Cities and towns during the Syrian Civil War
Towns and strategic places: | Villages and details: |
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For all towns (size 7 or larger) and strategic places like airfields, border-crossings, ports, dams, military bases and oil fields. | For all villages (Size 6 or smaller) and detailed places like hills, factories, neighborhoods and checkpoints. |
Syria is subdivided in a hierarchical manner into:
- 14 Governorates (or G.)
- 65 Districts
For each governorate, the first city in the table is the governorate capital (and capital city of its district at the same time). The following towns are the regional capitals (administrative centers) of the districts. The last item is the rural area outside of the listed towns in each governorate. Each section details a brief summary of that city or town's history during the Syrian Civil War. The population figures are given according to the 2004 official census. The table is sortable. Click on the arrows next to the column headings to sort alphabetically, based on population, District, or control status.
Aleppo Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aleppo | 2,132,100 | Mount Simeon District | 90%10% | See Battle of Aleppo (2012–16). |
Afrin | 36,562 | Afrin District | ||
Atarib | 10,657 | Atarib District | At the center sit the charred shells of the police station and city hall, which government troops occupied in February 2012. For months, local rebels attacked their positions and tried to cut their supply lines. By the time the army left in June 2012, the city was destroyed and deserted. Every building downtown is damaged and is without electricity and water. Town leaders have formed military and civil councils and opened a prison.[3] Only about 4,000 residents remain as of August 2012.[4] By November 2013, the town was controlled by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS).[5] By early January 2014, clashes were reported between the Islamic Front and ISIS forces in the town.[6] By April 2014, the town was under rebel control. By June 2014, clashes were reported between the SRF and al-Nusra, about 5 days later, most of al-Nusra Front withdrew from the towns of Atarib and Sarmada. | |
Kobanî | 44,821 | Ayn Al-Arab District | See Kobanî (Syrian Civil War). | |
Azaz | 66,138 | A'zaz District | Azaz is a passage point to Turkey. On 19 July 2012, the FSA chased out the Syrian Army from the city of Azaz and took complete control of it.[7] FSA also took over the associated border crossing of Bab al-Salame.[8] Samir Haj Omar, an economist who now heads the local 30-member political council, said Turkish officials have been more willing to deal with him and other rebel leaders now that they are de facto governors. In early August 2012, the first new shipments of rice, flour and gasoline arrived in rebel-controlled northern Syria, according to local officials there. Earlier in the conflict, supplies were ferried across the Turkish border by horse, or on foot, by smugglers traversing muddy trails while dodging Turkish and Syrian border guards.[9] On 29 October 2012, France 24 reported that there was a refugee camp between Azaz and the Turkish border. On 28 February 2013, it was reported that the FSA checkpoint in Azaz was where the Free Syrian Soldiers hand in their weapons to go into the Refugee camp and onto Turkey. It is also the first or second checkpoint into Turkey and Syria.[10] On 18 September 2013, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant seized control of the town, posting snipers on rooftops, erecting checkpoints and imposing a curfew on the local population.[11] On 28 February 2014, FSA and Jabhat al-Akrad took control of the town and the surrounding villages.[12][13] As of January 2015; Northern Storm Brigade controls the town.[14] al-Nusra Front has a minor presence.[14] | |
Al-Bab | 130,475 | Al Bab District | See Al-Bab (Syrian Civil War). | |
Dayr Hafir | 18,948 | Dayr Hafir District | See Dayr Hafir (Syrian Civil War). | |
Jarabulus | 25,000 | Jarabulus District | See Jarabulus (Syrian Civil War). | |
Manbij | 69,000 | Manbij District | See Manbij (Syrian Civil War). | |
Al-Safira | 95,832 | As-Safira District | Al-Safira is next to important weapon factories and the government's largest chemical weapons stockpiles. On February 8, 2013, it was reported that government forces were stationed at defense establishments and had set up checkpoints on the route to Khanasser, but rebel battalions controlled the streets of the city.[15] On October 13, 2013, it was reported by Xinhua that the town was besieged by the government forces.[16] See also: Battle of Safira. | |
Anadan | 11,918 | Mount Simeon District | At dusk on 29 July 2012, FSA commander in the area, Lieutenant Rifaat Khali, mobilized 150 fighters to seize control of the Anadan checkpoint, a strategic location linking the city of Aleppo 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) to the south with the Turkish border to the north, which the FSA used as a source for supplies. On 30 July, after ten hours of fighting, FSA seized control of Anadan checkpoint[17] and retrieved ammunition left behind by the defeated government forces. During the fighting, eight tanks were also captured, seven of which were still operational; the operational ones were intended for use in the battle of Aleppo.[18] At least some of the captured tanks were deployed northwards to Azaz, where they were used to support an attack on a loyalist-held airbase.[19] Anadan has been the site of heavy shelling by the Syrian army military.[20] On 24 October 2012, the formation of a local administration council composed from prominent engineers, doctors, human right activists, was announced.[21] | |
Darat Izza | 13,525 | Mount Simeon District | On June 23, 2012, 25 Shabiha militias were killed by Syrian rebels in the city. They were part of a larger group kidnapped by a rebel group. The fate of the others kidnapped was unknown.[22] Many of the corpses of the shabiha militia killed were in military uniform.[23][24][25] A secondary school has turned into a police station, a courthouse and a temporary town hall run by the rebels. It is part of a nascent rebel administration that is taking shape in areas of the country where Assad's authority has disappeared as his security forces try to secure control of Syria's main cities: Aleppo, Damascus, Homs and others. A defector from the Assad administration, Abdul Hadi heads a "revolutionary" security force made up of some 40 officers, all of them former policemen in the government. At times, Abdul Hadi's role seems more akin to that of a local mayor than a police officer. Among his self-assigned responsibilities, he monitors local bread supplies, urging bakeries to adjust production according to need. Recent rebel attacks on a government-owned wheat silo and army gasoline depots have given them access to new supplies.[26] On 21 November, rebels attacked the nearby Sheikh Suleiman base (which was under siege for over two months), but were repelled from the area by an army counterattack, in which 25 rebels were killed.[27] on 10 December, the base was taken by opposition forces. A little over 100 regime troops that were left inside the base retreated to the scientific building wearing gas masks.[28] The town was under the control of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant since September 2013.,[29] but then withdrew following a wide-scale offensive led by the Army of Mujahedeen and the Islamic Front.[30] | |
Kafr Safra | 2,150 | Afrin District | By August 2012, YPG forces controlled this town.[31] | |
Khan Tuman | 2,781 | Mount Simeon District | There is a huge collection of warehouses (about 58 of them) that extends over 5 kilometers in Khan Tuman. on December 15, 2012, Free Syrian Army declared their full control of the fuel, ammunition, and grain warehouses in Khan Tuman 11 km southwest of central Aleppo after clashes with the government forces. On 15 March, rebels seized control of an ammunition factory complex and munitions depots. The complex had been used to supply the Syrian army with munitions to regularly shell rebel positions in the surrounding area.[32] On 18 August, Sohr said that Syrian troops take control over the hill of Khan Toman.[33] | |
Khanasir | 2,397 | Al-Safira District | On late August 2013, Ahrar al-Sham seized the town.[34] On October 1, Syrian Army forces launched an offensive outside the town (which is situated along a key road needed to transport essential supplies), met by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Al Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham and other militias troops.[35] By 10 October, Syrian government troops had seized the town.[36] On 25 February 2016, government forces regain over control the town of Khanassir after ISIS take him during their attack on the town a few days ago.[37] | |
Maydan Ikbis | 1,302 | Afrin District | By late July 2013, YPG fighters controlled the town.[38] | |
Al-Muslimiyah | 5,916 | Mount Simeon District | Since late November 2012, the Syrian Army Military Infantry College (north east of the city of Aleppo) has been under siege by rebels from the Tawhid Brigade of the Free Syrian Army (FSA). The siege of the College is a continuation of the push from Atarib and base 46.[39] In early December, FSA entered the College and took control progressively of all buildings[40] On 15 December 2012, the rebels reportedly captured the infantry academy, army base and recruiting center at al-Muslimiyah,[41][42] after weeks of fighting. The Hanano Barracks has a three-kilometer square campus.[42] A top rebel commander from the Tawhid Brigade, Yusef al-Jadr ("Abu Furat"), was killed during the clashes while the pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights stated a large number of rebels and soldiers were also slain in the battle.[43] The rebel brigade claimed it captured 100 prisoners.[41] During the SAA offensive in October 2014 which captured the Handarat area and placed rebel-held Aleppo under a de facto siege, Syrian Army units captured the village along with surrounding areas.[44] | |
