Hundreds of deaths were killed by violent clashes between the Syrian governments. This is what to know

Hundreds were killed in Syria after violent clashes between the Army and the ousted President Bashar al-Assad and the loyalists.
The ambush by Assad loyalists on Syria’s security patrols will destroy the crisis to several towns along the coast.
The attack sparked the worst violence in Syria since the country’s 13-year conflict, three months after the Assad regime’s offensive regime was overthrown by opposition fighters from the Sunni Islamic group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham or HTS.
This is what we know so far about the attack and what is happening in the region.
How does violence break out?
The violence occurred Thursday after the Alavipai community launched an unexpected attack on police patrols near the port city of Latakia, spiraling out amid widespread conflicts along the coast of Syria.
The attack seemed coordinated – a major escalation and challenge to the new government in Damascus, which promised to unite Syria after more than 50 years under the Assad dynasty.
In the ambush, the armed pro-Assad fighter was overwhelmed by the government security force, which later took control of Assad’s hometown, Kardaha, as Damascus scrambled to introduce reinforcements.
The majority of the population in coastal cities are members of the deposed President Alaves, a branch of Shia Islam.
The Alavians previously formed the core constituency of the Assad government in the Sunni-majority countries, linking communities to the regime’s cruel domination of Syria, in the eyes of its opponents. But many Alawites say they suffer like other Syrians under Assad, his father Hafez al-Assad.
Witness reports and videos from coastal areas show homes in several neighborhoods paved on the streets. Many residents say they are too afraid to leave their homes.
The government poured reinforcements into coastal cities including Latakia, Benias, Tough and Grocery Stores to crush the deadly, well-planned and premeditated attacks described by the remnants of the Assad regime.
On Monday, the government said it had ended military operations in Latakia and Taraki.
Syria’s interim president Ahmed Al-Sharaa later admitted that some armed groups had entered in advance with the Ministry of Defense.
The Syrian Movement and the Syrian Human Rights Network (SNHR) said on Saturday that security forces and pro-Assad gunmen were “engaging in large-scale executions and systematic killings.”
Who is the target?
Despite the authorities’ call for an end to sectarian incitement, the conflict was fatal, with many civilians killed.
According to SNHR, between Thursday and Monday, about 779 people were killed.
SNHR told CBC News in a statement that at least 383 people were killed by remnants of the Assad regime.
Of these 383 people, 172 are members of the ordinary security forces and 211 are civilians.
CBC News cannot independently verify these numbers.

Meanwhile, an armed force composed of military factions, armed local residents (Syrian and foreign) and members of general security forces – killed at least 396 people.
“Discribing the disarming members of civilians and Assad regime has proven particularly challenging, as many of them wear civilian costumes,” the group said.
SNHR also noted that its death toll excludes “fight-related “deaths” among Assad’s loyalists “because deaths are not classified as violations of international law. ”
CBC News’ verification team has verified the video released by the Syrian Coast Observatory on Saturday, showing a shooting of unarmed people wearing civilian costumes in public safety forces. Five people killed are shown in the video.
The UN Human Rights Office said Tuesday that entire families, including women and children, were killed by the military, part of a series of sectarian killings, opposing the Assad loyalist rebellion.
What is the response of the new government?
Defense Ministry spokesman Hassan Abdel Ghani said on Sunday that security forces have restored control of the region and will continue to pursue leaders of the galvanized rebellion.
Public safety departments were arrested on Tuesday for allegedly committing illegal and bloody violations of civilians in the region, according to Syria’s national news agency SANA.
On Monday, Sharaa told Reuters that he could not yet say whether Syria’s Ministry of Defense forces had incorporated former rebel factions into a structure and participated in the sectarian killing.
“Syria is the state of law,” he told Reuters in an interview.
“We fight for the defense of the oppressed, and even among those closest to us, we do not accept the blood of injustice, or there is no punishment or accountability.”
Sharaa blames foreigners for supporting Pro-Assad groups and asks them to cause bloodshed, but admits to the subsequent killing of revenge.
Sharaa called on Syrians and the international community over the weekend to call for responsibility for anyone who hurt civilians and abused prisoners, and said Syria would not be dragged into the civil war.
The United Nations is urging Syria’s interim leaders to protect civilians in the battle between security forces and those loyal to the removal of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Former Army personnel have been coordinating attacks and ambushes since Thursday.
The Syrian Fact Investigation Commission, which investigates the sectarian killing, said it would seek to arrest and prosecute any perpetrator involved.
“No one goes beyond the law and the committee will convey all the results to the entities, the president and the judiciary that initiated the law,” Commission spokesman Yasser Farhan said in a television press conference on Tuesday.
Fahan added that the committee is preparing a list of witnesses for interviews and potential perpetrators and will submit any suspects with sufficient evidence to the judiciary.
What has happened since then?
Several demonstrations were held in Syria after the violent attacks.
Syrians gathered in Latakia on Tuesday to fight against the recent mass killings.
Demonstrators chanted in a video in Latakia calling for security in the region and protection of the government from sectarian violence.
The Syrian movement shared a statement on Instagram on Tuesday after the incident.
“Our hearts are broken for all families who have lost their loved ones [the] It says. It added that many people still cannot bury their loved ones, while others flee their homes to fear their lives.
“Indifference is like complicity. Opposing these atrocities requires responsibility and justice for all.”
Since Assad was ousted, Sharaa has promised to operate Syria in an inclusive way.
Although many Syrians believe that Assad is favored by Assad, including many senior bureaucrats and military officers, thousands have continued to call for unity among all factions since the founding of the new Provisional Government.
The UN Refugee Bureau said in a statement that 6,078 Syrians have arrived at about a dozen villages in the northern Lebanonian Akka province, according to local authorities fleeing combat in the Syrian coastal areas.