BALADI NEWS
Mohammad al-Naeemi, a Syrian refugee wh had everything he could possibly want living in exile in Germany, has returned to war-torn Syria anyway to fight Bashar Assad’s regime.
Clutching a rifle to his chest, his back flat against the ground, the 23-year-old shimmies across a dry field in northwestern Syria on his graduation day from training to join an armed opposition group.
“I returned to give back to my country,” said the young fighter, wearing a black T-shirt and beige combat trousers.
From now on, “I’ll reside in military barracks and on the front lines,” he said, according to AFP. “It’ll be the best place I can possibly live.”
Naeemi was a high school student in Syria’s southern province of Quneitra when peaceful protests demanding change erupted across the country in 2011.
After a brutal crackdown on the demonstrations spiraled into war, he joined the armed opposition for several years.
In 2015, fearing a regime takeover of his region, he decided to leave his war-torn country and join his siblings in Germany, he said.
Traveling over the summer, he and friends crossed Syria’s central desert to the Turkish border, before traveling by sea to Greece, and then by land onto Germany.
“I lived in Berlin. I was studying” German, he told AFP.
“I had an ordinary life. I had rights like any German citizen and a monthly stipend. I wanted for nothing,” he said.
“But I wasn’t happy and I constantly missed my home country,” he added.
“The fierce regime campaign on Idlib” and a regime takeover of his hometown are the main reasons Naeemi decided to head back to Syria, he said.
Since April 26, Assad forces backed by Russia, started the most brutal military campaign against Idlib province, the rebels' last stronghold. During which campaign, more than 600 civilians have been killed according to war monitors, while more than 500,000 civilians have been displaced towards the Syrian-Turkish borders.
He arrived in northwest Syria last month and immediately joined Jaysh al-Izza, a formerly US-backed Syrian opposition group active in the north of Hama province and parts of Idlib, reported AFP.
“My parents opposed my decision and tried to stop me from returning… but I insisted,” said Naeemi, who has no relatives in the province.
He spent one month in a opposition training camp near the Bab al-Hawa crossing with Turkey, where life was governed by strict routine.
He woke up early everyday for military drills, which consisted of diving through burning tires, jumping over cement blocks and shuffling across trenches.
He also sat for classes in religion and ethics.
His unit was named after Abdel-Basset al-Sarout, a Syrian goalkeeper turned opposition fighter who died last month of wounds sustained in battle against regime forces.
The group consists mainly of fresh recruits spurred into joining opposition ranks by the latest flare up in Syria’s northwest, said Mustafa Bakour, a commander.
“Each one of these men has a story,” he told AFP from the camp.
“I liked Germany and considered it as my home but there is nowhere like my country Syria,” he said.
“I don’t regret my decision, I did not return for money or wealth. If money was the goal, I would have stayed in Germany.”
Source: The Syrian Observer.