Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts

Monday, August 06, 2012

Syrian army moves on rebels in Aleppo, Damascus

By Hadeel Al Shalchi | Reuters – Aug 3, 2012

ALEPPO, Syria (Reuters) - Syrian forces stormed the last rebel stronghold
in the capital Damascus in tanks and armored vehicles on Friday and
blasted artillery at rebels in Aleppo, where the United Nations said the
army was preparing a massive assault.

The violence came within hours of former United Nations Secretary-General
Kofi Annan quitting as international peace envoy for Syria, underlining
the impotence of mediation efforts in the 17-month-old uprising against
President Bashar al-Assad.

A senior U.N. official said a long-expected army onslaught to take Aleppo,
Syria's largest city and economic hub, was imminent following a buildup of
army reinforcements. The fighting in Aleppo has focused on the Salaheddine
district, seen as a gateway to the city for the Syrian army.

Rebels poured into Aleppo in July after being largely driven from the
capital, Damascus, where they had launched an offensive that coincided
with a bomb blast that killed four top security officials. The fighting in
Syria's two main cities has intensified the conflict over the past three
weeks.

Rebels told Reuters journalists inside Aleppo on Friday that they had
captured a large police station after days of clashes. Rebel commander Abu
Zaher said fighters had taken several police officers prisoner and seized
weapons and ammunition.

Other rebels said heavy fighting was taking place in Saleheddine, the main
battleground district, where they estimated 20 civilians had been killed.
They say 50 of their fighters have been killed there in the last several
days.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said "acts of brutality" reported in
Aleppo could be crimes against humanity. Both sides have accused each
other of carrying out summary executions of prisoners in the city.

U.N. member states voted overwhelmingly to condemn the Syrian government
at a special session of the 193-nation General Assembly that Western
diplomats said highlighted the isolation of Assad supporters Russia and
China.

Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin blasted the Saudi-drafted
resolution, which condemned Damascus and called for a political
transition, as "harmful" and said it "hides blatant support for the armed
opposition." Russia and China were among the 12 nations that voted against
the text, which received 133 yes votes and 31 abstentions.

DAMASCUS TO ALEPPO

In the capital, Syrian troops entered Damascus's southern district of
Tadamon with dozens of tanks and armored vehicles in a push to win back
the last rebel stronghold there, a witness and activists said.

Activists said most of the district was under the control of government
forces by early Friday evening. The army had been trying to enter Tadamon
for more than a week but was pushed back by fierce resistance from the
rebels.

An activist said the troops had executed several people after entering the
district. The account could not be confirmed.

"Thousands of soldiers have entered the neighborhood, they are conducting
house-to-house raids," a resident, who did not want to be identified for
security reasons, said by telephone.

The fighting spread to Aleppo from Damascus after the bomb attack on
Assad's security headquarters in the capital on July 18, which killed four
of the president's senior aides and encouraged rebels to step up
hostilities.

The Syrian army has reinforced its positions in and around Aleppo over the
past two weeks, while conducting daily artillery and aerial bombardments
of rebel forces in the city.

"The focus two weeks ago was on Damascus. The focus is now on Aleppo,
where there has been a considerable buildup of military means, and where
we have reason to believe that the main battle is about to start," Herve
Ladsous, the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, said in
New York.

HELICOPTER BOMBARDMENT

Annan resigned on Thursday, complaining of "finger-pointing" at the United
Nations while the bloodshed in Syria went on. His mission, centered on a
peace plan and a ceasefire that never took hold, had looked increasingly
futile amid escalating violence.

In an article published on the Financial Times website, Annan said Russia,
China and Iran "must take concerted efforts to persuade Syria's leadership
to change course and embrace a political transition." [ID:nR4E8D400Y]

"It is clear that President Bashar al-Assad must leave office," Annan said.

However, in a sign that Russia is not yet ready to abandon support for its
ally, Moscow hosted a Syrian oil official and promised to send gasoline in
return for crude that Syria is having difficulty selling because of
sanctions.

"We are ready to deliver all of our oil and receive what we need in
gasoline and diesel," Qadri Jamil, Syria's deputy prime minister for
economic affairs, told journalists in Moscow.

At the United Nations, the 193-nation General Assembly approved a
Saudi-drafted resolution that expressed "grave concern" at the escalation
of violence in Syria, with 133 votes in favor, 12 against and 31
abstentions. Russia and China were among those opposed.

The resolution has the assembly "deploring the failure of the Security
Council to agree on measures to ensure the compliance of Syrian
authorities with its decisions."

Syrian Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari complained that the meeting was "another
piece of theatre," adding that the "resolution will have no impact
whatsoever."

KEY CITY

Aleppo, with its 2.5 million inhabitants, is a prize that could determine
the outcome of a war the Syrian opposition says has already cost 18,000
lives.

Internet and telephone networks in Aleppo were mostly cut for the third
day, hampering attempts by rebels to coordinate and forcing them to use
couriers to deliver orders. Soldiers were launching rockets at insurgents
from an infantry school north of Aleppo.

Areas around the city are divided, with some villages loyal to Assad and
others favoring the opposition. Police and soldiers were setting up mobile
checkpoints on some main roads leading into the city from the north.

There are increasing signs of quarrelling among rebel factions and between
fighters and the population.

"The Free Syrian Army is causing us headaches now," said Abu Ahmed, a
local official who works with journalists in the Syrian town of Azaz, near
the Turkish border.

"If they don't like the actions of a person they tie him up, beat him and
arrest him. Personality differences between brigade members are being
settled using kidnappings and force. They are self-righteous and we are
not happy about it," he told Reuters.

Elsewhere in the country, opposition activists said Syrian forces had
killed at least 50 people during clashes with rebels in the central city
of Hama on Thursday, while a helicopter bombardment killed 16 rebels near
the southern town of Deraa.

In Damascus, at least 20 people were killed on Thursday when security
forces fired three mortar rounds at a Palestinian camp that is home to
100,000 refugees, medical sources said. Palestinian leaders in the West
Bank and Gaza condemned the attack.