Nubl | 21,039 | A'zaz District | Located on a main road between Aleppo and Turkey, Nubl and neighbouring al-Zahraa form a small Shia-dominated pocket in a mostly Sunni area in the Aleppo Governorate. Though their relations with the surrounding villages were normally friendly before the war, al-Zahraa and Nubl have been under siege by rebel forces since July 2012, with opposition members claiming that the towns hosted pro-government militia who had attacked opposition supporters.[45][46] The villages were still under siege as of 10 December 2012, being regularly supplied by government helicopters. Sniper fire from both government and opposition forces had rendered the highway impassable, and traffic was diverted around them.[47] | |
Sarrin | 6,104 | Ayn Al-Arab District | In May 2013, the YPG took control of this area near the Tomb of Suleyman Shah. In September 2013, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and al-Nusra Front militants seized control of Sarrin.[48] See also 2012 Syrian Kurdistan campaign. In July 2015, YPG forces took over the area.[49] | |
Tell Aran | 17,767 | Al-Safira District | On 1 August 2013, Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and Al Nusra Front fighters took control of the town after defeating Kurdish forces.[50] Shortly afterwards, local Kurdish sources claimed that Kurdish civilians were killed by the jihadist groups.[51] On 11 November 2013, Tell Aran was seized by Syrian Army troops[52] | |
Tell Rifaat | 20,514 | A'zaz District | In the early summer of 2012, Syrian government authorities withdrew from Tell Rifaat and were replaced by a council made up of local scholars, judges, and former Syrian Army officers.[53] On 8 August 2012, Tell Rifaat was bombed by the Syrian Air Force, resulting in the deaths of six people, all members of the Blaw family.[54] Opposition activists based in Aleppo claimed that Syrian Army forces were attempting to cut off the FSA's transport route between Tell Rifaat and Aleppo.[55] By November 2013, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant was in full control of the town.[56] In January 2014, resistance fighters, mainly members of the Islamic Front, defeated ISIS militants in the town. Liwa al-Fatah of the Islamic Front came into control of the town.[14] On 15 February 2016, the town was taken by the YPG-led Syrian Democratic Forces.[57] | |
Tell Shughayb | 5,110 | Mount Simeon District | On 1 March 2013, the Syrian army regained control of the strategic Tell Shughayb town allowing them to approach the Aleppo airport.[58][59] | |
Urum al-Kubrah | 5,391 | Atarib District | Since June, has control. On 22 September 2012, FSA seized Urum al-Kubrah from "pro-government militias", opening the way to lay siege to Base 46.[60] By January 2014, the town was controlled by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.[61] | |
Urum al-Sughrah | 637 | Atarib District | Since June 2012, FSA has control.[62] In October 2012, the military base of regiment 46 (west of town) was under siege by rebels who shelled it on a regular basis with mortar and rockets. On 18 November 2012, the base which is considered as one of the most important in north Syria, fell under rebel control, after a 55-day siege[63] On December 14, 2012, the Administrative Affairs College (which is 17 km west of central Aleppo and 8 km east of the recently captured 46th regiment base) fell under rebel control[64] | |
Al-Zahraa | 13,780 | A'zaz District | Located on a main road between Aleppo and Turkey, Al-Zahraa and neighbouring Nubl form a small Shia-dominated pocket in a mostly Sunni area in the Aleppo Governorate. Though their relations with the surrounding villages were normally friendly before the war, al-Zahraa and Nubl have been under siege by rebel forces since July 2012, with opposition members claiming that the towns hosted pro-government militias who had attacked opposition supporters.[45][46] The villages were still under siege as of 10 December 2012, being regularly supplied by government helicopters. Sniper fire from both government and opposition forces had rendered the highway impassable, and traffic was diverted around them. Siege broken by government troop on 3 February 2016.[47] | |
Outside of listed towns in Aleppo G. | — | 200+ towns and villages 200+ towns and villages 200+ towns and villages |
Damascus and Rif Damashq Governorates
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Damascus - Barzeh | 47,339 | Damascus District | Barzeh, a suburb of Damascus, was reported to be contested as of 7 December 2012.[67] A truce in Barzeh was signed in January 2014. Government footage showed bulldozers clearing rubble and the local governor speaking to residents; footage from the rebels showed their fighters were still present, neither shooting nor being rounded up. The deal was voluntary; rebels were tired and wanted their destroyed town cleaned up.[68] On 14 April, Barzeh, a suburb of Damascus, was reported to be under army control.[69] See also: Damascus offensive (2013).In February 2017, the Government demmanded that the rebels leave Barzeh as well as the neighbouring Tishreen neighbourhood. After an intense three month period of fighting, the rebels finally gave up and agreed to be transferred to Idlib. "See also: Qaboun offensive (2017)." | |
Damascus - Jobar | Damascus District | |||
Damascus - Kafr Sousa | Damascus District | |||
Damascus - Qaboun | Damascus District | |||
Damascus - Tadamon | 86,793 | Damascus District | ln late November 2012, the west side of this neighborhood of Damascus was controlled by the Syrian Army whereas the east side was controlled by FSA after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq.[67] In February 2014, it was reported that the neighborhood was under siege by the army.[70] See also: Damascus offensive (2013). | |
Damascus - Yarmouk Camp | 18.000 | Damascus District | The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) conquest Yarmouk in April 2015. See also Yarmouk camp fighting (2015) | |
Damascus (except neighborhoods listed separately) | 1,280,781 | Damascus District | 90% | |
Darayya | 78,763 | Darayya District | See Darayya during Syrian Civil War. | |
Douma | 110,893 | Douma District | A battle began on 21 January 2012, after FSA fighters changed their tactics from attack and retreat guerrilla warfare in the suburbs of Damascus to all-out assault on army and loyalist units. Earlier in January, the FSA had gained control over large portions of Douma. On 31 January 2012, the Syrian Army retakes Douma. Hundreds of troops controlled the mostly deserted streets and arrested hundreds of people.[77] Complete control was achieved on 30 June when Syrian army troops entered all parts of Douma.[78] On 18 October, after heavy fighting, the FSA retook control of the city.[79] On 30 October, there were continuing fights in Douma.[80] It was reported to be under rebel control as of 7 December 2012.[67] On 30 December, the Syrian troops killed 30 "terrorists" from the Al Qaeda-linked Al Nusra Front and other jihadist groups during a series of "qualitative" operations in two areas of the rebel-held Douma suburb, east of the capital Damascus.[81] On 1 February, the Observatory said that regime-versus-rebel clashes were heavy in the Damascus suburb of Douma.[82] See also: Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012) and Rif Dimashq offensive (November 2012–February 2013) and Rif Dimashq offensive (August 2014–present). | |
An-Nabk | 32,548 | Al-Nabk District | See Battle of Qalamoun (Army push into An-Nabek). | |
Qatana | 33,996 | Qatana District | In December 2012, it was reported that 28 government checkpoints control this multi-ethnic regime stronghold.[83] On 15 October 2013, there was shelling emanating from Turba checkpoint and the Baath School area. | |
Qudsaya | 33,571 | Qudsaya District | Qudsaya is called "The Lion’s Den" because of the presence of a large number of Alawite government supporters.[67] On 24 August 2012, government forces stormed the town amid heavy gunfire. in March 2013, it was reported that the majority Sunni suburb of Qudsaya has just two Alawite areas, but Republican guard troops were busy clearing out Sunni enclaves there throughout the summer and fall of 2012.[84] On November 9, 2013, military sources announced an agreement had been reached in Qudsaya. The agreement establishes a ceasefire and a joint security committee from the army and the opposition militants, under the Syrian flag, which will be raised in the town square. Also as part of the agreement, the two roads leading to Qudsaya will be reopened – the old Safsaf Avenue and the road that links the city to its main suburb.[85] | |
Al-Qutayfah | 26,671 | Al-Qutayfah District | On December 5, 2012, government forces stationed in Al-Qutayfah launched rocket shelling on neighboring areas. | |
Al-Tall | 44,597 | Al-Tall District | In July 2012, the city became an important rebel base around Damascus.[86] When the Battle of Damascus started, the rebels stormed two government buildings and reportedly detained 40 soldiers while seizing a quantity of weapons. The city was also one of the places where the rebel retreated after their defeat in Damascus. At the end of July, rebels were gathering and massing in Al-Tall to ready themselves for another attack on Damascus.[87] In the beginning of August, the Syrian Army started shelling the rebel positions more intensively.[88] The city became completely besieged by the Army after the capture of 3 Syrian journalists by the rebels near the city.[89] The Syrian Army took control of the city and cleared it of rebel presence the 17 August, while the Syrian National Council described the area a "sinister zone".[90] The three captured journalists were found by the Syrian Army.[91] See also: Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012). | |
