The main road enters the Syrian Sweida City which is surrounded from the West has changed dramatically for 12 hours.
Buldoser, parked on the side of the road, has been used to make several embankments to form sand barrier about 25 km (16 miles) from the city center.
Dozens of Syrian security forces stand in the line in front of the barricade when we arrived, and there were troops further on the road that stopped the vehicle to go further.
The Arab tribal fighters we saw fought angrily in the city the day before all had been camping next to the road. Some sleep behind their pick-up.
“We did not give up,” us shouted when we walked to the examination post.
The ceasefire agreement between the Bunker leaders in the city and Bedouin – and tribal fighters who had flocked to join them – had frustrated several.
Some of them, waiting with weapons hung on their backs, itching to return to battle. But for now, ethnic leaders have instructed them to hold fire.
Read more: Who is Druze and who they fight in Syria?
How long may be the key to the future of Syria and whether it can be a peaceful one.
Khalaf Al Modhi, head of a group of tribes called United Tribes, told the warrior group: “We are not against Druze. We are not here to kill Druze.”
But he spent a lot of minutes to punish senior Druze scholars in Sweida which was seen by many tribes as an agitator behind the clash of violence.
Hikmat Al Hijiri is the head of the Druze faction who is very suspicious of the new government led by Ahmed Al Sharaa and rejects the power of Ceding to Damascus.
Arabic tribal retreats from the city center means that the Druze militia under the control of Hijiri now is the people who decide who is in or out of town.
Around 30,000 people who are mostly foamy are considered trapped in the cities and cities around them, without electricity, a little internet and the supply of food and water that are thinning.
The dramatic situation of humanity deteriorated from day to day. But at the time of writing, there is still no safe corridor agreed upon to issue that is embedded inside.
In addition, there are almost 130,000 people displaced and forced out of their homes because of battles, according to the UN estimate.
Maintaining a ceasefire is the key to ensuring a solution found to help those who suffer, and quickly. This is also the most serious challenge faced by new Syrian leaders and temporary government.
The level of distrust between the Druze faction led by Hijiri and the new government is strong and deep. In such a way that the leaders of Druze have refused to receive trucks organized by one of the government outlets.
The new Syrian leader has struggled to convince the country’s minority that their safety under his leadership is guaranteed.
Druze civilians and human rights activists reported mass killings and the execution of Druze by government forces sent last week to extinguish the latest clashes between Druze and Arab Bedouin which had been at odds for years.
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Government forces pulled out of town only after Israel released a series of air strikes, saying they defended Druze. The bombing killed hundreds of Syrian troops.
But with the withdrawal of government forces, the Arabic Bedouin population said the city’s Druze militia began a series of cruelty to revenge.
That in turn caused thousands of tribal fighters to gather from all over the country to defend their Arab brothers.
When we were in the city, we saw several corpses lying on the streets, and many seemed to be killed with shots to the head.
Houses and businesses are still burning after looting the mass when the warrior retreats.
And now, there is a developing humanitarian disaster that occurs.
Additional reporting by Garwen McLuckie camera operator, specialist producer Chris Cunningham, and Syrian producer Mahmoud Mossa and Ahmed Rahhal.
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