Qalb Loze massacre | |
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Part of the Syrian Civil War | |
Location | Qalb Loze, Idlib Governorate |
Date | 10 June 2015 |
Target | Druze |
Attack type | Shootout/massacre |
Deaths | 20–24 Druze, 3 al-Nusra Front members |
Perpetrators | Al-Nusra Front |
Part of a series on
Druze |
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The Qalb Loze massacre was a massacre of Syrian Druze on 10 June 2015 in the village of Qalb Loze in Syria's northwestern Idlib Governorate. The village was under the control of a coalition of Islamist rebels, when a Tunisian commander of one group in the coalition, the al-Nusra Front, tried to confiscate the house of a villager accused of working for the Syrian government. When the villagers protested, Nusra fighters opened fire on the protesting villagers,[1] who were accused of blasphemy.[2] A Nusra fighter claimed the villagers opened fire first.[1] In the end, 20 people, including elderly individuals and a child, were killed. Three al-Nusra fighters were also killed.[3] Two days later, a report put the number of Druze killed at 24.[4]
The massacre sparked widespread condemnation in neighbouring Lebanon, which has a considerable Druze minority. Walid Jumblatt responded that "Any inciting rhetoric will not be beneficial, and you should remember that Bashar Assad’s policies pushed Syria into this chaos".[5] In contrast, the Lebanese Druze party chief and former government minister Wiam Wahhab urged the Druze to form an armed force to defend their community in an angry televised speech saying “We will not accept to sell Druze blood!“. His call was much in line with that of the Syrian Druze spiritual leader who directed the Druze to join the Syrian Army.[6] Subsequently, Druze fighters from Sweida assisted the Syrian Army in recapturing an airbase from the Nusra Front.[7] Prior to the Qalb Loze killings, Nusra had forced hundreds of Druze to convert to Sunni Islam, as well as desecrating their graves and destroying shrines.[8][9] On June 22, a group of Druze lynched a wounded Syrian in the Golan Heights who was being transported to Israel for treatment, as they claimed he was a rebel fighter.[10]