A convoy of Syria's new security forces departs from the northwestern city of Idlib, as reinforcement for the coastal area on March 8, 2025. Photo by Omar HAJ KADOUR / AFP.
Damascus: Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa called on Sunday for peace and national unity after days of clashes between security forces and loyalists of the former government that have killed more than 1,000 people, most of them Alawite civilians.
"We must preserve national unity (and) civil peace as much as possible and, God willing, we will be able to live together in this country," Sharaa said in a speech delivered from a mosque in a neighbourhood of Damascus where he spent part of his childhood.
He added that as long "the mosques have taught their children morality... and fairness and justice among the people, there is no fear for Syria, God willing".
The clashes along Syria's Mediterranean coast have escalated into the largest challenge to the new government's security forces since Sharaa's coalition toppled Assad in December.
During a sermon on Sunday, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch John X appealed to Sharaa to "put a stop to these massacres... and give a sense of safety and security to all the people of Syria, regardless of their sect".
"The targeted areas were predominantly inhabited by Alawites and Christians," he said. "Many innocent Christians have also been killed."
"Those who were killed were not all regime remnants, rather the majority of them were innocent, unarmed civilians, with women and children among them," he said.
The coastal provinces of Latakia and Tartus are the heartland of the country's Alawite minority, the religious group to which the Assad family belonged.
Latakia is also home to a small Christian community, though the majority of Syrian Christians fled during the civil war.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 745 Alawite civilians have been killed in Latakia and Tartus since the deadly clashes began on Thursday.
The fighting has killed 125 members of the new government's security forces and 148 pro-Assad fighters, according to the Observatory's figures, taking the overall death toll to 1,018.
Restoring security is a major challenge for the new government after more than 13 years of civil war, while Sharaa has sought to reassure minorities their rights will be protected.