Yabrud | 25,891 | Yabrud District | As of 24 December 2012, the town has been in FSA control for over 6 months.[92] In December 2013, the town was controlled by the Al Nusra Front.[93] On 30 December, In the town of Yabrud near Damascus, the troops eliminated gatherings of the Nusra fighters, killing 15 of them and destroying their ammunitions and weaponries.[94] On February 27, 2014, 10 officers of Artillery Brigade 555 were killed as they were attempting to infiltrate Yabrud.[95] On 16 March, Syrian state media and opposition activists have reported that the Syrian troops, backed by Hezbollah fighters, are in full control of Yabroud after clearing out rebels holed up in the strategic Syrian town for months.[96] | |
Al-Zabadani | 26,285 | Zabadani District | See Al-Zabadani (Syrian Civil War). | |
Arbin | 44,934 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | On July 2, FSA had taken control of a number of suburbs north of the capital Damascus, including Arbin. FSA fighters openly patrolled the streets of the suburbs, and clashes occurred less than 10 km from the center of Damascus city itself.[97] In November 2012, there was sustained fighting in the town after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq. It was reported to be under rebel control as of 7 December 2012.[67] | |
Assal al-Ward | 5,812 | Yabrud District | Since June 2012,the Syrian Army has control of this town located along the Syrian–Lebanese borders.[62] On 15 April 2014, the Syrian army, backed by Hezbollah fighters, retook village Aasal al-Ward.[98] In October 2014, al-Nusra Front launched a heavy attack on al-Jebbah and Assal al-Ward.[99] | |
Babbila | 50,880 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | ln late November 2012, this suburb has seen fighting between FSA and government troops after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq[67] In February 2014, Syria's army and rebels agreed a truce in Babbila. Regime troops raised the Syrian flag over the municipality of the southern suburb, which had been used as a rebel rear base until several months ago when the army laid siege to it. Armed rebels were still present in the area, as the terms of the agreement also included an amnesty, a security source said.[100] | |
Beit Sahem | 15,667 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | ln January 2014, the local opposition committee in the suburb proposed to the government a cease-fire with local autonomy, according to a resident of a neighboring town familiar with the talks. People there were shot as they tried to leave under an abortive deal in December, but they are hungry, and ready to try again.[68] | |
Beit Sawa | 6,249 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | Beit Sawa and the nearby Hammurah fields, experienced intermittent shelling by Syrian Army for three days between June 30 to July 2, 2012.[101] ln late November 2012, Beit Sawa was under FSA control after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq.[67] | |
Deir Atiyah | 10,984 | An-Nabk District | Deir Atiyah is a town with a Christian majority. See also: Battle of Qalamoun. | |
Al-Hajar al-Aswad | 84,948 | Darayya District | On 26 July 2012, fighting was reported in the Al-Hajar al-Aswad suburb of the capital, a place described as home to thousands of poor refugees from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights who were at the forefront of the movement against Assad.[102] The FSA had withdrawn to the southern suburb of Al-Hajar al-Aswad with the suburb being shelled by Government forces and an activist in the area said that there were still ongoing clashes in the south of the city.[103] On 27 July 2012, the army took it back. On 30 October 2012, clashes broke out in Al-Hajar Al-Aswad between rebels and the army, spreading into the adjacent Yarmuk Palestinian camp.[104][105] On 19 November, rebels seized the headquarters of an army battalion and air defense base on the edge of the suburb, making it the nearest military base to Central Damascus to fall under rebel control.[106] ln January 2014, reports indicated that opposition fighters fleeing the fallen towns are concentrated in the remaining strongholds, particularly Al-Hajar al-Aswad.[107] See also: Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012) and Rif Dimashq offensive (November 2012–present). | |
Harasta | 68,708 | Douma District | On 21 October 2012, it was reported that Harasta was under heavy shelling.[108] On 25 October, the Syrian army fired heavy tank and rocket barrages, after rebels overran two army checkpoints on the edge of the town.[109] The town is home to the 104th and 105th Republican Guard regiments and has a high population of Alawites in the suburbs. It was reported to be under regime control as of 7 December 2012.[67] Harasta is mostly in government hands but rebels have been trying since summer 2012 to advance into it.[110] See also: Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012) and Rif Dimashq offensive (November 2012–present). | |
Jaramana | 114,363 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | Jaramana is a diverse town with a Christian and Druze majority. There have been reports of Popular Committees and pro-government Shabiha working closely with government forces there.[67] | |
Kafr Batna | 22,535 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | On 29 January 2012, Syrian Army tanks entered this suburb of Damascus to force out FSA. Although it has not been verified, opposition activists reported that five FSA soldiers and 14 civilians, including at least one minor, were killed during the raid.[111] on 4 February 2013, it was reported that the suburb was taken over by the rebels as part of a large push into the capital[112] | |
Muadamiyat al-Sham | 52,738 | Darayya District | After a two-day operation at the end of July 2012, which killed 120 people in this suburb,[113] the Syrian Army started a new operation on 20 August. The rebels repelled the first attack but the Syrian Army quickly managed to overrun the rebels.[114][115] The death toll of the operation was estimated at 86 dead, half of them executed by the Syrian Army for being suspected rebels.[116][117] A car bomb exploded in the town on 31 October, injuring an unknown number of people. By this point, the town was being contested between rebels and government forces.[118] On November 30, 2012, there was continued shelling in the suburb from 4th division headquarters and Mezzeh Military Airport. Rebels surrendered to the Syrian Arab Army on 1 Sept. 2016[119] See also: Siege of Darayya and Muadamiyat. | |
Al-Sabinah | 62,509 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | On late November 2012, this suburb has seen fighting between FSA and government troops after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq[67] The town was retaken by the SAA, National Defense Force and Hezbullah fighters on 7 November 2013, cutting off the main rebel supply lines into southern Damascus.[120] On March 12, 2013, artillery shelling targeted Hujaira Balad from brigade 158 that is situated on Jabal Suhya south of Al-Sabinah.[121] See also: Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012). | |
Sahnaya | 13,993 | Darayya District | Since late November 2012, this suburb was under government control[67] See also: Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012) and Rif Dimashq offensive (November 2012–present). | |
Saqba | 25,696 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | On 27 August 2012, rebels attacked government positions in Saqba, overrunning several Army checkpoints. Following the attacks, airstrikes killed an unspecified number of people in Saqba.[122][123] ln late November 2012, Saqba was under FSA control after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq.[67] See also: Rif Dimashq offensive (August–October 2012). | |
Sayyidah Zaynab | 136,427 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | Home to a Shi'a holy shrine, it is populated heavily by Shi'a Muslims and was reported to be a pro-government stronghold as of 7 December 2012.[67] on 4 February 2013, it was reported that Sayyidah Zaynab was contested between rebels and hezbollah/iraqis[124] | |
Yalda | 28,384 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | ln late November 2012, this suburb was under FSA control after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq.[67] Syrian Army Kills More Militants, Terrorist Attacks Claim Lives of 19 Citizens | |
Zamalka | 44,661 | Markaz Rif Dimashq | On July 2, FSA had taken control of a number of suburbs north of the capital Damascus, including Zamalka. FSA fighters openly patrolled the streets of the suburbs, and clashes occurred less than 10 km from the center of Damascus city itself.[97] In November 2012, there was sustained fighting in the town after a regain in strength of the rebels in Rif Dimashq. It was reported to be under rebel control as of 7 December 2012.[67] However, as of September 2013, the government still had a presence in the town.[125] | |
Outside of listed towns in Rif Dimashq G. | — | (ISIL only in Yarmouk camp) |
most part
Daraa Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daraa | 97,969 | Daraa District | ||
