Akil Hussein, writing for Syria Deeply, speaks in Aleppo with a member of the “shabiha”, the pro-regime militia, about his motives and life:

…The young man was visibly nervous and refused to have his picture taken. His mother was hoping we could convince Walid to give up his job.

He said he first joined the shabiha “when the first protests started taking place. Thugs came around the Telal market where I used to work, and offered money to sales workers and cart owners, most of whom were teenagers, to join the popular committees for 1,500 Syrian pounds [just over $10] for every operation.”

It was, he said, “a nice sum of money…[at the market]. I barely made 400 Syrian pounds [less than $3] a day. They also offered to give us hashish and drug pills, which we previously had to steal [money] to be able to buy. Joining the shabiha meant we had the chance to belong to the [powerful] hashish and tobacco gangs.”

What Walid described fit the many other testimonies that have been reported about the establishment of the pro-regime militias by the regime security apparatus and the ruling Baath party….

For Walid, who has been using drugs and hashish since he was 17, this was the opportunity to lead the easy life. Now he would not need to work hard or steal money to be able to pay for his pills and cigarettes.

As he spoke, Um Walid begged her son to clean up and come home. She said he had stolen from her and from other families when he needed money for drugs during his youth.

Walid denied ever killing anyone since he joined the popular committees for which he has helped disperse demonstrations and detain protesters. He seemed unconcerned with their fate after handing them over to Syrian intelligence.

He was confident in the idea that he himself would never be detained, because the checkpoint he now mans is in a government-controlled area far from the front lines. His only goal is to keep getting his fix of hashish and pills, as well as his monthly shabiha salary of 20,000 Syrian pounds [nearly $150].

Walid left the house in a rush, as his mother begged him to stay.

“I’m not happy,” she said. “But I don’t wish for my son to be killed or to be captured by the FSA. There isn’t one mother in the world who would be happy if her son died, no matter the circumstances.”

VIDEO: Shabiha surrendering to insurgents in Aleppo earlier this month: