MOSCOW, December 27. /TASS/. A Syrian student was killed as a result of indiscriminate gunfire during the Alawite protests in the city of Latakia on December 25, a source told TASS.
"A rally of Alawites was held in Latakia following the burning of their shrines. An Alawite, a fifth-year student at a Latakia medical school, died. We heard shots, they usually fire into the air, so he could have been hit accidentally," the source said. According to him, "another woman is in a coma, hit by a bullet when she was standing at the window, possibly filming" the protest on video.
"In addition, it became known that a Sunni was brought to the Alawite village, accused of something, and awaiting punishment. But the villagers called the new authorities, and everything was resolved quickly and peacefully," the source noted.
On December 27 in Tartus, security forces formed by the new Syrian authorities cordoned off the neighborhoods where members of the Alawite community were rioting. The perpetrators were given four days to lay down their arms and surrender to law enforcement. Similar measures were imposed on supporters of former President Bashar Assad in the Alawite neighborhood of the city of Homs. The Syrian Interior Ministry has warned that it will prosecute those who attempt to destabilize the situation and incite sectarian strife.
On December 26, transitional Interior Minister Mohammad Abdul Rahman said that law enforcement officers formed by the new authorities were ambushed near the city of Tartus. The clashes left 14 law enforcement officers dead and 10 others injured. Earlier, nine fighters from the interim authorities were killed while arresting a senior security official from the former government in Tartus.
On December 25, Alawites, representatives of Syria's religious minority, held protests in Jebla, Latakia, Tartus, and Homs after unidentified gunmen attacked an Alawite shrine in Aleppo. Authorities responded by imposing curfews and sending reinforcements to coastal areas, accusing Assad supporters of inciting the unrest.