Shiite Afghans fighting for Syria's Assad: monitor
Shiite Muslim militiamen from Afghanistan have been fighting in Syria for months alongside President Bashar al-Assad's troops, a monitoring group said Wednesday.
Afghanistan is home to a Sunni Muslim majority but nearly one-fifth of the population is Shiite, mainly Farsi-speakers and from the Hazara ethnic group.
"Shiite Afghan militiamen have been fighting for several months alongside Bashar al-Assad's army, especially around Shiite religious sites in Sayyida Zeinab" near Damascus, said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.
"They later started fighting alongside loyalist troops all over Syria, especially in the northern province of Aleppo," he told AFP.
Shiites around the world revere the shrine, with many volunteering to defend it from any attacks in the war between Assad loyalists and mainly Sunni rebels.
The Observatory did not specify how many Afghans were fighting in Syria.
In the northern city of Aleppo, meanwhile, 16 Assad loyalists, including Afghans, were killed in a clash Tuesday night in the Malah area, said the Britain-based group.
The army has been making advances in the area, and aims to cut off a supply route used by rebels who hold more than half of Aleppo, once the country's commercial capital.
Foreign fighters have streamed into Syria to support both sides in the conflict that broke out in March 2011 when Assad's forces unleashed a bloody crackdown on democracy protests.
Assad has been backed by thousands of members of the powerful Lebanese Hezbollah group, as well as Iranian, Iraqi and Palestinian militiamen.
"The Afghan fighters are clearly driven by sectarianism," said Abdel Rahman.
Syria's government has been dominated for 40 years by the Alawite community, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.
Sunnis make up the vast majority of Syria's population, as well as the rebels fighting to oust Assad.
Elsewhere in Syria, the number of civilians killed in army air strike against the Waer district of Homs on Tuesday has risen to 32, the Observatory said, adding that 11 were from one family.
Among the victims was a member of a delegation that had been in talks for a ceasefire with the government, as well as his wife and nine other members of their family.
Waer is the last rebel-held area of Homs, which was once known as the "capital of the revolution" against Assad.
The war has resulted in the deaths of an estimated 200,000 people, and displaced roughly half of the country's population, according to the UN.
The majority of fatalities are reportedly of civilians, primarily killed by pro-Assad forces, although other groups are also implicated.
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