The BBC sees an easy ceasefire in a battlefield where the battle is in place.

City Hall: BBC Report in the last checkpoint before Suweida City

The BBC is trying to reach SUWEIDA, a southern city of SUWEIDA, where the sects between Druze Fighters and Bedouin Tribal Militia are crashed. Killed hundreds of people. There is an easy truce, but the area is very tense.

On Monday, we went within 6 miles from SUWEIDA.

The Syrian Army Commander warned us as we approached.

On the way, we have passed the devastated de Rouge village under the control of the Syrian government.

Over last week, this highway was clearly the battlefield. Shops and business are burned. Shell casing is scattered on the packaging road.

Every half miles we had a small group of the Syrian army. All young people drink hot tea in black and move the gun to the side.

grey placeholderDozens of government security officers are on the earthly road block on the way to Syria Weddi Dia.

There was a government security personnel armed in this area.

Four days have passed since the Syrian government has deployed the army to enforce the armistice.

The goal was to end a week’s sectarian violence between the minority druze religious community and more than 1,000 people who died.

It seems to be holding a ceasefire now, but it is easy to break.

When we headed south, we met hundreds of armed Beduin living on the side of the road.

In their unique red and white hair scarves, they were fired into the air as a Syrian government soldiers worrying and in a challenging atmosphere.

They all said they were ready to take weapons again when the armistice collapsed.

grey placeholderThere are five armed men standing in one line. Four four heads are covered with head scarfs and one hat. One is wearing a cam bulletproof vest.

The BEDOUIN fighter BBC said that if the armistice failed, he was ready to raise the weapon again.

grey placeholderA man stood a guard and crawled into his arm. He wears black clothes and his face is covered with Bala Clava and Desert Campus.

The ceasefire is maintained in the current state.

Meanwhile, Syria’s red crescent moon took the injured people from Sue and Da.

In the main hospitals of Syria, Deraa, we saw some of the injured people.

The 27 -year -old Ahmed (Ahmed) was crutched and was still in the fatigue of the Syrian army, but the left foot was severely bandaged.

“The rocket exploded, and I was fragmented,” he said.

“When we entered SUWEIDA, the houses in front of us burned, the children of the children were burned, and the children were cut off,” the young lecture said.

“The situation was beyond imagination.”

The BBC could not confirm his claim.

grey placeholderA young man in a camouflage combat uniform looks at the camera. His face is dirty and his eyes look tired.

Ahmed said that he was fragmented in the rocket propulsion grenade during the recent battle.

Outside the hospital, I talked with Riham Bermawi, a coordinator of the Syrian red crescent moon.

She called the situation “fatal” and said that there is a lack of medicines and first aid kits.

“I needed too much surgery,” he added.

She just could bring injured people from the Suweida province, but she said that it would be too dangerous on the road to try other medical evacuation that day because the sniper was shot in an ambulance.

grey placeholderA young man with a light machine gun on his knees is sitting on the land and the pile of debris. He is not absent and looks far away.

Syrian army fighters that take a break after recent actions

What is Syria’s future?

After the Syrian rebellion last week, Islamic rebel leader Ahmed Al-Shara had seen the most serious sectarian violence since the end of last year.

It came after decades of dictatorship under the Assad regime.

RAED Al-Saleh, Minister of Disaster Management and Emergency Response, said in a shelter for the victims of the Suweida region, “We all have to do more and unite for Syria.”

“We have a lot of challenges, but we have great hope,” he said.

“We believe that there are wise people in the community, so we can overcome this difficult stage and achieve peace and justice.”

But on the way to SUWEIDA City, we did not witness many of them.