This Syrian conflict doesn't make sense to me at all. There are so many groups involved and the thing is that Assad is actually a Sunni and not even Shia.
He is from the Alawite community, which is neither Sunni nor Shia. They are a reclusive group like Druze, Bahai, and Yazidis.
They view Hazrat Ali with some kind of divinity, so they are not even Muslims if you research them fully.
Bashar Al Assad himself is an Atheist and devoted secularist. he follows a similar Baathist Pan-Arab ideology which Saddam did.
When the French and British left the region, they tried to put Non-Muslim groups in power over Muslims. Originally Ottoman Bilad Ash Sham included Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, and Western Iraq. Lebanon was sectioned off to become a Non-Muslim Christian Arab country, but later demographics made it Shia. Jordan was given to Hashemite rulers, descendants of the Sharifs of Makkah and Faisal I of Iraq. We all know what happened to Palestine...
Syria was put under military dictatorship of a 10% Alawite sect/ethnic minority ruling over a 90% Muslim (Sunni Arab mostly, and some Sunni Kurd) population first under Hafez Al Assad and then his son Bashar Al Assad.
Interesting that KSA,UAE promoted sectarianism which painted him as a Shia, which eventually Iran ran with to shore up its Shia proxies and unite them for the purpose of keeping him in power.
You have to understand that FSA would have taken over Syria and defeated Bashar, except that out of nowehere Daesh came (now we know on US and Israeli designs.) That gave impetus to PKK, Shia militias, and all manner of groups to come into Syria in full force.
Civilians in Syria suffered tragedies under all foreign forces, Daesh, PKK, Shia radical militias, and even the government of Syria under Bashar Al Assad. They are the real victims here.
Shias make 20% only in Karachi city and some trolls on internet and Pakistani media with origins in Karachi extrapolate this number to entire Pakistan. In Punjab, Shias are less than 10% and in KPK they are less than even 5%.
I also think so, numbers of Shia are exaggerated in Pakistan, perhaps to keep sectarianism to a minimum.
The Muhajir community has the largest number of Shias that I have seen, so Karachi is the largest Shia population. Agakhanis in particular are very prominent there.
I always heard 20% growing up, but there are not many Shias in Punjab. I always doubted that number. Although Sunnis and Shias in Punjab are fairly closeknit and you can only tell differences by first names. I used to go attend Ashura events in Lahore, Faislabad, and visited many Imambara there. I even remember they used to parade Zuljannah (horse of Imam Hussain RA) around the city, and I watched it thinking it is so cool.