Izra | 19,158 | Izra' District | Izra is base to 5th division’s 12th Armored Brigade and 175th Artillery Regiment;[84] on 16 Dec 2012, rebels and troops clashed in the town.[134] On 22 January 2013, it was reported that the army entered the town and started an arrest campaign.[135] | |
Al-Sanamayn | 26,268 | Al-Sanamayn District | Al-Sanamayn is base to the 9th division’s 15th Brigade[84] | |
Adwan | 2,487 | Izra District | By early September 2013, the town was in control of the Syrian Army.[136] Rebels took control of the town during their spring offensive in 2014. | |
Da'el | 29,408 | Daraa District | In March 2011, this predominantly Sunni Muslim town was among the first towns in the area of Daraa where residents participated in demonstrations against the government.[137] On 29 March 2013 the town was reportedly captured by anti-government rebels. Da'el is strategically located on one of two main north-south highways that connect Damascus to Daraa. The rebels initially engaged in clashes with Syrian Army troops manning checkpoints outside the town, leaving 12 government soldiers and 16 rebels dead, according to the activist group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).[138] | |
Al-Harra | 17,172 | al-Sanamayn District | On 10 August 2013, the Syrian Army seized the town, formerly under opposition control. They freed prisoners held by the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and captured weapons and munitions, following their victory. The army reportedly found an almost empty village upon their arrival, since the vast majority of the residents had left their houses due to the ongoing military operations.[139] | |
Jamla | 1,916 | Daraa District | On 6 March 2013, rebels kidnapped 21 United Nations peacekeepers patrolling the border between Syria and the Israeli Golan Heights. Rebels were reportedly in control of the village itself, but intense clashes were occurring around it.[140] The rebels accused the peacekeepers of cooperating with the Syrian authorities in trying to "push the rebels out of Jamla" and demanded that the Syrian Army withdraw from the vicinity of Jamla in return for their release.[141] | |
Jasim | 31,683 | Izra' District | Jasim was one of the first cities to participate in large-scale protests against the government on 18 March 2011.[137] Further mass protests were reported on 22 April 2011.[142] On 1 April 2012, four Syrian Army soldiers were killed in clashes with rebel FSA gunmen in Jasim.[143] On 12 and 13 November 2012, fierce gunfire has been reported in the town. On 15 January 2014, rebels were in control of Jasim.[144] | |
Khabab | 3,379 | Al-Sanamayn District | By May 2013, this predominantly Catholic town was reportedly under the control of the Syrian Army.[145] | |
Muthabin | 2,351 | Al-Sanamayn District | By May 2013, the town was reportedly in control of the Syrian Army.[145] | |
Nawa | 47,066 | Izra' District | In the same speech where he commented on the loss of territory in Daraa province, Syrian MP Walid al-Zouhi stated that "we are only protected from the west by Base 61," referring to the 61st Mechanized Brigade headquarters located near Nawa.[146] On 17 July, rebels captured most of Nawa city.[147] In early August 2013 the town was under the control of the Army.[148] On October 16, 2013, a powerful blast ripped through a pickup truck that went past Tell_al-Jumou' (south-west of Nawa), where a battalion of troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad was positioned.[149] On 9 November 2014, Islamic battalions and the al-Nusra Front took over the city of Nawa, after violent clashes against regime forces.[150] | |
Qarfa | 4,885 | Izra' District | On early January 2013, FSA fighters attacked a compound in the outskirts of Qarfa, killing a nephew of Rustum Ghazaleh, while the victim’s father was wounded and his brother abducted.[151] | |
Al-Shaykh Saad | 3,373 | Izra District | By early September 2013, the town was under the control of the Syrian Army.[136] | |
Tubna | 1,272 | Al-Sanamayn District | By May 2013, this predominantly Catholic town was reportedly in control of the Syrian Army.[145] | |
Outside of listed towns in Daraa G. | — | Since June 2012, FSA controls two areas, west and east of Daraa city (about ¼ of Governorate).[62] by December 2012, the FSA took control of several border checkpoints stationed at the borders with Jordan[152] On March 23, the FSA seized full control of the largest base in Daraa, Base 38. On March 25, 2013, Jordanian official told AFP that "The Free Syrian Army closed the two crossings of Daraa and Nasib from their side after they took control of them," The development comes after the rebels seized a 25-kilometer strip of land stretching from the Jordanian border to the Israeli Golan Heights.[153] On 3 April 2013, rebels captured the air defense base of the 49th battalion of the Syrian Army, in the town of Alma in the northern outskirts of Daraa.[154] On May 3, 2013, it was reported that the rebels were surrounding brigade 34 of the 9th Division[155][146] See also: Daraa Governorate campaign. |
Deir ez-Zor Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Deir ez-Zor | 211,857 | Deir ez-Zor District | (The south of Deir ez-Zor) (The north of Deir ez-Zor) | |
Abu Kamal | 42,510 | Abu Kamal District | See Abu Kamal (Syrian Civil War). | |
Mayadin | 44,028 | Mayadin District | See Al-Mayadin (Syrian Civil War). | |
Outside of listed towns in Deir ez-Zor G. | — | As the Syrian Army has concentrated its forces on wresting back control of Aleppo, rebels have slowly gained ground in the eastern tribal heartland where the big prize is the country's 200,000 barrel-a-day oil output.[156] In August 2012, units of the FSA targeted the remaining isolated outposts of the Syrian Army forces in north-east Syria, where the FSA control all the main roads. There were said to be only 3 Army outposts left in Deir ez-Zor province countryside and they were under attack. On November 30, 2012, Syrian troops withdrew from Omar oil field, one of the last regime positions east of Deir Ezzor city near the Iraqi border. This meant that the rebels control the country's major fields. This happened after Syrian troops lost the Conoco gas reserve on November 27. The insurgents took control of an oil field for the first time on November 4 when they overran Al-Ward, the most important in the province. After also losing control of Al-Jofra field also in November, the army controlled not more than five fields, all located to the west of Deir Ezzor city.[163] Residents in Deir ez-Zor used crude oil for heating and agriculture for lack of fuel[164] On 1 January 2013, it was reported that two thirds of Deir ez-Zor Governorate was under rebel control.[65] On April 11, 2014, ISIL withdrew from Abu Kamal to the T2 oil site, where a Syria-Iraq pipeline runs.[165][165] On 3 Jule, SOHR said that all towns and villages on the route from Abu Kamal to Al-Bab , passing through Raqa province , are now under IS control," Only the provincial capital, which shares the same name as the province, and the military airport are not under IS control. The city of Deir Ezzor is split between President Bashar al-Assad's forces and an amalgam of rebel groups.[166] In early 2016, the forces of the Syrian Democratic Forces entered the governorate following the Al-Shaddadi offensive. |
Hama Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hama | 312,994 | Hama District | On 28 January 2012, 4 neighborhoods of Hama city were under opposition control.[167] Inside Hama city, FSA under the leadership of Captain Mohammed Khalid al-Battal’s al-Majed Brigade has been able to coordinate disruptive raids across the city targeting military checkpoints and security forces’ outposts, but their ability to inflict casualties on loyalist troops pales in comparison to their rural counterparts.[62] On 25 April 2013, there were fights in the Tariq Halab neighbourhood[168] See also: Siege of Hama (2011), 27 May 2012 Hama Governorate clashes and 2012 Hama offensive | |
Masyaf | 22,508 | Masyaf District | Since June 2012, the government has maintained control.[62] | |
Mahardah | 17,578 | Mahardah District | In June 2012, FSA was in control of this Christian town.[62] In September 2012, the government was reported in control of the town[169] On 17 December 2012, government positions in Mahardah were reportedly under attack by rebel forces.[170] In the summer 2014, Al Nusra briefly besieged the city during the 2014 Hama offensive before being beaten back. | |
Salamiyah | 66,724 | Salamiyah District | Since June 2012, the government has maintained control.[62] | |
Al-Suqaylabiyah | 13,920 | Al-Suqaylabiyah District | On October 14, 2012, there was fierce artillery and rocket shelling from Al-Nahel checkpoint in this Christian town, targeting the town of Kirnaz | |
Suran | 29,100 | Hama District | On August 31, Jund al-Aqsa and allies captured this town on the road between Aleppo and Damascus.[171] Later, the army recaptures this town.[172][173] | |
Hayalin | 3,913 | Al-Suqaylabiyah District | Government forces shelled the village on 13 May 2012.[174] Rebels claimed to have captured Hayalin On 17 December along with a string of other towns during an offensive against the Hama Governorate. According to the Local Coordination Committees (LCC), security forces reportedly surrounded checkpoints outside the village, leading to doubts as to whether or not rebels had full control over Hayalin, unlike the other places they captured in the operation.[175] See also: 2013 Hama offensive. | |
Kafr Nabudah | 13,513 | Al-Suqaylabiyah District | On 19 December 2012, within two days, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claimed that government troops had already been cleared from the small town of Kafr Nabudah. Qassem Saadeddine, a member of the rebel military command confirmed this.[176] | |
