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Abdul Baset al-Sarout
Syrian footballer and rebel (1992–2019) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Abdul Baset al-Sarout (Arabic: عبد الباسط الساروت; 1 January 1992 – 8 June 2019) was a Syrian football goalkeeper and prominent rebel figure during the Syrian revolution. He represented his country at both the U17 and U20 levels.[4]
Al-Sarout became known by the epithet "Keeper of the Revolution", a wordplay on him being an ex-goalkeeper.[5][6][7]
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Biography
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Abdul Baset al-Sarout was born to a Bedouin family in Al-Bayadah, a neighborhood of Homs.[8] He was a goalkeeper for Al-Karamah SC and represented the Syrian national team at youth levels.[5] When the Syrian revolution started in 2011, he led demonstrations in his hometown of Homs demanding the removal of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and became well-known for his chants. Initially, his speeches and chants were mostly nationalist in nature, but in line with the rising influence of Islamism among Syrian rebel groups, they adopted more overtly religious undertones.[9] Notably, at a 2012 opposition rally, al-Sarout called for the extermination of Alawites.[10]
As violence erupted, al-Sarout joined the Islamist Free Syrian Army. During the Siege of Homs, he commanded the Al-Bayadah Martyrs’ Brigade.[11] Four of his brothers, who were fighting with him in the same battalion, were killed.[12] In 2013, he was featured in the war documentary The Return to Homs.[13] Following the surrender deal that ended the siege in 2014, he was among the rebels evacuated from Homs to the rebel-held Idlib Governorate by the Syrian government.[14][15]
Before his evacuation from Homs, al-Sarout called on ISIS and the Al-Nusra Front, the arm of al-Qaeda in Syria, to unite to “fight shoulder to shoulder” against the Christians to reclaim Syria.[16] He stated: “We’re not Christians nor Shiites to be afraid of suicide belts and car bombs.” He also stated: “This is a message to the Islamic State, and our brothers in Al-Nusra, that all of us are one hand to fight the Christians and take back the lands defiled by the regime.”[17][18] By November 2015, following infighting between Syrian rebel groups, news spread that al-Sarout had pledged allegiance to ISIS, and a warrant was issued for his arrest by the Al-Nusra Front.[17][19] Al-Sarout escaped to Turkey, but surrendered in 2017 to an Islamic court in Idlib. He was acquitted, claiming that he gave up on joining the group after realizing that it was primarily concerned with setting up a caliphate, rather than fighting the government. He added that while he didn't join the militant group, he would also refuse to fight against it.[17][20]
Following his return to Idlib Governorate, al-Sarout was arrested by Tahrir al-Sham after being accused of participating in an anti-HTS protest in Maarat al-Nu'man.[21] He was released on June 24 and charges against him were dropped.[22]
In 2018, after the decentralization of the Free Syrian Army, Sarout became a commander in the rebel group Jaysh al-Izza.[23][24]
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Death

Al-Sarout died on June 8, 2019, during the 2019 Northwestern Syria offensive, after engaging in combat with the Syrian Army at Tell Malah.[26][23][24][14][27] According to a Jayish al-Izza spokesperson, as well as the pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, he died in a Turkish hospital in Reyhanlı, Hatay from wounds sustained two days prior,[28] when he was struck by Syrian Army artillery, after his unit clashed with the army in northern Hama.[29][27][30] He was taken a day later to the village of Al-Dana in rebel-held northwestern Syria, to be buried with one of his deceased brothers.[17]
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