'Ghassan Hammoud, aged 46, fled Kafr Nabel in southern Idlib province in 2019, as régime forces captured opposition-held areas in Syria’s northwest.
He left behind a house he had built a few years earlier, and now lives in a displacement camp near the Turkish border, where he works as a day labourer to look after his seven children and his niece.
Hammoud’s life is hard; he relies on loans for almost half of his monthly expenses and is struggling to cope with abysmal living conditions and cuts to humanitarian aid. But it is what he has recently discovered about his old home, left behind in Kafr Nabel, that upsets him the most.
“I discovered my roof was stolen,” he said, still in disbelief. After hearing from friends and residents that Syrian régime forces had looted abandoned homes, Hammoud had been looking at Google Maps on his phone to view his old neighbourhood.
“Then a friend of mine who passed by the area sent me a picture which confirmed everything,” Hammoud said, his voice trembling. “It makes my blood boil.”
And Hammoud said, he was not the only one with a missing roof.
“I don’t think I was personally targeted; they looted the entire neighbourhood!”
Displaced Syrians who fled southern Idlib and Hama province over the past four years, along with human rights monitors, have accused Syrian régime forces of ransacking the ruins of their neighbourhoods and auctioning off agricultural land.
The Syrian régime has not commented publicly on the accusations.
Drone pictures show hundreds of houses and buildings in southern Idlib province stripped down to their concrete foundations. The glass windows, roofs, aluminium frames, and everything in between are all gone.
Some of the drone pictures show pickup trucks near scrapheaps of metal and bricks. Watchdog groups and monitors have shared photos on the ground of régime forces looting not just the foundations of the houses, but washing machines, refrigerators, furniture, and even steel pots and pans. Photos that surfaced on activist pages and on social media show construction workers drilling through homes and mosques to remove their roofs.
Syrian troops and state-backed militias have looted some three dozen towns and villages in southern Idlib over the past three years, after their residents fled northwards. Stolen goods are then sold online or in flea markets.
“We call them the army of looters,” 32 year-old journalist Ibrahim al-Soueid said, as he scrolled through footage he had collected from years of covering the conflict in northwest Syria with pro-opposition television station Syria TV.
Al-Soueid was born and raised in Kafr Nabel, and had to flee further north in 2019, when régime forces reclaimed the area.
“It’s so overwhelming seeing your own home defiled,” he said. “I didn’t think we would never return when we left, so we kept most things, even the children’s toys.”
The house al-Soueid inherited from his grandfather and shared with other members of his family was partially damaged in an artillery strike, but he says the doors, windows, kitchen appliances, and aluminium frames he put in were all looted.
But it was the messages on Facebook that most upset him.
“People who say they live in Kafr Nabel and appear to be pro-regime in their profile would send me defamatory messages,” al-Soueid explained. “And they would send photos of my looted home with threatening messages written on the walls.”
Looters in military garb sprayed the word “confiscated” and al-Soueid’s name on his living room wall.
In another photo, they had tagged “the home of the traitor has been confiscated”. Another picture they sent the reporter was a truck loaded with his furniture.
Local governments and security committees are publicly auctioning off land they claim to be vacant, but which the NGO says is in fact the property of residents who fled into opposition territory or out of the country.
Even people with their land deeds, other documents, and house keys have no way of claiming their property or land back.
Experts and activists say that Syria’s régime, struggling economically, has resorted to auctioning off property to generate revenue, while pro-régime militias have sold valuable looted raw material from homes for profit.
Most displaced Syrians do not have much to return to, having lost not just their homes, but their livelihoods. Meanwhile, human rights organisations have documented returnees being arbitrarily detained, forcefully conscripted into the army, and a host of human rights abuses.
Even with no political solution on the horizon, and the leader he detests entrenched in power, al-Soueid hopes to be able to return to Kafr Nabel.
“We hope to go back to our towns and homes, and rebuild this home that they took from me,” a dejected al-Soueid said. “My home is just one of thousands of homes that was looted.” '
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