(Additional reporting Dominic Evans and Mariam Karouny in Beirut, Gabriela
Baczynska in Moscow, Tom Miles in Geneva, Khaled Yacoub Oweis in Amman,
Sui-Lee Wee in Beijing and Louis Charbonneau at the United Nations;
Writing by Giles Elgood; Editing by Peter Graff, Claudia Parsons, Doina
Chiacu)

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Syria After the Massacre

May 28, 2012 counterpunch.org by PATRICK COCKBURN
Long War Looms

Damascus

Parts of Syria are convulsed by civil war, while in other areas life
continues almost as normal. At the same moment as more than 30 children
had their throats cut and dozens of civilians were killed by shelling in
Houla in central Syria on Friday, people in Damascus were picnicking on
the slopes of Mount Qassioun, overlooking the capital.

Syria yesterday denied that its forces had carried out the massacre of at
least 116 people including dozens of children in Houla, claiming that the
slaughter was the work of rebels.

But it did not give a detailed account of what had happened that would
convincingly refute allegations by insurgents, largely supported by UN
monitors, that military units and militia men loyal to the government had
carried out the killings.

Sources in Damascus told me yesterday that they believed the attack had
been carried out by regime forces in revenge for the killing of a
government informant in the nearby Alawite village of Kabou a month
earlier.

The claims and counterclaims came as shelling of neighborhoods in the
central Syrian city of Hama, the rebel-held town of Rastan north of Homs,
and areas of the Damascus suburbs were reported by the Local Coordination
Committees and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in
Britain.

The government in Damascus yesterday appeared to be somewhat leaderless
and seemed slow to take on board the impact of an outrage in which people
across the world are blaming the Syrian authorities for the murder and
mutilation of children. “I get the impression that there is nobody in firm
control of Syrian policy and the Syrian armed forces,” said a diplomat
yesterday.

The Syrian government is claiming that the massacre happened after 100
heavily armed men attacked government checkpoints around Houla early on
Saturday morning and then butchered the inhabitants of Houla over a
nine-hour period. Blaming “terrorists” for the massacre, Foreign Ministry
spokesman Jihad Makdissi told reporters in Damascus that “women, children
and old men were shot dead. This is not the hallmark of the heroic Syrian
army.”

The opposition gave a more detailed account of what happened, saying that
Houla was first shelled on Thursday after street protests by villagers.
This has been confirmed by UN ceasefire monitors, who later found
large-caliber shell casing. Anti-government militants say that “shabibah”
militia men from the Alawite community loyal to President Bashar al-Assad
entered Houla and hacked or shot its people to death.

An opposition eyewitness, named by news agencies as Maysara al-Alhawi,
said he saw the bodies of six children and their parents in a looted house
in the town.

He told a news agency: “The children’s corpses were piled on top of each
other, either with their throats cut or shot at close range.

“I helped collect more than 100 bodies in the last two days, mostly women
and children. The last were six members of the al-Kurdi family. A father
and his five kids. The mother is missing,” he said.

Alawite villagers in the area of Houla were said to be frightened of
retaliation for the massacre and have been donating blood for the wounded,
the number of which is believed to be between 300-400.

Fighting can be intense, but it is also sporadic, even in highly contested
areas. Over the past week, insurgents, many of them defectors from the
army, have been fighting to capture Rastan, a strategically placed town on
the road running north from Homs. During the same period, militants in the
small city of Douma, an opposition stronghold on the outskirts of
Damascus, were involved in UN mediation over access to hospitals, the
release of detainees and the restoration of services. Soldiers manning
sand-bagged checkpoints surrounding Douma’s narrow streets, where shops
and markets were reopening, looked bored and relaxed.

Kofi Annan, the UN-Arab League envoy, returns to Damascus in the next
couple of days to attempt to give more substance to the so-called
ceasefire that began on 12 April. This now looks like a critical visit, as
the Houla slaughter makes Syria once again the centre of international
attention and a possible target for some form of foreign intervention.

The ceasefire was only sporadically implemented from the beginning. The
government has always had more interest in its successful implementation,
which would stabilize its authority, than the insurgents, who need to keep
the pot of rebellion boiling. The UN monitoring team says that during the
ceasefire “the level of offensive military operations by the government
significantly decreased” while there has been “an increase in militant
attacks and targeted killings”. But any credit the Syrian government might
be hoping for in showing restraint will disappear if the latest atrocities
are confirmed.

A Long War Looms

Not that anybody in Syria expects a quick solution to the crisis in which
a mosaic of different interests and factions are battling to control the
country. “My picture of Syrian society is that 30 per cent of people are
militantly against the government, 30 per cent are for them, and 40 per
cent don’t like anybody very much,” said a Christian in Damascus. A
diplomat said people are much more polarized than six months ago into
pro-government, anti-government and “what I term the anti-anti government,
the people who dislike the regime, but equally fear the opposition”. The
government has been exploiting this by targeting its non-violent opponents
“so they can say it is a choice between us and guys with long beards.
People want change, but they are frightened it might be for the worse”.

Conversations with liberally minded critics of the regime in Damascus
reflect these differences. “If I made even the most peaceful protest I
would be immediately arrested,” said one woman in frustration. “The exiled
opposition leaders have not developed a serious plan to reassure the
minorities [Alawites, Christians, Druze, Kurds], though they are the main
supporters of the government,” added a businessman whose business is
collapsing, forcing him to live off his savings.

Could the present stalemate change as a result of the death of all those
people in Houla on Friday? Internationally, the atrocity, if confirmed in
detail, will increase pressure for foreign support for the insurgency and
tighter sanctions on Syria. Weapons from Saudi Arabia are now reportedly
reaching the rebels and their degree of co-ordination in the fighting at
Rastan is greater than a few months ago.

The Syrian government says its has been abiding by the ceasefire except
where it comes under attack. Speaking before the Houla killings, Jihad
Makdissi, the spokesman for the Syrian Foreign Affairs Ministry, said:
“Since we signed the ceasefire on 12 April, we have documented 3,500
violations of it by the opposition.” But the bombardment of civilian
areas, with the gory consequences at Houla showing on every television
screen in the world, will confirm Syria’s status as a pariah, from which
it had been starting to emerge.