Kirnaz | 14,075 | Mahardah District | On January 28, 2013, FSA was reported to be in control of this predominantly Sunni Muslim[177] town, while the army was shelling it and preparing to attack it.[178] On 7 February 2013, SOHR reported that the army had regained control over the town.[179] | |
Al-Lataminah | 16,267 | Mahardah District | On 19 December 2012, Qassem Saadeddine, a member of the rebel military command, said that towns taken by rebels included Al-Lataminah.[176] | |
Murak | 14,307 | Hama District | On 23 October 2014, the Syrian army backed allies took back total control of the strategically important city Morek, later nine months after it was seized by rebels and their Al-Qaeda allies.[180] See also: Battle of Mork. Despite this on November 6th, 2015 after a two day battle Jund al Aqsa and their allies retook the town from the SAA and their allies. | |
Ma'an | 1,561 | Hama District | On December 27, 2012, the army took control of three Alawite villages in the central province of Hama, among them Ma'an, large swathes of which were overrun by rebels[181] On October 7, 2014, SOHR reported clashes in the vicinity of Ma'an.[182] During the 2016 Hama offensive rebels retake control. Army recaptures Ma'an.[183] | |
Qastun | 6,187 | Al-Suqaylabiyah District | On 29 January 2013, it was reported that FSA was in control of the town.[184] However, The Tiger Forces of the Syrian Arab Army launched an assault of their own in the Jisr Al-Shughour District, taking control of the several villages including Qastoun, after fierce clashes with the Syrian Al-Qaeda group "Jabhat Al-Nusra" on the afternoon of Monday April 27, 2015. currently fighting is still ongoing this morning, with both sides in a deadlock for control of this town.[185] | |
Tremseh | 6,926 | Mahardah District | The Tremseh residents are mostly Sunni Muslims.[186] A Syrian Army convoy was ambushed by rebels near Hama, which led to a counter-attack from the Syrian Army, and reports suggested government troops were trying to take back the town from rebel forces.[187][188] On 12 July 2012, Tremseh was surrounded by government tanks and artillery, after which, the Syrian military launched a full-scale attack against FSA inside the town. Tanks entered Tremseh after forces had shelled the town continuously from 5 a.m. until noon. Syrian army forces, whose numbers were bolstered by "Shabeha", accompanied the tanks into Tremseh.[189] See also: Battle of Tremseh. | |
Outside of listed towns in Hama G. | — | 10% |
90%
al-Hasakah Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History of the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Al-Hasakah | 188,160 | Al-Hasakah District | [196] 5% | 90-95%Syrian Government control Kurdish control Syriac Military Council control See Al-Hasakah (Syrian Civil War). |
Al-Malikiyah | 26,311 | Al-Malikiyah District | YPG forces on 21 July reportedly captured Al-Malikiyah, which is located just 10 kilometers from the Turkish border.[197] Although another report stated that fighting was ongoing in the city.[198] On 22 July 2012, it was reported that Kurdish forces were still fighting for Al-Malikiyah where one young Kurdish activist was killed after government security forces opened fire on protesters.[199] In November 2012 Kurdish militia evicted all remaining regime forces from the city See also: 2012 Syrian Kurdistan campaign. | |
Qamishli | 184,231 | Qamishli District | In July 2012, rebels control the suburbs of the city. On 21 July, the rebels were intending to capture the largest of the Kurdish cities.[198] On 22 July, clashes erupted between YPG and government forces in which one Kurdish fighter was killed and two were wounded along with one government official.[199] In early August 2012, it was reported that the Assad administration is intact and functioning but the police and army remain in their barracks. Kurds in Qamishli have demonstrated against the Government and are actually allowed to do so on one street, though some have been shot at by the army in the past. There is a border post near the city.[200] As of December 18, 2013, the regime controls about 10 percent of Qamishli, including the airport, the security quarter housing the intelligence services, and several buildings to the south. Regime security services move unfettered around the city and the surrounding Arab villages. In many ways, the PYD is neutral in the civil war, because they see it as a war between two evils. Even so, the YPG has sporadically skirmished with regime units for control of checkpoints.[201] Syrian regime retains wide control in city of Qamishli.[202] In February 2014, a Human Rights Watch official explained that the Assad forces and the government is basically present in three places in Qamishli: One is in the center so they call it kind of ‘security square.’ That also includes some Arab neighborhoods. The second is on the Turkish border at the border crossing. The third is at the airport.[203] See also: 2012 Syrian Kurdistan campaign. | |
Qamishli Border Crossing | — | Qamishli District | By late November 2013, the border crossing between Qamishli and the Turkish city of Nusaybin was controlled by the Syrian government.[204] | |
Ras al-Ayn | 29,347 | Ra's al-'Ayn District | See Ras al-Ayn (Syrian Civil War). | |
Al-Darbasiyah | 8,551 | Al-Hasakah District | On 22 July 2012, YPG forces took control over the town which is on the Turkish border, after the security and political units withdrew from it, following an ultimatum issued by the Kurds.[199] See also: 2012 Syrian Kurdistan campaign. | |
Al-Hawl | 3,409 | Al-Hasakah District | The town was under IS control, after several offensives by YPG and their allied al-Sanadid forces were repelled. This town was seized by the YPG forces.See also: Al-Hawl Offensive (2015). | |
Al-Maabadah | 15,759 | Al-Malikiyah District | On 24 July 2012, PYD announced that Syrian security forces withdrew from al-Ma'bada, located between Al-Malikiyah and Turkish borders. YPG forces afterwards took control of all government institutions.[205] See also: 2012 Syrian Kurdistan campaign. | |
Markada | 2,530 | Al-Hasakah District | On the morning of 27 March 2014, the ISIS attacked the town, which was being held by the Al-Nusra Front. The ISIS managed to force Nusra to withdraw to the town's hospital and the mountain overlooking Markada.Before dawn on 29 March, clashes erupted in the town[6] as the ISIS attacked the hospital and Nusra positions in the mountain.[5] After heavy fighting that left 43 Nusra and 13 ISIS fighters dead,[4] the ISIS took full control of the town | |
Simalka Border Crossing | — | Al-Malikiyah District | Border crossing between towns of Simalka on Syrian side and Fish Khabur on Iraqi side was built by Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government in order to connect Iraqi Kurdistan with Syrian Kurdish regions. Border crossing is actually only a temporary military bridge over river Tigris hoisted by Peshmerga to facilitate transfer of goods and refugees which was opened on February 1, 2013. Since 1991 it was used only by boats and after 2003 it was not used in order to promote Rabia land border crossing.[206] | |
Outside of listed towns in Al-Hasakah G. | — | On January 8, 2013, FSA took control of Tishreen oil field Opposition sources reported that all other oil fields in the governorate were under Syrian government control.[207] See also: 2012 Syrian Kurdistan campaign. |
Homs Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Homs - Abbasiya | 33,363 | Homs District | ||
Homs - Baba Amr | 34,175 | Homs District | On 28 February 2012, reinforcements from an elite Syrian military unit, directed by the brother of the Syrian president, took positions in Homs. They managed to completely seal off the city, notably by destroying a tunnel.[208] On the morning of 29 February, the Syrian Army launched a ground assault with infantry on the rebel-held district.[209] On 1 March 2012, the Syrian Army took full control of the quarter of Baba Amr according to a Syrian official. Rebel leaders reported that they pulled out of the quarter and that some fighters stayed to cover the retreat.[210] On 3 July 2012, clashes raged in and around the neighborhood of Baba Amr.[211] On 10 March 2013, rebel fighters launched an assault on the district, around a year after its capture by government troops, in an effort to relieve pressure on besieged rebel-held districts in the city centre.[212][213] However, the military re-secured the district and repelled the rebels two weeks later.[214] | |
Homs – Deir Baalbah | 44,795 | Homs District | In October 2012, FSA took over part of the neighborhood that has been under army control for many months. On 22 December 2012, Deir Baalbah was recaptured by Government forces, and now stands like a ghost town. The government is encouraging former inhabitants to return.[215] Activists reported that up to 200 civilians were killed in the assault.[216] | |
Homs - Ghouta | 12,634 | Homs District | On August 21, 2012, the rebel-held district came under sustained Army shelling. | |
Homs - Jobar | 4,242 | Homs District | On 20 January 2013, it was reported that the army was fighting to enter Jobar (from four directions) where Free Syrian Army soldiers were present.[217] | |
Homs - Joret al-Shayyah | 16,816 | Homs District | On 3 July 2012, the military made an attempt to storm Joret al-Shayyah.[218][219][220] On 5 October 2012, Syrian warplanes and artillery pounded Joret al-Shayyah, subjecting it to its worst bombardment in months. Government forces were mainly firing rockets and heavy mortars with an average of 5 rockets falling a minute. Activists say most government forces near Homs are stationed outside the town - a common pattern in rebel strongholds.[221] On 7 May 2014, under the terms of the agreement between the Syrian government and rebels the government forces take over all rebels districts in Homs city and Al Waer district in western Homs city.[222] However, rebels still hold the suburb.[223] | |
