Kinsabba
Town in northwestern Syria
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Kinsabba (Arabic: كنسبا, also spelled Kansaba) is a town in northwestern Syria administratively belonging to the Latakia Governorate, located northeast of Latakia. Nearby localities include Slinfah to the south, al-Haffah to the southwest, Balloran and Umm al-Tuyour to the west, Qastal Ma'af to the northwest, al-Najiyah to the northeast, Qarqur to the east and Sirmaniyah to the southeast. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Kinsabba had a population was 514 in 2004. It is the administrative center, but 16th largest locality, of the Kinsabba nahiyah ("subdistrict") which contains 35 localities with a collective population of 17,615.[1] Its inhabitants were mostly Christians during the first half of the twentieth century, but it had become a predominantly Sunni Muslim village by 1994.[2][3]
History
The rebels attacked the Kinsabba police station on 25 May 2012 and seized the weapons. Later, they withdrew from the village.[4] Syrian Arab Armed Forces captured the village from rebels on 18 February 2016.[5] Several months later, the rebels recaptured the village from Assad forces on 1 July 2016.[6] The regime forces seized the village on 9 August.[7]
As of April 2025 the village is uninhabited.[8] The police station was reopened on 17 September.[9]