He comes from an influential clan in eastern Syria and has been living in the small German city of Düren for five years.
Aged 45, he is anonymous because he is explaining how some of his kin turned to people smuggling when Syria’s civil war broke out.
When the Syrian revolution turning to armed revolution and people began dying in the streets, some members of his clan got involved in kidnapping and extortion.
They relocated to Turkey and began smuggling Syrians to Bulgaria, before expanding their network and activities.
Members of other close tribes soon joined the operation, as did former army officers who had defected from the Syrian military and security services.
This tribal alliance quickly became a key player in the smuggling of thousands of Syrians through Turkey to Greece, Bulgaria, and Serbia.
The smugglers proliferate
Testimony gathered by Al Majalla from refugees in Germany, the Netherlands, and France reveal the tragedies of the Syrian war.
It also shows how the ensuing chaos, social disintegration, and proliferation of so-called shabbiha (networks of thugs with direct connections to the regime’s security services) contributed to the emergence and proliferation of armed smuggling gangs.
Some were of a sectarian nature, as is the case of the shabbiha. Others gangs were orchestrated by families or tribes.