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SYRIA AFTER ASSAD

Palestinian faction chiefs quit Damascus amid pressure

The Palestinian factions "did not receive any official request from the authorities to leave Syrian territory" but instead faced restrictions and property confiscations, one faction leader said.

Palestinian faction chiefs quit Damascus amid pressure

A boy walks under Palestinian and Syrian flags hanging outside buildings damaged during Syria's 14-year Civil War in the Yarmuk refugee camp in southern Damascus on May 22, 2025. U.S. President Donald Trump offered a major boost to Syria last week by vowing to lift sanctions on the war-ravaged country, but he also asked the new Syrian president to deport Palestinian militants and ask foreign fighters to leave the country. (Credit: Louai Beshara/AFP)

DAMASCUS — Two Palestinian sources told AFP Friday the leaders of pro-Iran Palestinian factions who were close to former Tehran-backed ruler Bashar al-Assad have left Syria under pressure from the new authorities.

The factions, which enjoyed considerable freedom of movement under Assad, have also handed over their weapons, one of the sources said, amid U.S. demands that Syria's new authorities take steps against Iran-backed Palestinian groups based in the country.

A pro-Iran Palestinian factional leader who left after Assad's December ouster said on condition of anonymity that "most of the Palestinian factional leadership that received support from Tehran has left Damascus," while another still based there confirmed the development.

"The factions have fully handed over weapons in their headquarters or with their cadres" to the authorities, who also received "lists of names of faction members possessing individual weapons" and demanded that those arms be handed over, the first added.

A third Palestinian source from a small faction in Damascus confirmed the arms handover.

Those who have left include Khaled Jibril, son of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC) founder Ahmad Jibril, as well as Palestinian Popular Struggle Front Secretary-General Khaled Abdel Majid and Fatah al-Intifada Secretary-General Ziad al-Saghir.

Washington, which considers several Palestinian factions to be "terrorist" organizations, last week announced it was lifting sanctions on Syria after earlier saying Damascus needed to respond to demands including suppressing "terrorism" and preventing "Iran and its proxies from exploiting Syrian territory."

According to the White House, during a meeting in Saudi Arabia last week, U.S. President Donald Trump gave new Syrian leader Ahmad al-Sharaa a list of demands that included deporting "Palestinian terrorists."

The first Palestinian factional leader said the chiefs joined up with groups from Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen that are also part of the Iran-backed 'Axis of Resistance' against Israel.

A number of Iran-backed groups fought alongside Assad's forces after civil war erupted in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.

Sharaa's coalition of rebels, which brought together a variety of Islamist groups, led the offensive that ousted Assad, a close ally of Iran, in December.

The factions "did not receive any official request from the authorities to leave Syrian territory" but instead faced restrictions and property confiscations, the first Palestinian factional leader said, noting that some factions "were de facto prohibited from operating" or their members were arrested.

The new authorities have seized property from "private homes, offices, vehicles and military training camps in the Damascus countryside and other provinces," he said. The Syrian authorities did not immediately provide comment to AFP when asked about the matter.


DAMASCUS — Two Palestinian sources told AFP Friday the leaders of pro-Iran Palestinian factions who were close to former Tehran-backed ruler Bashar al-Assad have left Syria under pressure from the new authorities.
The factions, which enjoyed considerable freedom of movement under Assad, have also handed over their weapons, one of the sources said, amid U.S. demands that Syria's new authorities take steps against Iran-backed Palestinian groups based in the country.
A pro-Iran Palestinian factional leader who left after Assad's December ouster said on condition of anonymity that "most of the Palestinian factional leadership that received support from Tehran has left Damascus," while another still based there confirmed the development.
"The factions have fully handed over weapons in...