Mr Makdissi said that an earlier monitoring mission by the Arab League had
been “binned” by Arab leaders because it showed that the opposition was
armed and on the offensive. There is no doubt that the opposition has
become militarized, but this is not surprising given the repression of
peaceful protest. “What Syria needs is gradual evolution, not armed
confrontation,” said Mr Makdissi. “You want Syria to reform, but you
impose sanctions, so there is no gas for people to cook on.”

The Syrian government has been growing stronger over the past seven weeks,
because the Kofi Annan plan reduced calls for international intervention.
The killings at Houla have put this in doubt and will put pressure on
Annan for a more substantive ceasefire plan than the present one, which
saw each side abide by it only when it was militarily convenient for them
to do so.

Will the latest killings have an impact on how Syrians see the struggle
for power? The indiscriminate and excessive nature of government violence
over the past 14 months has alienated swathes of Syrians not naturally
sympathetic to revolution. “It is not just that 10,000 people have died,
but the bestial way in which they died,” said one well-off and secular
woman in Damascus.

For all the criticism of the Annan peace mission and the 300 monitors from
the UN Supervision Mission in Syria, they appear to be the only way of
abating the violence. Even with an increased flow of weapons to the
opposition, the government still has a great superiority in armed force.
Indeed, this turns into political weakness because, as with the US in Iraq
and Afghanistan, or Israel in Lebanon and Gaza, excessive use of heavy
weaponry against civilians leads to a furious reaction at home and
political isolation abroad.

A better-armed opposition will be too strong to be suppressed by the
government, but the outcome is most likely to be prolonged civil war
rather than a clear victory by either side. Sanctions have already wrecked
the Syrian banking sector and are hurting the country, but they are not
leading to economic collapse. Syrians feel it is a collective punishment
on them all which causes little harm to the government. There is plenty of
food because Syrian agriculture, the largest sector of the economy, is
benefiting from two years of heavy rain after three years of severe
drought. There is no tourism and hotels are empty, but this was never as
important as in Lebanon or Egypt. The biggest blow has been the fall in
oil exports as foreign oil companies cease operating here.

Both the government and the armed opposition have become stronger in the
past six months and neither side sees much reason to compromise. It feels
like the beginning of a long war.

The Scene in One Damascus Suburb

Soldiers guard earth barricades surrounding Douma on the outskirts of
Damascus, while tough-looking militants control the streets. It is a
stalemate which neither side, for the moment, is willing to break.

On seeing UN vehicles, passers-by shout anti-government slogans amid
chants of “God is Great”. A boy rips open his shirt to reveal white
bandages on his chest which he also tries to remove, to show what look
like burns underneath. “It may look safe in the daytime, but after 7pm
snipers in high buildings shoot people walking in the streets,” says a man
riding a red motor scooter. “They shot two children and three young men
last night.”

A crying woman, veiled and in the black robes worn by most women in this
conservative Muslim district, says her son was arrested six weeks earlier
and she had not seen him since.

For all their complaints of snipers, arbitrary arrests and disappearances,
the crowd of a hundred people in the centre of Douma do not appear
frightened that they will be attacked by government forces. About a third
of the shops are open. Mobile phones do not work but somebody has
collected the rubbish, unlike in the embattled city of Homs where it lies
in rotting heaps. Local militants are well-organized, with disciplined
young men in a sort of uniform of black shirt and trousers guarding the
door of a mosque that serves as their headquarters.

“The Muslim Brotherhood has always been strong in Douma,” explains a
Christian observer. An official from the mosque says: “This struggle goes
back a long way.” He offers to show us the outside of a house belonging to
a militant that was sealed in 1980 during the last Sunni Muslim rebellion
and had never been reopened.

Inside the mosque, a team from the UN Supervision Mission in
Syria(Unsmis), which has 300 monitors in the country, are seeking to
mediate between local militant leaders and the government. Discussion
revolves around immediate issues such as detainees, sniping, access to
hospitals and the restoration of services.

Although people in Douma vocally claim the UN is doing them no good, they
want more UN monitors, particularly if they can be stationed in Douma at
night. Martin Griffiths, the deputy head of Unsmis, acknowledges: “Where
they are present violence tends to reduce. If we had four brave [UN]
observers staying overnight in Douma it would make a difference.” He adds
that until there is a reduction of violence, there can be no real
political dialogue.

Douma, a suburb of at least 180,000 people, shows few signs of physical
damage aside from some buildings pock-marked with bullet holes. Local
people complain of killings, disappearances and destructive searches, but
not of buildings being destroyed. Nevertheless, perceptions of the
violence within Syria are very much determined by rumor and YouTube
postings by the opposition. Many people six miles away in central Damascus
are convinced that Douma, which they dare not visit, has been pounded into
ruins. “Maybe the government did not let you see all the city,” a
politically moderate businessman says disbelievingly, but there had been
no government officials with us on our visit to Douma.

The violence is much worse further north. Taxi and bus drivers will often
refuse to risk the road to Aleppo, which passes through rebel-held
territory around Homs and Hama. The UN confirms that this week there has
been heavy fighting at Rastan on the main road north of Homs. “There are
many defectors from the Syrian army fighting there,” a UN official says.

While the Syrian army is meant to withdraw heavy weapons from city centers
under the terms of the Kofi Annan ceasefire agreement on 12 April, it can
keep them to guard main roads.

Although some international diplomats outside Syria say Mr Annan’s
ceasefire has failed, many Syrians believe the violence could get much
worse. The Syrian army could launch more assaults backed by heavy armor
and artillery on insurgent held areas. Reflecting this, a popular saying
in Damascus is that “the Minister of Defence has not yet got out of his
pyjamas”. According to a statement by Unsmis, over the past six weeks,
since the Annan ceasefire, the “level of offensive military operations by
government forces decreased significantly” while there has been “an
increase in militant attacks and targeted killings”. A report published
this week by another UN team, which has not been allowed to enter Syria,
said both sides were carrying out human rights violations, but blamed the
majority of them on the government.

