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NextImg:Syrian government forms committee to investigate violent clashes in Sweida

Syria has pledged to investigate clashes in the southern province of Sweida, which killed hundreds of people last month and marked the second major episode of sectarian violence since the ouster of longtime Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad.

In a decree dated July 31, Syrian Justice Minister Muzher al-Wais said a seven-person committee comprising judges, lawyers and a military official would investigate the circumstances leading to the “events in Sweida” and report back within three months.

The committee would investigate reported attacks and abuses against civilians and refer anyone proven to have participated in such attacks to the judiciary.

The violence in Sweida began on July 13 between tribal fighters and Druze factions after a Bedouin gang robbed and kidnapped a Druze vendor. Government forces were sent to quell the fighting, but the bloodshed worsened, and Israel carried out strikes on Syrian troops to support the Druze.

Israel has been involved militarily in Syria since the fall of the Assad regime in December. In the immediate aftermath, Israel occupied Syria’s demilitarized zone and destroyed most of the Assad military’s facilities in a widespread bombing campaign.

The Druze are a minority offshoot of Islam with followers in Syria, Lebanon and Israel. Sweida province is predominantly Druze, but is also home to Sunni tribes, and the communities have had longstanding tensions over land and other resources.

This handout picture released by the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) on July 28, 2025, shows Syrian Red Crescent cars and trucks carrying aid arriving at Busra al-Sham in Syria’s southern Daraa province before crossing the buffer zone into Sweida province. (SANA/AFP)

A US-brokered truce ended the fighting, which had raged in Sweida city and surrounding towns for nearly a week.

The Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, a British-based war monitor whose accuracy has been called into question, estimated that over 1,000 people were killed in the conflict. According to the UN, up to 175,000 people were displaced.

In March, hundreds of Alawite civilians were killed after government-aligned forces deployed to Syria’s coastal areas following a deadly attack on new government forces by militias still aligned with Assad, who hails from the Alawite minority.

Assad’s brutal crackdown on protests against him in 2011 from within Syria’s Sunni majority spiraled into a nearly 14-year war. Western leaders are keen to ensure the new government, led by a former Sunni Islamist group that has its roots in global jihad, conducts an orderly democratic transition.

The fact-finding committee established after the March killings last month referred 298 people suspected of carrying out abuses against Alawites to the judiciary.

The committee said it found no evidence of commanders ordering troops to commit violations and that 265 people had been involved in the initial attack on government forces.