Homs - Karm al- Shami | 35,732 | Homs District | ||
Homs - Karm al-Zeitoun | 49,132 | Homs District | The Syrian Army captured the district of Karm al-Zeitoun by 9 March 2012, before activists reported that the government forces massacred 47 women and children.[224] | |
Homs - Khaldiyeh | 32,337 | Homs District | ln early July 2012, the rebel-held neighborhood came under sustained Army shelling.[219] In early October 2012, Syrian warplanes and artillery pounded Khaldiyeh, in an attempt to overtake it. Attacking government forces were mainly firing rockets and heavy mortars with an average of 5 rockets falling a minute.[221] On 9 December 2012, it was reported that Khaldiyeh was still under rebel control[225] | |
Homs - Old City | 18,907 | Homs District | The Old City is the most condensed area of Homs, and it includes the neighborhoods of Bab Tadmur, Bab al-Dreib, and Bab Hud and the area around the citadel. ln July and August 2012, the rebel-held Old City was under siege and came under sustained Army shelling.[219][226] On 5 October 2012, Syrian warplanes and artillery pounded Old Homs, subjecting it to its worst bombardment in months. Government forces were mainly firing rockets and heavy mortars with an average of 5 rockets falling a minute.[221] On 9 December 2012, it was reported that the Old City was still under rebel control[225] On 7 May 2014, under the terms of the agreement between the Syrian government and rebels the government forces take over all rebels districts in Homs city and Al Waer district in western Homs city.[222] However, rebels still hold the suburb.[223] | |
Homs - Qusour | 21,534 | Homs District | On 5 October 2012, Syrian warplanes and artillery pounded Qusour, in an attempt to overtake it. Government forces were mainly firing rockets and heavy mortars with an average of 5 rockets falling a minute.[221] On 7 May, under the terms of the agreement between the Syrian government and rebels the government forces take over all rebels districts in Homs city and Al Waer district in western Homs city.[222] However, rebels still hold the suburb.[223] | |
Homs – al-Waer | Homs District | On March 2017 rebels fighters agreed with Syrian officials a withdraw from al-Waer to al-Bab in Idlib Governorate.[227] | ||
Homs | 353,184 | Homs District | January 2012 saw intense fighting in the opposition stronghold of Homs, as the opposition claimed to be in control of ⅔ of the city. However, starting on 3 February 2012, the Syrian army launched a major offensive to take rebel-held neighborhoods in the city. By the end of March, and after weeks of artillery bombardments and heavy street fighting, the Syrian army retakes control of half a dozen districts, leaving them in control of 70 percent of the city.[224] By March 2013, the military was in control of 80 percent of the city.[228] On 7 May, under the terms of the agreement between the Syrian government and rebels the government forces take over all rebels districts in Homs city and Al Waer district in western Homs city.[222][229] See also: Siege of Homs and 2012 Homs offensive. | |
Al-Mukharram | 6,202 | Al-Mukharram District | Al-Mukharram and the localities of its district have a significant Alawite population.[230] The government has maintained control.[62] | |
Palmyra | 51,323 | Palmyra District | See Palmyra (Syrian Civil War). | |
Al-Qusayr | 29,818 | Al-Qusayr District | Al-Qusayr, which lies along the Lebanese border, is a critical node in rebel supply lines that links the predominantly Sunni areas of Lebanon’s northern Bekaa valley. Rebels had been fighting loyalist troops in the border town long before the survivors of the Farouq Brigades arrived, but in the second half of March, fighting in al-Qusayr picked up. Rebels and loyalist troops had reached an uneasy stalemate in the city by the time the ceasefire went into effect in mid-April, since neither side had been able to expel the other from the town, but by the end of May, the pace of fighting had picked up again and gun battles raged two out of every three days in al-Qusayr[62] On 10 July 2012, Al-Qusayr was completely under rebel control with the city being under siege from the surrounding countryside.[231][232] However, later, it was confirmed that government troops still held the town's main road.[233] On June 5 it was confirmed that government troops were if full control of Al-Qusayr
[234] See also: Battle of Al-Qusayr and Al-Qusayr offensive. | |
Al-Rastan | 39,834 | Ar-Rastan District | Al-Rastan is on the main highway between Damascus and Aleppo. The area near Al-Rastan was scene of the first serious armed confrontations between army defectors and loyalist forces through 2011.[235] Assad’s forces regained control of the city several times, but it has kept slipping back into rebel hands.[235] Its strategic location along the road which links the capital Damascus to the north of the country[236] and the terrain had helped deserters from disparate units mount raids against Syrian army buses and roadblocks manned by Military Intelligence and pro-Assad militia.[235] (see also: Siege of Rastan and Talbiseh, Battle of Rastan, 2011 and Battle of Rastan, 2012). The rebels in Al-Rastan were strong enough to fend off a military offensive in mid-May 2012. After twelve hours of indirect fire to soften rebel positions, elite security forces assaulted Al-Rastan in armored vehicles. The rebels destroyed three armored vehicles, including a main battle tank, and killed over twenty government troops. The rebels had their own losses, including a long-standing leader within Khalid bin Walid and its affiliated units, Lieutenant Ahmad Ayoub. The Army called off the assault and retreated to the perimeter to shell the city with rockets through the following day. Ten days later security forces attempted another combined arms assault on the rebel stronghold, failed again, and took similar heavy losses.[62] The two main rebel forces in the Homs area, the Khaled Ibn Walid Brigade and Farouq, both work out of Rastan[237] | |
Taldou | 15,727 | Taldou District | See Taldou (Syrian Civil War). | |
Talkalakh | 18,412 | Talkalakh District | On 15 May 2011, the Syrian military entered the town which is on the border with Lebanon, in a crackdown against pro-democracy protesters.[238] There followed reports that the military was massacring members of the Syrian opposition. The reports were mostly from civilians fleeing over the Kabir River into Lebanon to escape the violence.[239][240][241] By 19 May, the military finished its operation and withdrew from Talkalakh.[242] Since June 2012, FSA has controlled some neighbourhoods of the city, however the government has retained control of loyalist and mixed neighbourhoods.[243] In late October 2012, Talkalakh was under siege by the army. On 12 February 2013, a CNN report from inside Talkalakh revealed that the town itself was under rebel control, though government forces were only a matter of yards away, surrounding the town. Nevertheless, there was no fighting in or around the town thanks to a tenuous ceasefire between the warring sides brokered by a local sheikh and an Alawite member of parliament. Though isolated clashes have occurred, killing three rebels, and though government forces have been accused of harassing civilians since its implementation, the ceasefire has largely held. The town has returned to a degree of normal function, and some shops have started to re-open. Even the governor of Homs Province has been able to meet with rebels in the town, and has called the ceasefire an "experiment". Both sides reject sectarianism, stressing the need to keep foreign jihadist fighters out of the country. Nevertheless, rebels in the town stated that they remained committed to overthrowing Assad.[244] On 23 June, the Syrian Army captured the town. Following the assault, 39 local leaders of the Free Syrian Army surrendered and handed over their weapons. The Syrian opposition denied the town had fallen and claimed there was still fighting ongoing however reporters on the ground said there was no sign of it.[245] | |
Abil | 2,873 | Homs District | On 20 January 2013, it was reported that FSA overran the Um al-Sakhar air defense base, (that is located near the rebel held town of Abil and two km north of the village of al-Buwaydah) and took weapons and ammunition from it.[246] On 18 April, the Syrian Army took control over the town of Abel[247] | |
Al-Buwaydah al-Sharqiyah | 3,196 | Al-Qusayr District | The village was the site of the al-Buwaida al-Sharqiya massacre in May 2012, during the Syrian Civil War. Opposition activists claimed 13 factory workers were killed by the government's security forces, while Syrian government sources blamed rebel forces for the killings[248][249]
On 8 June 2013, the town was recaptured by the Syrian Army during the Al-Qusayr offensive.[250] | |
Al-Husn | 8,980 | Talkalakh District | On January 22, 2014, heavy clashes raged in al-Hosn[251] On 20 March 2014, the Syrian troops recaptured the town of Al-Hosn close to the border.[252] | |
Outside of listed towns in Homs G. | — | Most part 30+ village |
Since June 2012, FSA has control of parts of rural Homs.[62] At the beginning of 2015 the Syrian troops controls most of Homs province.[253] |
