US strikes Al-Qaeda leaders in Syria as regime violates Idlib ceasefire

People walk amidst the rubble of damaged buildings following a reported airstrike by Syrian regime forces in the area of Maaret Al-Numan in Syria's northwestern Idlib province on August 28, 2019. (AFP)
Updated 31 August 2019
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US strikes Al-Qaeda leaders in Syria as regime violates Idlib ceasefire

  • The strike north of Idlib targeted leaders of the group the Pentagon calls Al-Qaeda in Syria (AQS)
  • Regime bombardment on Syria's northwest province of Idlib on Saturday killed a civilian just hours after a Russian-backed truce for the area started

BEIRUT: US forces attacked extremist leaders in Syria Saturday, the Pentagon said, in what a battlefield monitor called a missile strike that left at least 40 dead.
The US Defense Department said the attack targeted leaders of Al-Qaeda in Syria north of Idlib. It did not say what kind of weapon was used or give any details.
The missiles targeted leaders of terrorist groups and allied factions near Idlib, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

 "A missile attack targeted a meeting held by the leaders of Hurras Al-Deen, Ansar Al-Tawhid and other allied groups inside a training camp" near Idlib city, said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Observatory.
The attack killed at least 40 extremist leaders, the Britain based monitor said.
The US Central Command said in a statement that the attack targeted leaders of Al-Qaeda in Syria (AQ-S) "responsible for attacks threatening US citizens, our partners and innocent civilians. Additionally, the removal of this facility will further degrade their ability to conduct future attacks and destabilize the region."
An AFP correspondent saw clouds of black smoke rising over the area after blasts rocked the extremist stronghold.
Ambulances rushed to the site of the attack, which was closed off to journalists, he said.
It was not immediately clear if the missiles were launched from war planes or positions on the ground, the monitor said.
CENTCOM declined to say what kind of weaponry was used.

Regime bombardment on Syria's northwest province of Idlib on Saturday killed a civilian just hours after a Russian-backed truce for the area started, Abdel Rahman also said. 
The truce that came into effect on Saturday is the second such agreement between the Syrian regime and extremists since an August 1 ceasefire deal covering the Idlib region broke down only days after going into effect.
Russia-backed regime forces have been pressing an offensive against the major opposition stronghold in Idlib since April.
But Russia and Damascus are not the only players with a history of strike activity in the area.
On July 1 the United States said it had carried out a strike on Hurras Al-Deen in northwestern Syria, in its first such operation there in two years.
Al-Qaeda-linked Hurras Al-Deen was established in February 2018 and has some 1,800 fighters, including non-Syrians, according to the Observatory.
The group and its ally Ansar Al-Tawhid both operate in the Idlib region and are members of a joint extremist operation room that also includes Al-Qaeda's former Syria affiliate, Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham.
Most of Idlib province and parts of neighbouring Aleppo and Latakia provinces are controlled by HTS.
Syrian state news agency SANA on Saturday said the government agreed to the Idlib ceasefire deal, which Russia said aimed "to stabilise the situation" in the anti-government bastion.
But the army "reserves the right to respond to violations" by extremists and allied rebel groups, SANA added, citing a Syrian military source.
The Idlib region is home to some three million people, nearly half of whom have been displaced from other parts of Syria.
Air strikes by Damascus and Russia have killed more than 950 civilians since the end of April, according to the Observatory.
The United Nations says the violence has also displaced more than 400,000 people.
The Idlib region is supposed to be protected from a massive government offensive by a Turkish-Russian deal struck in September 2018 that was never fully implemented as extremists refused to withdraw from a planned demilitarised cordon.
Turkey backs rebels in northwestern Syria.
"Russia and the Syrian government may be willing to give Turkey another opportunity to implement the terms of its September 2018 bilateral agreement with Russia," said Sam Heller of the International Crisis Group.
"Alternately, this ceasefire may just be an operational pause for Damascus and Moscow to consolidate their territorial gains and prepare for the next phase of their offensive," the Syria expert added.
Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, whose forces control around 60 per cent of territory, has vowed to reclaim the rest of the country, including Idlib.
Saturday's truce is the latest attempt to avert a full-blown offensive, which the UN has said would result in one of the worst humanitarian "nightmares" in Syria's eight-year conflict.
Only a few hours before it went into effect, a Russian air strike hit a health facility in Aleppo's western countryside, putting it out of service, the Observatory said.
The UN has said 43 hospitals and clinics and 87 educational facilities have been impacted by fighting since April.
"The attacks we have seen on health facilities, educational facilities and water points is one of the highest in the world," Panos Moumtzis, the UN's Syria humanitarian chief, told AFP.
The Syrian conflict has killed more than 370,000 people and driven millions from their homes since it started with the brutal repression of anti-government protests in 2011.