Greater Damascus is mostly quiet, with Douma its most violent area. The
capital’s five million population has been swollen by at least 400,000
refugees from Homs. Many are living in hotels and apartments previously
occupied by pilgrims from Iraq and Iran visiting Shia shrines. The banking
system has been paralysed by sanctions.

But the degree of economic calamity has been exaggerated, economists say.
Nabil Sukkar, the managing director of the Syrian Consulting Bureau for
Development and Investment and a former World Bank official, says: “The
economy is hurting but it is not collapsing.” He points out that the
biggest sector is agriculture and rains have been good, tourism is not as
important as in Egypt or Lebanon, and what has been worst affected is oil
exports. Even in Douma the vegetable market is open and in Damascus there
is a minor building boom as people illegally add several stories to
apartment buildings on the grounds that the government is too preoccupied
to enforce regulations.

Mass detentions have, however, created an atmosphere of fear in the
capital, according to one diplomat. “People are more frightened than they
were last November and December,” he says. “The government is stronger,
but so is the armed opposition.”

UN Condemns Syria

The United Nations Security Council Sunday night condemned the
Syrian
government “in the strongest possible terms” for
heavy-weapon attacks on
the town of Houla, where 108 people, and up
to 34 children, were killed on
Friday.

While the carefully worded statement stopped short of blaming anyone for
the “close-range attacks” that killed many of the victims, the Council
condemned “the killing of civilians by shooting at close range and by
severe physical abuse”.

The statement said the “outrageous use of force” against civilians
violated international law and government commitments to cease violence,
including the use of heavy weapons. The Syrian government denies
responsibility for the massacre.

Diplomats say Britain and France had proposed issuing a press statement
condemning the killings, but Russia told Council members it could not
agree and wanted to be briefed first by Major-General Robert Mood, who is
heading the UN observer mission in Syria. Syria is once more facing
diplomatic isolation. Mr Annan is due back in Damascus today for talks
aimed at rescuing his foundering peace plan, which was agreed seven weeks
ago.

To survive, President Bashar al-Assad needs to avoid the international
isolation which befell Libya. He also needs to prevent Syrians, and the
world, from believing the fall of his regime is inevitable and they should
avoid betting on a loser.

“How will Russia respond to this?” asked one foreign diplomat in Damascus
yesterday. “That is the crucial question.” Russia remains Syria’s most
important friend. It was Russian and Chinese vetoes at the UN Security
Council in February that relieved Syria from the danger of foreign
intervention similar to that which overthrew Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in
Libya.

But Russia is paying a price for backing Syria, and this price will have
been raised by the Houla killings. It may not want to be allied to a
regime in a permanent state of crisis.

President Assad can look for longer-term support to Iran and, to a lesser
extent, Iraq, both Shia powers. They see Syria as being targeted by the
Sunni rulers of Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The Iranians have been giving some economic aid to reduce the impact of
sanctions. Hezbollah in Lebanon will also be loath to see its long-term
ally in Syria go down. But the Iranians, whose foreign policy is normally
cautious and devious, will not want to depend on the survival of President
Assad. They will look for an accommodation with any successor government,
though Iran still faces a serious strategic defeat. It will be losing its
one important ally in the Arab world. It will lose much of its ability to
play a role as a regional power.

The Scene in Damascus

In Damascus there are small but menacing signs of abnormality. Soldiers
prevent all but military and security personnel entering certain streets.
Heavy goods vehicles are being stopped on the outskirts of the capital
because of fear of suicide bombs.

The massacre of the children of Houla and their parents has deepened the
sense of crisis here, though many Syrians are becoming inured to violence.
Unlike the rest of the world, which focuses on Syria only intermittently
when there is some particularly gruesome outrage, people here may be
losing their sense of shock after seeing 13,000 die in the last 15 months,
according to the latest estimates.

But the most frightening indication that something is wrong is the
emptiness, the absence of people and vehicles in previously crowded
streets. Many stay at home fixated by a crisis they largely see unfolding
on television and online. In the hotel where I am staying in Damascus, I
am the only guest.

The government itself often feels curiously absent, perhaps because its
attention is elsewhere. Decision-making in Syria was always slow because
so many decisions had to be taken at the top but now it is worse.

“I sense that lower-ranking officials do not want to take decisions
themselves because they might be countermanded by harder-line officials
above them,” said a diplomat. At the same time, massacres like Houla, if
carried out by Alawite militia men, suggest a leadership not quite in
control of its own forces.

The mood is edgy. One person, in the space of a few minutes, shifted from
claiming he had total confidence in the happy future of the Syrian people
to expressing grim forbodings about the possibility of civil war.

“Why do you foreigners harp on about differences between our minorities?”
an anti-government human rights activist asked me in exasperation
yesterday. “The French said we would fight each other when they left
Syria, but nothing happened. We Syrians stick together whatever
governments say about our divisions.”

A quarter of an hour later, the same man, a Christian from the city of
Hama in central Syria, not far from where the Houla massacre took place,
was gloomily wondering about the prospect of sectarian conflict. He
explained that Houla is “on a tongue of land where the people are Sunni,
but the villages around it are Alawite and Christian. I know it well
because my wife comes from a village near there.” He said he was very
worried that if it turned out that the Sunni villagers, including 34
children, had been murdered by militia men from neighboring Alawite
villages then “I do not know what will happen”.

Damascus is deeply affected by the crisis, though this is not always
visible. The banks have been cut off from the rest of the world. “All the
banks in Lebanon are terrified of doing business with Syria,” said one
wealthy businesswoman. “My bank manager in Beirut did not want to take a
deposit I made even though the cheque was drawn on a British bank.” Many
in Damascus know first-hand about the physical destruction wrought by the
fighting in the centre of the country. There are some 400,000 Syrians
displaced by the turmoil, mostly from Homs, who have taken refuge in the
capital. Often they move into apartments previously occupied by Iraqi
refugees who have returned home, some claiming that for them, Baghdad is
now safer than Damascus.

