Weapon prices rise with violence

Rebel groups seek more arms for the uprising against Al Assad's regime

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Reuters
Reuters
Reuters

Beirut: The demand for black-market weapons in Syria is soaring as the ten-month uprising against President Bashar Al Assad's regime turns increasingly violent, say Lebanese arms dealers.

Procuring sufficient supplies of weapons and ammunition has become a key requirement of rebel groups, including the Free Syrian Army, a military force composed of deserters from the normal army. Syrian opposition activists say they urgently need weapons to fight back against the security forces and hasten the downfall of the Al Assad regime.

"We are pushing for weapons but no one is listening," says Ahmad, a Syrian activist living in hiding in north Lebanon. "Even with limited resources we are making painful attacks. Imagine what we could do if we had the weapons."

The weapons shortage in Syria, the record high prices for arms in Lebanon, and the limited scale of smuggling into Syria suggests that the Syrian opposition has not yet secured the external logistical support that could help them tip the balance against the Al Assad regime.

Reluctance

The Arab world for now is limiting its involvement in the Arab League observer mission which is monitoring Syria's compliance with a deal signed last month to end the crackdown which has left more than 5,000 people dead, according to the United Nations.

The international community has slapped sanctions on the Al Assad regime but so far has shown a reluctance to play a more direct role. On Sunday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu urged a delegation from the Syrian National Council, the leading opposition body, to maintain ‘peaceful means' in pursuing its resistance against the Al Assad regime.

The prices of black-market weapons have climbed steadily since mid-March 2011, when the uprising began, but arms dealers say there has been a jump lately in the prices of certain armaments.

Double the price

"There's a big demand right now for rocket-propelled grenade launchers, hand grenades, and ammunition," says Abu Rida, an arms dealer in Beirut.

The price of a good quality Russian AK-47 assault rifle has almost doubled in the past ten months from around $1,100 (Dh4,040) to $2,100. A rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) launcher cost $900 last March and a single grenade was priced at around $100. Today an RPG launcher is worth $2,000 and each grenade $500.

"The prices are crazy. And it's all going to Syria," Abu Rida says. "The market is so strong that ordinary people are selling their rifles to make a quick profit."

Part of the price hike is due to the difficulties in smuggling weapons into Syria on a large scale. While there's significant smuggling between Syria and Lebanon, activity on Syria's other borders is not as high. Syria shares borders with Turkey, Iraq, Jordan, Israel, and Lebanon, all of them — barring the frontier with Israel — relatively porous and traditionally susceptible to smuggling.

The border with Iraq, in particular, stretches across 595km of mainly stony desert. The Iraqi government of Nouri Al Maliki, the Shiite prime minister, has generally sided with the Al Assad regime.

Desire to assist

But the Sunni inhabitants of Iraq's Al Anbar province in the west adjacent to the Syria border share historic family and tribal ties with the Sunnis of western Syria and sympathise with the Syrian opposition. Following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, Washington regularly accused Syria of allowing militants to slip into Iraq to join the growing insurgency.

While it is unclear whether there is a reverse traffic of militants and arms being smuggled into Syria from Iraq, there is certainly a desire among some Sunni Iraqis to assist their brethren across the border. Jihadist websites from Iraq and elsewhere have posted numerous articles and comments calling for armed struggle in Syria against the Al Assad regime.

The backbone of the Syrian regime is drawn from the minority Alawite sect, an obscure offshoot of Shiite Islam, while the bulk of the opposition protest movement is Sunni, casting an ominous sectarian shadow over the intensifying confrontation.

‘Embark upon jihad'

In November the jihadist website Ansar Al Mujahideen posted a commentary by Shaikh Abu Al Zuhara Al Zubaydi, who gave advice on how the Syrian opposition should organise its struggle against the Al Assad regime.

"Arm yourselves with live ammunition and embark upon jihad against the Syrian regime," he wrote. "Peaceful revolution is useless."

The Syrian authorities have blamed Al Qaida for three suicide car bombings in the past month in Damascus that killed more than 60 people, the first such attacks since the uprising began. The Syrian opposition, however, has accused the regime of perpetrating the bomb attacks to back the claim it is fighting ‘armed terrorist gangs' rather than a popular revolt.

Security has been tightened along Syria's southern border with Jordan with land mines reportedly planted along some stretches of the frontier. Many Jordanians support the uprising against the Al Assad regime and King Abdullah has recommended that the Syrian leader should step down.

— Christian Science Monitor

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