Idlib Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Idlib | 98,791 | Idlib District | Additional armored and artillery units arrived outside of Idlib by 11 March and began deploying into the city by 12 March. On 12 February 2012, the entire city of Idlib was under opposition control, but was preparing for an attack by the government.[254] In mid-March 2012, rebels in Idlib offered stiff resistance but could not defeat the military’s tanks and the city fell in a matter of days.[62] As of 7 June 2012, the edges of the city and the surrounding areas belong to the rebels.[255]
On 20 January 2013 a coordinated attack on Idlib city was begun by the FSA. They overran several checkpoints on the Western edges of Idlib, one attack at Rodoko checkpoint led to the killing of 15 Syrian Army soldiers (the rest fled on foot) and allowed rebels to capture 3 tanks and the checkpoints weapons cache.[256] | |
Ariha | 39,501 | Arihah District | See Ariha (Syrian Civil War). | |
Harem | 21,934 | Harem District | Harem is situated exactly on the border of Turkey. Since June 2012, the government has maintained control.[62][258] In October, the FSA gained control of the town.[259] Army troops remain surrounded in the town’s citadel. On December 25, the FSA gained complete control over the town after government forces that were surrounded in the town's ancient citadel surrendered after a 70-day siege.[260] In December 2013, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant announced its entire control over Harem.[261] By January 2014, clashes were on going in the town as part of the Syrian opposition–Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant conflict. | |
Jisr al-Shughur | 39,917 | Jisr ash-Shugur District | |40px]] | |
Maarrat al-Nu'man | 58,008 | Maarat al-Numaan District | See Maarrat al-Nu'man (Syrian Civil War). | |
al-Alani | 3,279 | Harem District | In June 2012, FSA was in control.[62] In September 2012, the government was reported in control of the town[169] | |
Armanaz | 10,296 | Harem District | Rebels drove out government forces on 20 June 2012 after weeks of clashes.[262] | |
Azmarin | 3,720 | Harem District | ln June 2012, FSA was reported to have control of this town located on the border with Turkey.[62] At a later date, FSA lost control of the town. On 14 October, rebels recaptured it after a three-day siege. Remaining government soldiers fled during the night, some across the Turkish border and into Turkish custody. Dr. Ghnnam worked as a urologist in Azmarin before taking command of rebel forces in the town.[258] | |
Bab al-Hawa Border Crossing | — | Harem District | It is a frequent place of crossing for Syrians trying to reach the refugee camp in nearby Reyhanlı.[263] Drivers complained in December 2011 that they had been stalled at the crossing for days after customs officials stopped allowing vehicles with Turkish registrations to enter Syria.[264] The crossing is a major route for smuggling, particularly oil and gas, and has seen a dramatic rise in weapons smuggling.[265] On July 19, 2012, the FSA with 200 fighters seized the border crossing and defaced images of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.[266][267][268][269] On 22 July 2012, Turkish armed forces further restricted border crossings of their own nationals.[270] Crisply dressed rebels check passports of new arrivals, enter names into computers and extend a welcome hand to "Free Syria."[9] In mid-August 2012, FSA fighters attacked tanks and helicopters from the government near the Turkish border, foiling an attempt to take over the Bab al-Hawa border gateway.[271] | |
Binnish | 21,848 | Idlib District | Binnish has been a major protest hub. On 13 October 2011, clashes were reported in the city.[273] FSA takes control in December 2011–January 2012. The Syrian Army then later assaulted Idlib city in March 2012 in a major operation. As early as March 23, it was reported Binnish was one of their next targets.[274] Binnish is on a hill, so it is harder to assault. The Syrian Army had agreed to Kofi Annan's peace plan and to withdraw troops by April 10. By April 3, CNN reported the Syrian Army was assaulting Binnish with tanks and helicopters.[275] On 4 April 2012, the Syrian Army was still shelling Binnish with citizens fleeing the city.[276] In June, the government has control.[62] In November, the town was under rebel control.[277] In March 2013, it was reported that rebels in Binnish have negotiated a limited ceasefire with regime forces in nearby Idlib, in which the regime abstains from shelling the town in exchange for opposition assurances that they will not attack a village of minorities nearby[84] By November 2013, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant was in full control of the town.[56] In January 2014, army begin operation against rebel positions in Binnish.[278] | |
Al-Dana | 14,208 | Harem District | Since July 2012, it is under FSA control.[279] However, al-Jazeera reported that the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant controlled entirely the town since early July 2013.[280][281] ISIS rebels withdrew from Al-Dana.[282] See also:Syrian opposition–Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant conflict. | |
Darkush | 5,295 | Jisr al-Shughur District | on 28 March 2012, it was reported that two British journalists of Algerian descent, Nassim Terreri and Walid Bledi, were killed by the pro-government militia Shabiha in this town located on the border with Turkey. The freelance journalists were filming a documentary about refugees fleeing the violence.[283] ln June 2012, FSA was reported to have control of Darkush.[62] At a later date, FSA lost control of the town. On 11 October, rebels recaptured it.[258] | |
Al-Janudiyah | 7,774 | Jisr ash-Shugur District | On 5 February 2013, it was reported that rebels north of Jisr al-Shughur, in recent days, have seized the Christian village of Al-Janudiyah which dominates the Orontes valley.[284] | |
Kafr Nabl | 15,455 | Maarat al-Numaan District | FSA takes control in December 2011–January 2012.[285] After that, the government recaptured the town. On 11 August 2012, the FSA took it back after a 4 day fight and started reorganizing the town by working on reestablishing electricity, water, telephone and opening the bakeries.[286][287] On 30 December,
ISIS takes on Kafranbel.[288] In January 2014, the ISIS withdrew from the town following mass protests and clashes that were part of the Syrian opposition–Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant conflict. | |
Kaftin | 2,346 | Idlib District | By November 2013, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant was in full control of the Druze-majority town.[56] | |
Khan Shaykhun | 34,371 | Maarat al-Numaan District | FSA takes control in December 2011–January 2012. Fell in government hands on 6 July 2012. The rebels withdrew when a larger force arrived, backed by attack helicopters that the rebels had no way of countering. Once inside the city, the troops set homes on fire and arrested dozens of people.[289] On 17 December 2012, government positions in Khan Shaykhun were reportedly under attack by rebel forces. In May 2014, it was reported that the rebels had captured most of the city with the exception of two regime-held bases (Al-Khazanat & Sallam_Checkpoints).[170] From the end of October 2014 the city is the main stronghold of Jabhat al-Nusra.[290][291] | |
Maarrat Misrin | 17,519 | Idlib District | On 12 December 2011, opposition activists claimed the Syrian Army "indiscriminately" killed eleven people in the town. The incident began when soldiers allegedly shot dead two civilians in Maarrat Misrin prompting residents to block the main road leading to the town. The army then fired randomly, resulting in eleven deaths. The next day, two more residents were shot by Syrian security forces during a funeral procession for those killed the previous day.[292] According to a Syrian military source cited by Syrian Documents, on 7 September 2012, the Syrian Army ambushed a rebel unit in Maarrat Misrin. A total of 42 were killed.[293] In December 2012 the FSA took control of the city.[294] By November 2013, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant was in full control of the town.[56] In early January 2014, fighting raged between ISIS and non-ISIS rebels in the Syrian opposition–Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant conflict. | |
Qah | 2,262 | Harem District | ln June 2012, the regime was reported to have control.[62] On 16 October 2012, it was reported that Qah was the site for the first camp built inside Syria for those displaced by the fighting. This was the consequence of Syria's neighbours not willing to absorb more refugees. Since the town is near the frontier with Turkey, the Syrian war planes do not dare bombarding it. This provides a de facto safe-zone.[295] | |
Saraqib | 32,495 | Idlib District | FSA takes control in December 2011–January 2012.[296] Saraqib was considered an important strategic point because of its size, being the second largest city of the governorate, and its geographic position at the junction of two highways going to Aleppo: one going south towards Hama, Homs and Damascus, and one going west towards Latakia. It was also used as a base to launch attacks on military convoys.[297] On 24 March, eleven days after the Syrian Army took back Idlib,[298] the Syrian Army shelled the city briefly while leading a ground assault at the same time. A column of tanks entered the city to attack the defenses of the rebels, while infantry backed by snipers led the second wave to pursue the remaining fighters.[299] The Free Syrian Army fighters fought back the first day and damaged a tank. After the first day, the rebels were forced to withdraw from the city after the army took full control of it.[300] | |