PATRICK COCKBURN is the author of “Muqtada: Muqtada Al-Sadr, the Shia
Revival, and the Struggle for Iraq.


11-year-old played dead to survive Syria massacre

By BASSEM MROUE and ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY | Associated Press – May 30, 2012

BEIRUT  — When the gunmen began to slaughter his family, 11-year-old
Ali el-Sayed says he fell to the floor of his home, soaking his clothes
with his brother's blood to fool the killers into thinking he was already
dead.

The Syrian boy tried to stop himself from trembling, even as the gunmen,
with long beards and shaved heads, killed his parents and all four of his
siblings, one by one.

The youngest to die was Ali's brother, 6-year-old Nader. His small body
bore two bullet holes — one in his head, another in his back.

"I put my brother's blood all over me and acted like I was dead," Ali told
The Associated Press over Skype on Wednesday, his raspy voice steady and
matter-of-fact, five days after the killing spree that left him both an
orphan and an only child.

Ali is one of the few survivors of a weekend massacre in Houla, a
collection of poor farming villages and olive groves in Syria's central
Homs province. More than 100 people were killed, many of them women and
children who were shot or stabbed in their houses.

The killings brought immediate, worldwide condemnation of President Bashar
Assad, who has unleashed a violent crackdown on an uprising that began in
March 2011. Activists say as many as 13,000 people have been killed since
the revolt began.

U.N. investigators and witnesses blame at least some of the Houla killings
on shadowy gunmen known as shabiha who operate on behalf of Assad's
government.

Recruited from the ranks of Assad's Alawite religious community, the
militiamen enable the government to distance itself from direct
responsibility for the execution-style killings, torture and revenge
attacks that have become hallmarks of the shabiha.

In many ways, the shabiha are more terrifying than the army and security
forces, whose tactics include shelling residential neighborhoods and
firing on protesters. The swaggering gunmen are deployed specifically to
brutalize and intimidate Assad's opponents.

Activists who helped collect the dead in the aftermath of the Houla
massacre described dismembered bodies in the streets, and row upon row of
corpses shrouded in blankets.

"When we arrived on the scene we started seeing the scale of the
massacre," said Ahmad al-Qassem, a 35-year-old activist. "I saw a kid with
his brains spilling out, another child who was no more than 1 year old who
was stabbed in the head. The smell of death was overpowering."

The regime denies any responsibility for the Houla killings, blaming them
on terrorists. And even if the shabiha are responsible for the killings,
there is no clear evidence that the regime directly ordered the massacre
in a country spiraling toward civil war.

As witness accounts begin to leak out, it remains to be seen what,
exactly, prompted the massacre. Although the Syrian uprising has been
among the deadliest of the Arab Spring, the killings in Houla stand out
for their sheer brutality and ruthlessness.

According to the U.N., which is investigating the attack, most of the
victims were shot at close range, as were Ali's parents and siblings. The
attackers appeared to be targeting the most vulnerable people, such as
children and the elderly, to terrorize the population.

This type of massacre — even more than the shelling and mortar attacks
that have become daily occurrences in the uprising — is a sign of a new
level of violence. By most accounts, the gunmen descended on Houla from an
arc of nearby villages, making the deaths all the more horrifying because
the victims could have known their attackers.

According to activists in the area, the massacre came after the army
pounded the villages with artillery and clashed with local rebels
following anti-regime protests. Several demonstrators were killed, and the
rebels were forced to withdraw. The pro-regime gunmen later stormed in,
doing the bulk of the killing.

Syrian activist Maysara Hilaoui said he was at home when the massacre in
Houla began. He said there were two waves of violence, one starting at 5
p.m. Friday and a second at 4 a.m. Saturday.

"The shabiha took advantage of the withdrawal of rebel fighters," he said.
"They started entering homes and killing the young as well as the old."

Ali, the 11-year-old, said his mother began weeping the moment about 11
gunmen entered the family home in the middle of the night. The men led
Ali's father and oldest brother outside.

"My mother started screaming 'Why did you take them? Why did you take
them?'" Ali said.

Soon afterward, he said, the gunmen killed Ali's entire family.

As Ali huddled with his youngest siblings, a man in civilian clothes took
Ali's mother to the bedroom and shot her five times in the head and neck.

"Then he left the bedroom. He used his flashlight to see in front of him,"
Ali said. "When he saw my sister Rasha, he shot her in the head while she
was in the hallway."

Ali had been hiding near his brothers Nader, 6, and Aden, 8. The gunmen
shot both of them, killing them instantly. He then fired at Ali but
missed.

"I was terrified," Ali said, speaking from Houla, where relatives have
taken him in. "My whole body was trembling."

Ali is among the few survivors of the massacre, although it was impossible
to independently corroborate his story. The AP contacted him through
anti-regime activists in Houla who arranged for an interview with the
child over Skype.

The violence had haunting sectarian overtones, according to witness
accounts. The victims lived in the Houla area's Sunni Muslim villages, but
the shabiha forces came from a nearby area populated by Alawites, an
offshoot of Shiite Islam.

Most shabiha belong to the Alawite sect — like the Assad family and the
ruling elite. This ensures the loyalty of the gunmen to the regime,
because they fear they would be persecuted if the Sunni majority gains the
upper hand.

Sunnis make up most of Syria's 22 million people, as well as the backbone
of the opposition. The opposition insists the movement is entirely
secular.

It was not possible to reach residents of the Alawite villages on
Wednesday. Communications with much of the area have been cut off, and
many residents have fled.

Al-Qassem, the activist who helped gather corpses in Houla, said the
uprising has unleashed deep tensions between Sunnis and Alawites.

"Of course the regime worked hard to create an atmosphere of fear among
Alawites," said al-Qassem, who is from the Houla area, although not one of
the villages that came under attack over the weekend. "There is a
deep-seated hatred. The regime has given Alawites the illusion that the
end of the regime will spell the end of their villages and lives."

He said the army has been pouring weapons into the Alawite areas.

