Hassan and Moatasem Deeb “were killed Friday in a rebel assault on the Abu Zeid army checkpoint near Qalaat Al Hosn” in Homs province, Shaikh Mohammad Ebrahim said.
Their deaths have devastated their parents, who had already lost a third son Rabih to sectarian fighting in Tripoli last year.
Shaikh Mohammad said Moatasem, 18, blew himself up in a suicide car bomb at the checkpoint, and Hassan, 21, died in the assault that followed.
The youths apparently did not die in vain, as the assault on the checkpoint succeeded, said the cleric.
Cousin Jihad Deeb said that, although the youths had long been “deeply religious,” the news of their deaths hit the family hard.
While still in Sweden just a year ago, Hassan had started his university studies. And had he stayed in Scandinavia, Moatasem would have started his degree this year.
“But they left everything and travelled back to Mankubeen, where their parents have been living for two years now,” said Jihad.
Established to host families from Tripoli during a 1955 flood, Mankubeen later became home to people too poor to afford life in the heart of the northern port city.
Today, Mankubeen is an impoverished area that frequently gets dragged into sectarian clashes pitting Sunnis from the Bab el-Tebbaneh quarter and Alawites from neighbouring Jabal Mohsen.
Tripoli’s sectarian clashes erupt frequently, and their intensity has grown as a consequence of the war raging in neighbouring Syria.
Sectarian tensions in Tripoli see Sunnis generally supporting Syria’s rebels and Alawites, the Shiite spin-off group to which Bashar Al Assad belongs, backing the Syrian president’s regime.
The commitment to jihadist activities among family members goes further.
In 2007, one of the youths’ uncles was killed fighting alongside Islamists in a fierce battle against the Lebanese army in the Palestinian camp of Nahr Al Bared.
Another uncle is in jail in Germany over ties to Al Qaida.
Once they returned to Mankubeen from Sweden, where they had lived for several years, the young men “decided to cross the border and join Jund Al Sham”, said the shaikh, who stressed that no one knew of their plans.
Jund Al Sham is an independent jihadist group set up in 2012 and led by Lebanese radicals.
“Moatasem travelled first. He went to Qalaat Al Hosn eight months ago. Hassan joined him two months later,” Ebrahim added.
Jihad Deeb said “they had no work, and they lived in a poor area that has no state support. Most of us are not radicals, but you see many Al Qaida flags in Mankubeen.”
Asked why he believed his cousins joined the rebels, he added: “Hassan and Moatasem really believed that Sunnis must fight there.
“But their father and mother are devastated. The father is near emotional collapse. And you can imagine how their mother feels; she has lost three sons.”
The family was due to receive condolences from guests on Saturday, who would “congratulate” them for their sons’ “martyrdom” in Syria, said Ebrahim.
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