Sarmin | 14,530 | Idlib District | FSA had gained control over Sarmin. By April 3, the Syrian Army had retaken Sarmin as part of the April 2012 Idlib Governorate Operation which was initiated by the Syrian government in order to make gains against the rebels, prior to the implementation of the U.N. brokered ceasefire, planned for 10 April.[275][304] Sarmin’s mosque was severely damaged.[305][306] By November 2012, Sarmin was back under FSA control.[307] | |
Taftanaz | 8,540 | Idlib District | The town has been a center for opposition protests The Battle of Taftanaz started on April 3, 2012. Heavy fighting took place on the outskirts of the town, killing 20 people.[308][309] By 5 April, the military captured Taftanaz's city center, which was defended by 200 FSA fighters, after a two-hour battle, following which the army reportedly rounded up and executed 82 people. It was unknown how many were opposition fighters and how many were civilians.[310] Witnesses in the town said that tanks shelled the town from four sides before armored cars brought in dozens of soldiers who dragged civilians from their homes and gunned them down in the streets, and they also claimed that the soldiers looted, destroyed and torched hundreds of homes, bringing some down on their owners’ heads. Videos showed this, and 62 people were killed during the attack, despite the town only having a small rebel presence. Nine government tanks were destroyed by homemade bombs as they left the town.[311] Two months after, two-thirds of the population had left. On 29 August 2012, rebels claim to have attacked a "military air base in Taftanaz" damaging several Government helicopters. Their claims could not be independently verified.[312] In November, the town was under rebel control.[277] | |
Yakubiyah | 476 | Jisr al-Shughur District | On 5 February 2013, it was reported that rebels north of Jisr al-Shughur, in recent days, have seized the Christian village of Yaqubiyah which dominates the Orontes valley. Most of Al-Yaqubia's residents have fled, and the houses are shut and boarded up but some doors and shutters have been kicked in and rebels occupy several homes along the main street.[284] | |
Outside of listed towns in Idlib G. | — | 3% |
most part 100+villagesBy June 2012, large parts of Idlib Governorate are controlled by FSA who (along with local people), administered justice and the distribution of supplies to residents.[190] Sham Falcons (led by General Mustafa al-Sheikh) operate in Jabal al-Zawiya.[315] Eight out of the 35 villages of the Zawiya Mountain, around 25% percent, were reportedly under opposition control.[316] On October 18, 2012, Al Jazeera reported that rebels were giving classes to children in caves in Jabal al-Zawiya after the regime destroyed schools[317] By November 2012, the FSA had taken control of 65% of the Governorate.[318] |
Latakia Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Latakia | 383,786 | Latakia District | See Latakia (Syrian Civil War). | |
Al-Haffah | 4,298 | Al-Haffah District | Al-Haffah is a Sunni Muslim town that lies in the foothills of the coastal mountains that form the heartland of Assad's Alawi sect. It is strategically located close to the port city of Latakia, as well as, the Turkish border which has been used by the rebels to smuggle people and supplies.[320] On 12 June 2012, the military recaptured al-Haffah,[321] and the remaining 200 FSA fighters under heavy bombardment by government forces withdrew from the town. FSA said that the fact that Al-Haffah is surrounded by Alawi villages did not help them.[322][323] The rebels were reported to have retreated to Turkey. | |
Jableh | 53,989 | Jableh District | Since June 2012, the government has maintained control.[62] | |
Qardaha | 8,671 | Qardaha District | On early October 2012, Mohammad Assad, cousin of President Bashar Assad and leader of the local Shabiha, was wounded after a gunfight in the town with member of the rival Alawite Khayyir clan, sparked by a discussion about the earlier detention at Damascus airport of Abdel-Aziz Khayyer, a Qardaha native and member of the latter clan.[324] On early August 2013 in a surprise offensive, rebel fighters comprising ten mainly Islamist brigades, including al-Nusra Front and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant advanced south to the outskirts of the village of Aramo, 20 km. (12 miles) from Qardaha. One of the attackers stated "The objective is to reach Qardaha and hurt them like they are hurting us."[325] | |
Kesab | 1,754 | Latakia District | Kesab, which has a border post, is 3 kilometers away from the Turkish border and is mainly populated by Armenians[326] with an Alawite minority. On October 13, 2012, rebels were attacking towards the town. Since November 2012, Turkmen rebels tried to take control of the town and its border post, however they were prevented from doing so by the local Alawite militias formed there.[327] Local Alawite militias continue to exercise control over the area.[328] In late December, the town was reportedly shelled by unspecified forces, but no residents were killed or injured.[329] On 24 March 2014, the Islamist rebels and their jihadist ally Al-Nusra Front seized the small city of Kasab and nearby Kasab border crossing.[330] However they were repelled and forced back by the Syrian army and allied NDF forces (including by Syrian Resistance of Ali Kayali) by the end of June 2014. | |
Outside of listed towns in Latakia G. | — | 3% |
97%
Quneitra Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Quneitra | 4,318 | Quneitra District | See Quneitra (Syrian Civil War). | |
Bariqa | 371 | Quneitra District | This village in the Syrian-controlled part of the Golan Heights was reported to be under rebel control by 13 November.[333] | |
Beer Ajam | 353 | Quneitra District | This village in the Syrian-controlled part of the Golan Heights, populated mostly by Syrian Circassians, was reported to be under rebel control by 13 November[333] See also: 2012 Golan Heights clashes . | |
Khan Arnabah | 7,375 | Quneitra District | Town in southern Syria, administratively part of the Quneitra Governorate (Golan Heights), in the portion of the province still under Syrian control. | |
Madinat al-Baath | 4,500 | Quneitra District | Town in southern Syria, administratively part of the Quneitra Governorate (Golan Heights), under control the Syrian army. See also: Template:Syrian Civil War detailed map . | |
Outside of listed towns in Quneitra G. | — | 20% |
80%
As of 13 September the Syrian government has lost control of about 80 percent of towns and villages in Quneitra province.[334] |
Raqqa Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Raqqa | 220,488 | Raqqa District | 50%[335] |
50%See Raqqa (Syrian Civil war and ISIS). |
Tell Abyad | 14,825 | Tal Abyad District | The Free Syrian Army took control over the city on September 19, 2012.[336][337] Tell Abyad under control Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.[338] While rebels in Raqa appeared to be advancing, ISIL was fighting back in the countryside, especially in the border town of Tal Abyad, from which they were expelled earlier this week.[339] In the first weekend of January 2014, ISIS forces recaptured the town.[340] The YPG and FSA captured Tal Abyad from ISIS on June 15, 2015. | |
Al-Thawrah | 69,425 | Al-Thawrah District | See Al-Thawrah (Syrian Civil War). | |
Baath Dam | — | Al-Thawrah District | On 4 February 2013, opposition forces captured this minor dam on Euphrates river, a week before capturing Tabqa Dam[342][343] | |
Outside of listed towns in Raqqa G. | — | Most part almost all the southern Raqqa[344][345] |
few villagesOn 1 January 2013, it was reported that a majority of Raqqa Governorate was in rebel control.[65] On March 4, 2013, FSA forces captured the provincial capital of Raqqa. While ISIS has captured the remaining SAA outposts left in Raqqa Governorate, the Tabqa (Thawra) military airbase, as well as the army bases of Division 17 near the city of Raqqa and of Brigade 93 near the town of Ayn Isa.[346] See also: Syrian Kurdistan campaign (2012–present). |
as-Suwayda Governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
As-Suwayda | 73,641 | As-Suwayda District | On 28 October 2012, security forces launched a campaign of mass arrests in this Druze city.[347] | |
Salkhad | 9,155 | Salkhad District | The government has maintained control of this town located in the central Jabal el Druze highlands.[62] | |
Shahba | 13,660 | Shahba District | The government has maintained control of this town located in the Jabal el Druze.[62] | |
Outside of listed towns in As-Suwayda G. | — | (few villages) |
Since June 2012, FSA controls a small part near the frontier with Daraa Governorate. |
Tartus governorate
Name | Population | District | Held by | History during the Syrian Civil War |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tartus | 115,769 | Tartus District | Syrian army kept control of this Alawi stronghold and naval facility.[62] | |
Baniyas | 41,632 | Baniyas District | See Baniyas (Syrian Civil War). | |
Duraykish | 13,244 | Dreikiche District | Syrian army kept control of this town.[62] | |
Safita | 20,301 | Safita District | Syrian army kept control of this town.[62] | |
Al-Shaykh Badr | 9,486 | Ash-Shaykh Badr District | Syrian army kept control of this town.[62] | |
Outside of listed towns in Tartus G. | — | The government has maintained control of this governorate that has an Alawi majority.[62] |
See also
References
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(help) - ↑ "ISIS controls over the majority of Aleppo countrysied". Retrieved 25 October 2014.
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(help) - 1 2 Hendawi, Hamza. In Syria, Sunni rebels besiege Shiite villages. Yahoo News. Originally published by Associated Press. 2012-10-18,
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