The "Free Syrian Police", a 3,300-person strong police force which had received substantial support from the British and Dutch governments, has been dismantled after Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, an alliance of jihadist groups including the Nusra Front*, took over the majority of Idlib Province in recent infighting, the Middle East Eye (MEE) has reported.
The police force was dissolved as part of the terms of an agreement between jihadist and non-jihadist militants, with territories not governed directly by Turkey coming under the control of the militants' National Salvation Government, which controls much of Idlib.
"The damage in the region will not be limited now [that] the Free Syrian Police have stopped working on security, corruption and the spread of robberies and crimes, but a large number of police officers who are defectors from the Syrian government will be harmed and become unemployed, and this will damage society in general," Fadi Yassin, a resident and activist in the town of Kafr Rumah, told the outlet.
Half a dozen Western countries, including the United Kingdom, have provided support to the Free Syrian Police. Last month, the UK's Foreign Office accused the BBC of "inaccurate and misleading" reporting after it alleged that money going to the policing force had instead been reaching Nusra Front terrorists.
Late last month, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said that Damascus's priority remains the liberation of Idlib Province from the terrorist groups concentrated there. On 8 January, Syrian media reported that additional troops had arrived in the provinces of Idlib, Aleppo and Hama to repel Hayat Tahrir al-Sham militant attacks amid terrorist threats to shell residential areas of Aleppo and conduct other provocative operations.
*Aka al-Qaeda in Syria. A terrorist group outlawed in Russia and many other countries.