A language course is reviving Moroccan Jewish culture and bridging Middle East divide

Updated 7 sec ago
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A language course is reviving Moroccan Jewish culture and bridging Middle East divide

  • “In my family there were (many) different languages — Moroccan Arabic, French, Hebrew at the synagogue, and my dad also speaks Amazigh, Berber,” said Elfassi.
  • His passions for music and language took Elfassi on a journey to Bordeaux, France, and Be’er Sheva, Israel, writing a dissertation on Jewish identity among Moroccan Jews

RABAT: Growing up in Fez, Morocco, Yona Elfassi was always aware of the history of the city, which has been a center of culture, learning and spirituality since the ninth century.
Home to great minds such as the 12th-century philosopher and jurist Ibn Rushd and his contemporary, the physician and codifier of Jewish law Maimonides, the city was shaped by Jewish, Arab, Amazigh, Spanish and French cultures.
These influences left a deep imprint on Elfassi, 37.
“In my family there were (many) different languages — Moroccan Arabic, French, Hebrew at the synagogue, and my dad also speaks Amazigh, Berber,” said Elfassi.
Music, too, was a constant presence — from Andalusian to Flamenco, to Moroccan classic, to Moroccan chaabi popular, to Berber music,” he said. “We weren’t a family of professional musicians, but we were a family that lived with music.”
As a Jewish resident of Morocco, Elfassi belongs to a tiny demographic, as 99 percent of Jews of Moroccan heritage today live elsewhere. After major emigrations in the 20th century, only around 2,500 Jews remain in a country where they once made up 5 percent of the population. Today an estimated 50,000 live in France, 25,000 in Canada and 25,000 in the United States; and some 1 million Moroccan Jews make up one of Israel’s largest ethnic groups.
His passions for music and language took Elfassi on a journey to Bordeaux, France, and Be’er Sheva, Israel, writing a dissertation on Jewish identity among Moroccan Jews. (He has two doctorates, one in sociology and political science from Sciences Po Bordeaux and one in anthropology and history from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.)
His research into Morocco’s history eventually grew into a vocation to teach Darija, the Moroccan Arabic dialect, to allow diaspora Moroccan Jews to connect with their ancestors through language, culture and stories.
“As a sociologist, I was fueled by the conviction that academic research ought to forge connections and deepen understanding” beyond the academy, Elfassi said. “These stories and human histories are at the core of why I decided to teach, and my identity has inspired me to work with Jews of Moroccan background to reconcile with their ancestral language.”
As the COVID-19 pandemic ended, he launched Limud Darija, an educational movement and multimedia language platform. The hybrid courses mix Zoom classes with in-person gatherings, which take place in Israel. Elfassi also holds music workshops, drawing from Sephardic piyyutim— Jewish liturgical poems with Judeo-Arabic pronunciation and melodies — and the music of 20th-century Moroccan pop icons such as Hajja El Hamdaouia, Sliman Elmaghribi, Zohra El Fassiya and Abdelhadi Belkhayat.
Limud Darija’s impact has grown rapidly. “Today our community includes over 500 active members with the mission of connecting people across generations, helping participants reclaim lost voices and fostering resilience and a sense of belonging through cultural practices,” Elfassi said.
Through his Instagram feed and TikTok presence, many Moroccan Muslims have found Elfassi’s work and are inspired to see Moroccan Jews preserving the language of their shared home. Muslims, Elfassi said, in turn have expressed interest in learning Hebrew. “I opened an active WhatsApp group where we’re teaching Hebrew to Muslim speakers of Darija,” he said.
“Through this shared connection, divisions begin to fade,” Elfassi said. “The Israelis the Muslim Moroccans meet are seen as Moroccans like themselves, as family. They are talking a common language, talking about what unites them, people are begun to be seen as individuals.” The Muslims and Jews, he said, get the chance “to bond over music and heritage and language, not political or war-related topics, and they do not further the false ‘pro-Palestine’ vs ‘pro-Israel’ dichotomy, and instead humanize everyone as individuals, as human beings.”
Limud Darija students describe how the program has connected them more deeply with people in their own lives as well. “My parents talked between them in Moroccan language, but by the time I was an adult, I forgot,” said Yehudit Levy, a retired schoolteacher in Ganei Tikvah, Israel, who has studied with Elfassi for three years. “Since I started to learn with Yona, everything comes up — songs, music, food, poetry, all the traditional things come up. I smell Morocco when I am in the class.”
Noam Sibony, a Limud Darija alumnus, is a neuroscience researcher and musician living in Toronto. The 28-year-old spent nine months volunteering in Lod, an Israeli city whose population is Arab and Jewish, at a community center, working with local children and youth. Limud Darija, he said, showed him how learning the language of another culture can help build relationships that transcend regional politics and conflicts.
Habiba Boumlik, a professor of French, literature and women’s and gender studies at LaGuardia University in Queens, New York, and co-founder of the New York Forum of Amazigh Film, an annual film festival celebrating the Indigenous Berber people of North Africa, sees parallels between Elfassi’s work and her efforts to preserve the Tamazight language.
“I give credit to people who invest in learning language, and it is great with the new technology and variety of sources on the Internet. Even if people aren’t fluent, they can do so much with the language, and they will go to Morocco and connect more deeply,” Boumlik said.
Darija is closely related to the Judeo-Arabic dialect, Boumlik explained, and so has the potential to contribute to the Moroccan vernacular, just as Judeo-Arabic slang and idioms have shaped Modern Hebrew.
“The exchange among the Moroccans and Israelis will only enrich Darija as they also enrich their families and themselves,” Boumlik said. “And it is so important that they can connect with Moroccans on the Internet and have a dialogue. It is not just the culture and language of their grandparents — it is the living language and culture of the new generation.”
Bringing people together on this level, Elfassi said, is peacebuilding on a human scale, prioritizing personal stories, shared culture and mutual respect. “For me, peace will start with people, not with the decision-makers,” he said. “Peace is just two people talking to each other, having respect for each other and having a conversation where they can disagree, but where they always show respect for the humanity of the other.”