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Protests erupted there on Wednesday among Alawite members – the minority sect to which the al-Assad family belongs – after a video circulated showing an Alawite shrine in Aleppo being vandalised. Government officials later issued a statement saying that the video was old.

Wednesday’s protests began peacefully, said Alaa Amran, the newly installed police chief of Homs, but then “some suspicious parties … related to the former regime opened fire on both security forces and demonstrators, and there were some injuries.”

Security forces flooded the area and imposed a curfew to restore order, he said.

Mohammad Ali Hajj Younes, an electrician who has a shop next to the square, said the people who instigated the violence are “the same ‘shabiha’ who used to come into my shop and rob me, and I couldn’t say anything,” using a term referring to al-Assad-supporting militia members.

The protests were part of a larger flare-up of violence on Wednesday. Fighters backing the fallen Assad regime attacked members of the new security forces near the coastal town of Tartous, killing 14 and wounding 10, according to the Interior Ministry in the transitional government.

In response, security forces launched raids “pursuing the remnants of Assad’s militias”, state media reported. The state-run SANA news agency reported late on Thursday that clashes broke out in the village of Balqasa in a rural part of Homs province.