The southern Syrian city of Sweida has been engulfed in the deadliest sectarian violence since the fall of the Assad regime, with over 1,300 killed and more than 120,000 displaced. Clashes between Druze and Bedouin factions, as well as reported atrocities by Syrian government forces, have left hospitals overwhelmed and the city in a state of humanitarian crisis. Eyewitnesses and survivors recount mass executions, attacks on hospitals, and bodies left unburied in the streets. The violence has exposed deep-rooted sectarian tensions and the inability of Syria’s transitional government to maintain order, raising fears of a renewed civil war. International aid agencies are scrambling to deliver emergency relief as the fragile ceasefire holds, but the future of Syria’s unity and stability remains in grave doubt.
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