Thousands of Syrian citizens have mobilized across nearly every major region of the country to join mass pro-Palestine demonstrations, condemning two key Israeli actions: a newly enacted discriminatory execution law targeting Palestinian prisoners and the ongoing illegal occupation of Syrian sovereign territory.
The wave of protests ignited on Friday afternoon in the capital Damascus, before rapidly spreading to cities and provinces including Daraa, Quneitra, Aleppo, Latakia, Homs and Idlib, as well as long-standing Palestinian refugee camps such as Yarmouk and Khan al-Sheikh. Demonstrators assembled in large crowds to organize peaceful marches, solemn vigils and student-led rallies, uniting in shared opposition to Israeli policy.
The mass mobilization was directly triggered by the passage of Israel’s controversial new prisoner law, which codifies the execution of Palestinian detainees within a racially segregated legal framework that explicitly excludes Jewish citizens from the policy. This discriminatory legislation has already drawn widespread international condemnation for its violation of basic human rights norms.
At Aleppo University, thousands of student demonstrators packed the campus grounds, waving both Syrian and Palestinian flags and holding hand-painted banners carrying messages including “Palestinian prisoners are not numbers” and “Executing prisoners is a crime against humanity.” Crowds repeatedly chanted iconic solidarity slogans, including “With our souls, with our blood, we will redeem you, Palestine” and “Freedom for the prisoners of Palestine.”
Beyond solidarity with Palestinian prisoners, the demonstrations also channeled deep, long-simmering anger over Israel’s ongoing occupation of southern Syrian territory, most notably the disputed Golan Heights region. In the frontier province of Quneitra, where local residents face repeated Israeli military incursions into their communities, a group of protesters advanced toward front-line confrontation zones, prompting Israeli forces to respond by firing illumination flares into the area.
Hours earlier on the same Friday, Israeli military forces shelled a civilian vehicle traveling through the Quneitra countryside, killing all occupants inside the car. Syria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs quickly issued a formal condemnation of the strike, labeling it a “flagrant violation of international humanitarian law” and accusing Israel of systematically endangering innocent civilian lives. The ministry issued an urgent call for the international community to intervene to stop what it described as Israel’s “repeated violations” of Syrian sovereignty and global legal norms.
In the southern city of Daraa, additional demonstrations drew crowds of angry protesters who waved national and solidarity flags and pledged unwavering support for the people of Gaza. Many speakers at the Daraa protests explicitly linked the Palestinian struggle against Israeli occupation to Syria’s own decades-long experience of fighting foreign territorial encroachment, framing both conflicts as part of a shared fight for self-determination.
