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Syria's Aleppo: commercial hub turned battleground

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  • Syria's Aleppo: commercial hub turned battleground

    Agence France Presse
    July 28, 2012 Saturday 9:50 AM GMT

    Syria's Aleppo: commercial hub turned battleground

    ALEPPO, Syria, July 28 2012


    Syria's second city Aleppo has turned into what could be the key
    battleground of the 16-month uprising, as government forces launched a
    major push to drive out rebel fighters on Saturday.

    Troop reinforcements poured into the southwest of the commercial hub
    of some 2.5 million people, where the rebels concentrated their forces
    after seizing much of the city on July 20.

    "The fiercest clashes of the uprising are taking place in several
    neighbourhoods of the city," the head of the Britain-based Syrian
    Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdel Rahman, told AFP.

    Before this month, Aleppo had seen sporadic protests but had been
    largely spared the bloodshed that has engulfed other cities since the
    uprising against President Bashar al-Assad's rule broke out in March
    last year.

    The city suffered the wrath of the Assad family's regime after an
    uprising led by the Muslim Brotherhood between 1979 and 1982 when many
    of its businessmen backed the rebellion.

    But the manufacturing centre, renowned for its textiles, profited from
    a free-trade agreement signed with Turkey in 2005, even if some small
    businesses found themselves unable to compete.

    "Aleppo was calm because it is an industrial and commercial town that
    found favour with the regime after 10 years of punishment for its
    support for the Muslim Brotherhood during the 1980s," said geographer
    Fabrice Balanche, who heads the Mediterranean and Middle East Studies
    and Research Group in Paris.

    "The security apparatus has been very powerful since then. The rebels
    come from the countryside but Aleppo's residents are staying home."

    The lure of the big city as well as the search for jobs has drawn
    large numbers of migrants from the countryside around Aleppo.

    Around 45 percent of the city's 120 square kilometres (45 square
    miles) is made up of informal neighbourhoods, whose residents are
    mostly Sunni Arabs or Kurds.

    Overall, the majority of its residents are Sunnis, around 65 percent
    of them Arabs and 20 percent Kurds.

    Christians represent around 10 percent of the population, around half
    of them Armenians, with the remainder Syrian Orthodox, Greek Orthodox
    or Maronites.

    Members of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam to which
    Assad and his family belong, make up around five percent of the
    population.

    But unlike in Damascus and in Syria's third largest city Homs, the
    community is not concentrated in any particular district.

    With the exception of Hamdaniyeh, home to large numbers of government
    employees, many of them Alawites, the community is dispersed
    throughout the city.

    The metropolis of the north of the country, Aleppo was considered the
    second city of the Ottoman empire until its collapse after World War
    I.

    It served as the capital of a vast province stretching across
    southeastern Anatolia as well as northern Syria before the post-war
    redrawing of international borders deprived it of much of its historic
    catchment area.

    Aleppo preserves many heritage sites including its renowned 13th
    century citadel.The UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural
    Organisation named the Ancient City a World Heritage Site in 1986.




    From: A. Papazian
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