"Every house in each of those Alawite villages has automatic rifles. The
army has armed these villages, each home according to the number of people
who live there," he said, "whereas in Houla, which has a population of
120,000, you can only find 500 0r 600 armed people. There is an
imbalance."

Days after the attack, many victims remain missing.

Ali can describe the attack on his family. But al-Qassem said the full
story of the massacre may never emerge.

"There are no eyewitnesses of the massacre," he said. "The eyewitnesses
are all dead."
___

Associated Press writer Zeina Karam contributed to this report.

Pessimism in UN as Syria crisis worsens

Fears voiced as opposition Free Syrian Army says it will stop adhering to
truce by Friday if Assad forces ignore it.
Last Modified: 31 May 2012 Al Jazeera

UN Security Council members have voiced fears about the direction of
violence-wracked Syria as the rebel Free Syrian Army gave the government
of President Bashar al-Assad a 48-hour deadline to observe international
envoy Kofi Annan's peace plan.

The FSA's Colonel Qassim Saadeddine said in a video published online on
Wednesday that the government must "implement an immediate ceasefire,
withdraw its troops, tanks and artillery from Syrian cities and villages".

Council members were briefed by Jean Marie Guehenno, Annan's deputy, on
Wednesday as 13 bodies were discovered in the east of the country with
their hands tied behind their backs and signs that some had been shot in
the head from close range.


Colonel Qassim Saadeddine said if there was no response by Friday
lunchtime, the FSA would consider itself "no longer bound by the.. peace
plan".

"It [the government] should also allow immediate humanitarian aid to all
affected areas and free all detainees... The regime should also enter into
a real and serious negotiation through the United Nations to hand over
power to the Syrian people," he went on.

The FSA deadline came as the 15-nation Security Council was briefed about
the worsening crisis and the peace efforts by Annan.

"There had been very few positive elements in Syria," Russian ambassador
Vitaly Churkin said following the closed-door briefing.

Churkin called the political situation in Syria "sad" because the process
to bring both sides in the conflict into negotiations had so far failed to
get off the ground. He complained that "nobody is implementing" Annan's
six-point peace plan, including last month's ineffective truce.

US hints at bypassing UN

US ambassador Susan Rice said the unabated violence and failure to
implement Annan's plan could lead to the "worst scenario" in Syria, and
that the pessimistic scenario is the "most probable."

"The decision rests on the Damascus side," she said. "The council would
have to act swiftly and responsibly in order to avoid such a scenario and
support the Kofi Annan plan."

Rice said there were three ways the Syrian conflict could end.

The first would be if Assad's government decided to comply with its
obligations under Annan's six-point peace plan - stopping its military
assaults on Syrian towns, withdrawing heavy weapons, returning troops to
barracks and talking with the opposition on a "political transition."

The second option would involve the council taking action to pressure
Damascus to fully comply with the Annan plan, she said.

"In the absence of either of those two scenarios there seems to be only
one other alternative, and that is indeed the worst case," Rice said,
adding that it was unfortunately looking like "the most probable."

"That is that the violence escalates, the conflict spreads and
intensifies," she said. "It involves countries in the region, it takes on
increasingly sectarian forms, and we have a major crisis not only in Syria
but in the region."

In such a case, Rice said, the Annan plan would be dead and the Syrian
violence would become "a proxy conflict with arms flowing in from all
sides".

"And members of this council and members of the international community
are left with the option only of having to consider whether they're
prepared to take actions outside of the Annan plan and the authority of
this council," she said.

She did not specify what kind of "actions" she meant.

More mass killings

Also on Wednesday, Major-General Robert Mood, the head of the UN observers
in Syria, said 13 bodies had been discovered in the east of the country,
with their hands tied behind their backs and signs that some had been shot
in the head from close range.

The bodies were discovered late on Tuesday in the area of Assukar, 50km
east of Deir al-Zor. It comes after the weekend massacre of more than 108
people in Houla.

Survivors blamed pro-government armed men for at least some of the carnage
in Houla. The Syrian government denied its troops were behind the killings
and blamed "armed terrorists" and said it would conclude its own
investigation into the deaths by Wednesday, but it was not clear if the
findings would be made public.

The UN's top human rights body plans to hold a special session on Friday
to address the massacre.

Wednesday's UN observer report underlined how a peace plan drafted by
Annan has failed to stem bloodshed or bring Syria's government and
opposition to the negotiating table.

Guehenno, Annan's deputy, told the Security Council that Syria's
protesters "have lost fear and are unlikely to stop their movement",
according to a diplomat with knowledge of the closed session.

Guehenno said direct engagement between government and opposition was
"impossible at the moment" and expressed "serious doubts over the
commitment of Syrian authorities to the Annan plan", the diplomat said.

Friday, May 04, 2012

Syrian forces kill teen in Aleppo protests


By ZEINA KARAM | Associated Press – May 4, 2012

BEIRUT  — Syrian forces fired on thousands of protesters Friday in
Aleppo, killing a teenager, after a raid on dormitories at the city's main
university killed four students and enflamed tensions in a key bastion of
support for the regime.

An Aleppo-based activist said the protests were the largest the city has
seen since the start of the uprising against President Bashar Assad in
March 2011. Aleppo is a major economic hub that has remained largely loyal
to Assad over the course of the 14-month uprising.

"The people are incensed by what happened at the university," said the
activist, Mohammed Saeed. "Everyone wants to express solidarity with those
students."

Saeed said security forces were out in full force, firing live ammunition
to disperse protesters and arresting people randomly.

"With our blood, we sacrifice for you students!" people shouted.

Although Aleppo has largely been spared widespread violence,
anti-government protests have been on the rise. In recent weeks,
university students — many from rebellious areas such as the northern
Idlib province — have been staging almost daily demonstrations.

"This is what prompted this extremely brutal attack by the government ...
this is proof that the regime has started to worry about Aleppo rising
up," said Omar Idilbi, a member of the Syrian National Council opposition
group.

