is heated slowly, with the different grades of product
evaporating at different temperatures. The vapour is fed through
pipes channelled through pits filled with water to recondense it as a
liquid, which runs out into containers at the other end.
Near
Raqqa, they pay 4000 Syrian pounds (£20) a barrel, with the price
rising for smaller quantities and as the distance increases. A single
refining vat can take six barrels at a time, producing maybe 30
litres of petrol, similar quantities of cooking fuel and higher
amounts of diesel.
Abdulwahad
Abdullah, a wheat farmer from north of Raqqa who runs a single still
through two five-hour cycles a day, says he can make 20,000 pound
profit (£100) on a good day.
It
is a Mad Max scene, indicative of the chaos the war has unleashed in
Syria, creating a landscape ideal for the methods of dominance
al-Qaeda learned in post-war Iraq.
General
Selim Idriss, the head of the western-backed opposition Military
Council, has appealed for Western help specifically to seize the
fields from Jabhat, but the forces required - he put it at 30,000 men
- make that a pipe dream. Even pro-Western rebel militias in the area
admit that the level of support received from the council is at
present minimal.
They
have promised to take on Jabhat al-Nusra once the fighting is over,
but they are split and fighting among themselves, with their lack of
money forcing some to turn to looting and extortion to fund
themselves, further alienating the local population.
Jabhat
have used their greater proficiency at fighting, honed by jihad in
Iraq and elsewhere, to take a leading role at the battlefront. "They
are more disciplined," Abu Hamza, a fighter with a rival
Islamist rebel brigade in Aleppo admitted. "When they attack,
they make a plan first, and then stick to it."
Their
battlefield supremacy has enabled them to seize the economic as well
as the military high-ground.
In
Raqqa, they also control flour production, earning money from selling
to bakeries, some of which they own as well. "Jabhat now own
everything here," one disillusioned secular activist said.
In
other places they sell the flour at a loss, further endearing them to
the local population.
Until
now it has been a virtuous circle. Well-funded anyway from foreign
contributions, they are able to avoid levying the fees – some say
bribes – to pay their men and for supplies that have made other
brigades increasingly unpopular. That in turn has been a major boon
to recruitment, with thousands defecting to them.
Jabhat
al-Nusra's rule has not been easy. It has had to fight opposed local
brigades, and has begun to face protests over its hardline policies –
most recently last week after their public execution of three
captured soldiers in Raqqa's town square. The group said this was
revenge for a massacre of civilians by pro-Assad forces in the
coastal town of Baniyas.
Ominously,
this was done in the name of "Islamic State of Iraq and Syria",
suggesting that Jabhat al-Nusra at least in the east is now fully
under the control of the murderous Iraqi mother group.
Few
are concerned about the downsides, though one man showed huge weals
that had grown under his arm which he blamed on his days inhaling the
dense black smoke.
One
Mansoura man, Mahmoud Ismail, a computer technician who had come to
the desert site to visit friends and was watching them pour petrol
into barrels to take away, said he had tried the work for a single
day. But he then gave it up when he thought about what he was
inhaling.
"I
came, did it, and then packed up and stopped," he said. "It
just wasn't worth it."
With
that, he flicked his cigarette on to the ground, and stamped it out.
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