PHOTO: Fighters of the Islamic State-linked Liwa Shuhada al-Yarmouk, one of the threats to citizen journalists in southern Syria
Citizen journalists in Daraa Province in southern Syria speak to Syria Direct about the risks of their work:
Abu Muhammad al-Hourani in the rebel-held central Daraa town of Inkhil, where four people, including the local council president, were assassinated last Friday:
Q: What security risks do you face as a citizen journalist in Daraa?
A: Kidnappings, assassinations and death threats are the main difficulties we face in our line of work. A lot of the time we don’t know who is behind them, or masked gunmen fire on us or rig our motorcycles to explode and kill us.
We can’t please all the factions, and what we do angers them, especially the hardline groups.
Q: Has this impacted your work or prevented you from reporting certain events?
A: Many of us are afraid to report the truth if it is connected to military factions, especially hardline groups.
We pay a blood price for the truth. The Assad regime doesn’t have a monopoly on hunting down citizen journalists.
Q: Have you personally been threatened by armed groups or faced an assassination attempt?
A: To be honest, I always avoid mentioning matters that I think might result in my arrest. I content myself with reporting bombings and the suffering of residents and civilians without getting involved in military factions’ affairs.
I say that after seeing my colleagues arrested by Jabhat al-Nusra and other factions. Recently I witnessed the assassination of an internet café owner I know. His motorcycle exploded in the morning when I was going to have breakfast with his family. We still don’t know who was responsible for the explosion.
Q: How do you keep working after these events in your town, especially amidst the ongoing {rebel] fighting with [the Islamic State-linked] Liwa Shuhada al-Yarmouk in the west Daraa countryside?
A: It’s really difficult to move around, especially amidst the fear of revenge operations by extremist cells and suicide bombings. A suicide bomber blew himself up three days ago at a Free Syrian Army checkpoint [near Inkhil].
Personally, I’ve been dreading these operations, even while going to the shops or the bakery to buy what I need. Even walking in the street has become a crime we could pay for with our lives.
Aboud al-Hourani, in rebel-held eastern Daraa Province
Q: What security risks do you face as a citizen journalist in Daraa?
A: We are under a lot of pressure from all the forces working on the ground. We aim to transmit events transparently, to expose the regime’s crimes and violations and to get across some small part of what the blockaded Syrian people are suffering under all kinds of bombardment.
Moving around in the area is difficult. We are afraid of assassinations by some factions and of being targeted by the regime and its militias.
Q: Has this impacted your work or prevented you from reporting certain events?
A: The kidnappings and assassinations have impacted the work of a lot of citizen journalists. Many are afraid for themselves. They are afraid of being assassinated or arrested or held at gunpoint, so they stay silent.
Meanwhile, others defy these threats and report events with transparency, especially what is happening right now in the western countryside with the fighting between the Victory Army and the Southern Front on one side and Islamic State cells on the other.
Q: Have you personally been threatened by armed groups or faced an assassination attempt?
A: My friends and I were previously threatened at gunpoint, arrested and had our cameras stolen. Honorable members of the FSA [Free Syrian Army] stepped in to protect us and put a stop to it.
Q: Which factions arrested you?
A: Some of these factions belonged to the FSA, and later broke out of the Southern Front to form an independent group. Some of my colleagues have also been arrested by Jabhat al-Nusra, others by [Islamic State-linked] Harakat al-Muthanna and Liwa Shuhada al-Yarmouk.
Q: How did they treat you? Were you beaten or insulted? What were you charged with?
We were attacked, arrested and had our cameras stolen under the pretext of working with the regime and that the media organization we work with does not align with their ideology. The charges were ultimately treason, collaborating with the mukhabarat [regime security services] and foreign groups, and selling video clips for exorbitant sums.
Abu Ali al-Hourani, a journalist in western Daraa Province
Q: What security risks do you face as a citizen journalist in Daraa?
A: Since the Syrian revolution began, the biggest problems facing citizen journalists has been the absence of any authority to protect and support them, like a union or something similar. Because of that, the media has become the enemy of some groups that have proclaimed themselves judges. Anyone who reports a word they don’t like is subject to threat.
Q: Has this impacted your work or prevented you from reporting certain events?
A: Some citizen journalists quit working or distance themselves from events that are happening. Even some revolutionary media agencies have stopped reporting and gone silent after multiple incidents and threats over the course of the revolution for reporting on some of the crimes and violations that are going on.
Under the circumstances of the fighting that the Houran [area] is witnessing, we’ve remained silent and neutral and only reported incidents and violations connected with the regime.
Q: Have you personally been threatened by armed groups or faced an assassination attempt?
A: I received death threats twice from FSA factions for filming a video after the assassination of an FSA commander.