During Friday's protests, security forces killed a 16-year-old youth in
the Salaheddine district of Aleppo and wounded around 30 other people,
Saeed said. Scores also were arrested, he said. The British-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on a network of activists on
the ground in Syria, confirmed that a teenager was gunned down.

Amateur videos showed a large number of people shouting "Allahu akbar," or
"God is great," as a protester climbed an electricity pole in Salaheddine
to hang a flag that the opposition has adopted as its own — the national
flag that dates to before the ruling Baath party took over.

Other videos showed protesters shouting: "Death rather than humiliation!"

In the Damascus district of Kfar Souseh, regime forces opened fire Friday
on hundreds of mourners during a funeral procession, forcing people to
flee in panic as bullets whizzed overhead, said a witness who spoke on
condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

The witness said she took cover under a tree in a backyard when she saw a
sniper shoot a man in his 20s as he tried flee the shooting. She said she
saw the bodies of three people killed by army gunfire.

The violence has further highlighted doubts over a peace plan brokered by
international envoy Kofi Annan nearly a month ago.

A spokesman for Annan said Friday the international envoy believes his
peace plan for Syrian remains "on track" — a day after the Obama
administration offered a far bleaker view, saying the plan might be
doomed.

A U.N. team of up to 300 members is to monitor compliance with a truce.
U.N. peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous said about 40 U.N. observers are on
the ground in Syria and that the force will grow to 65 by Sunday.

Joshua Landis, director of the University of Oklahoma's Center for Middle
East Studies, said the protests in Aleppo could mark a shift in the
conflict.

"University students are Syria's future. They are the youth of Syria's
middle class and elite families — the ones who are supposed to be
sympathetic to the regime and leery of chaos and revolution," Landis said.

Aleppo University announced it was closing until final exams on May 13.

Thousands of Syrians also protested in the central provinces of Hama and
Homs, in the southern province of Daraa and in suburbs of the capital
Damascus. Activists reported at least 29 people killed across the country
in what is becoming an all-too common toll as the country grinds toward
civil war.

Friday is the main day of anti-government protests.

Also Friday, an Amnesty International researcher said she found evidence
that Syrian troops are systematically burning down homes and executing
detainees in apparent attempt to terrorize people and deter them from
protesting.

The Syrian military made people "pay a very heavy price, gave a very clear
message, including through very gratuitous types of violence," said
London-based Donatella Rovera, who spent the last two weeks of April in
Idlib province.

Rovera said she collected testimony detailing 30 extrajudicial killings,
including several in the city of Idlib on April 16, four days after a
U.N.-brokered cease-fire was to have taken hold.

One man told her that soldiers took his son from their home on that day.
The man said he later looked out the window and saw soldiers shoot eight
young men, their hands bound, as they faced a wall. The man told Rovera he
did not know whether his son was in that group, but that his body was
found later, along with others, in a nearby school.

In the town of Sarmin in Idlib province, a woman said soldiers seized her
three adult sons from their home, rousing them from their sleep on March
23. The woman told Rovera that soldiers blocked her from following her
sons outside.

"When I was able to go outside, after a couple of hours, I found my boys
burning in the street," Rovera quoted the woman as saying. "They had been
piled on top of each other and had motorbikes piled on top of them and set
on fire. I could not approach their bodies until evening because there was
so much shooting."

___

Associated Press writer Karin Laub contributed to this report.

Saturday, February 04, 2012

'Hundreds of casualties' in Syria's Homs

Activists say hospital overwhelmed in flashpoint city after government
forces deploy tanks and mortars.

04 Feb 2012 Al Jazeera

Hundreds of people have been killed or injured in a major army offensive
in the central Syrian city of Homs, activists say.

Activists talking to Al Jazeera on Saturday said the army had used tanks,
mortars and machine guns in the assault on the Khaldiyeh neighbourhood,
which began on Friday night and continued overnight.

Al Jazeera's Mysa Khalaf, reporting from Beirut in neighbouring Lebanon,
said sources in Syria told her bombardment of the area started after the
opposition Free Syrian Army attacked Syrian army checkpoints and killed
about 10 soldiers.

"Since then, it seems that Khaldiyeh has been under constant bombardment,"
she said."Several buildings have been destroyed.

"I've been told that the main public hospital is completely overwhelmed
and people have set up makeshift clinics in mosques. They are running low
on supplies of blood."


As reports of the violence spread, angry protesters stormed the Syrian
embassy in Cairo, the Egyptian capital, and staged demonstrations outside
the embassies in the UK and the US, demanding an end to the deaths.

Stones were thrown at the building during the demonstration in London.

'Random bombarding'

Hadi al-Abdallah, an activist in Homs, told Al Jazeera that army defectors
had captured 19 members of the security forces earlier in the day.

Activists said government forces were targeting the neighbourhoods of Bab
Tadmour, Bab Dreib, and Karm el-Shami simultaneously, as the military
campaign in Khaldiyeh intensified.

Video purportedly showing a building on fire in al-Inshaat neighbourhood
was posted online, after activists said the area was also shelled by
government forces.

"There has been non-stop bombardment in Bab Amr [neighbourhood of Homs]
... They've been bombarding Bab Amr and Khaldiyeh non-stop with mortar
bombs and tank shells ... it's just random bombarding on rooftops," Danny
Abdul Dayem, an activist, told Al Jazeera early on Saturday.

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 14 soldiers were
killed in clashes with opposition fighters and that five army defectors
had lost their lives.

The group cited witnesses saying 217 people had been killed in Homs, 138
of them in Khaldiyeh.

The opposition Syrian National Council decried Saturday's violence as a
"horrific massacre".

"The Syrian National Council calls on everyone around the world to speak
up and do something to stop the bloodshed of innocent Syrians," it said in
a statement.

Homs is one of the flashpoint cities in Syria's uprising, and some areas,
including Khaldiyeh, have become strongholds of the armed opposition.

The official SANA news agency blamed "armed terrorist groups" for the
violence, and reported that media reports were "distortion [and]
falsification".

UN vote

In a bid to halt the escalating violence, diplomats at the UN Security
Council in New York have for days been debating a draft resolution
condemning human rights violations in Syria.


Al Jazeera meets activists in Homs who are defying bullets to document
violence

A vote on the latest draft was expected as the council was due to meet in
New York on Saturday.

On Friday, a senior US state department official said his country was
"cautiously optimistic" that Syria's ally, Russia, would support the
resolution.

The latest draft does not explicitly call on Assad to step down or mention
an arms embargo or sanctions, though it "fully supports" an Arab League
plan to facilitate a democratic transition.

Speaking on conditions of anonymity, the official said: "From our
perspective, this meets the objective of supporting the demands of the
Syrian people and the Arab League ... providing a peaceful Syrian-led
political path forward."

In its statement, the SNC demanded that Russia "clearly condemn the regime
and hold it responsible for the massacres".

Activists in Homs have been calling for foreign intervention to stop the
violence there.

"We want any kind of intervention by any kind of troops. We want anyone to
help us. Our Free Syrian Army only has Kalashnikovs, has machine guns.
Some RPGs, some rockets" Dayem told Al Jazeera.

"They cannot fight the whole Syrian army, that has tanks, that has planes.
We want anyone to come in and help us.

"Civilians are dying, women are dying, kids are dying. Why isn't anyone
doing anything about this? No-one is helping us."

Commemorating Hama

On Friday, thousands of protesters took to the streets across Syria to
commemorate the 1982 massacre in the city of Hama, ordered by late
President Hafez al-Assad, that killed tens of thousands.

"While we commemorate Hama massacres, the son [President Bashar al-Assad]
is imitating his father," Burhan Ghallioun, the head of the Syrian
National Council, the main opposition bloc, told Al Jazeera.

The whole city [Homs] is being targeted by heavy weaponry. The hospitals
are in siege by the regime tanks. They want the injured to become dead."


Syrian activists: 200 dead in government assault

By ZEINA KARAM | Associated Press – Feb. 3, 2012

BEIRUT (AP) — In a barrage of mortar shells, Syrian forces killed 200
people and wounded hundreds in Homs in an offensive that appears to be the
bloodiest episode in the nearly 11-month-old uprising, activists said
Saturday.

The assault in Homs, which has been one of the main flashpoints of
opposition during the uprising, comes as the U.N. Security Council
prepares to vote on a draft resolution backing an Arab call for President
Bashar Assad to give up power.

Telephone calls to Homs were not going through, but residents of nearby
areas described a hellish night of shelling.

"Homs is on fire," said one opposition activist in a quieter area near the
city, who did not want to be identified for fear of reprisal. "All sides
are attacking each other and the number of casualties is more than anyone
can count," he said.

The government denied the assault. Syrian TV said the reports were part of
a "hysterical campaign of incitement by the armed groups" against Syria,
meant to be exploited at the Security Council.

It claimed that corpses shown in amateur videos posted online — bodies
that activists said were victims of the assault — were purportedly of
people kidnapped by "terrorist armed groups" who filmed them to portray
them as victims of the alleged shelling.

Two main opposition groups, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights and the Local Coordination Committees, said the death toll in Homs
was more than 200 people and included women and children in mortar
shelling that began late Friday. More than half of the killings — about
140 — were reported in the Khaldiyeh neighborhood.

"This is the worst attack of the uprising, since the uprising began in
March until now," said Rami Abdul-Rahman, the head of the Observatory,
which tracks violence through contacts on the ground.

The reports could not be independently confirmed.

It was not immediately clear what precipitated the attack, but there have
been reports that army defectors set up checkpoints in the area and were
trying to consolidate control.

Unconfirmed reports also said gunmen, possibly army defectors, had
attacked a military checkpoint in Khaldiyeh, captured 17 of its members,
prompting intense clashes with the military.

Homs is known to shelter a large number of army defectors known as the
Free Syrian Army.

The LCC called on residents of Homs and surrounding areas to support the
people of Khaldiyeh and nearby Bayada by donating blood and housing
families fleeing from the bombing.

It called for sit-ins in front of all Syrian embassies and consulates in
capitals across the world.

In Kuwait, demonstrators stormed into the Syrian Embassy compound on
Saturday, breaking windows and hoisting the flag of the opposition,
witnesses there said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to talk to the media.

They said there were no serious injuries at the embassy, where protesters
ripped down the Syrian flag. Police later cleared the area and blocked
roads.

There was also reports of protesters storming the Syrian Embassy in Cairo
and starting a fire.

Earlier on Friday, deadly clashes erupted between government troops and
rebels in suburbs of the Syrian capital and villages in the south,
sparking fighting that killed at least 23 people, including nine soldiers,
activists said.

Assad is trying to crush the revolt with a sweeping crackdown that has so
far claimed thousands of lives, but neither the government nor the
protesters are backing down and clashes between the military and an
increasingly bold and armed opposition has meant many parts of the country
have seen relentless violence.

The U.N. Security Council will meet Saturday morning to take up a
much-negotiated resolution on Syria, said a diplomat for a Western nation
that sits on the council.

The diplomat spoke Friday on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to be quoted by the media.

The move toward a vote came after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton spoke by telephone with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in
an effort to overcome Russian opposition to any statement that explicitly
calls for regime change or a military intervention in Syria.

The U.S. and its partners have ruled out military action but want the
global body to endorse an Arab League plan that calls on Assad to hand
power over to Syria's vice president.

Russia's deputy foreign minister, Gennady Gatilov, said Friday that Moscow
could not support the resolution in its current form. But he expressed
optimism that an agreement could be reached, according to state news
agency RIA Novosti.

Assad's regime has been intensifying an assault against army defectors and
protesters. The U.N. said weeks ago that more than 5,400 people have been
killed in violence since March. Hundreds more have been killed since that
tally was announced.

___

AP writers Elizabeth A. Kennedy in Beirut, Anita Snow at the United
Nations and Hussein al-Qatari in Kuwait City contributed to this report.

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Clashes erupt as protests spread across Syria


At least 32 reported killed in fighting between security forces and
demonstrators as thousands rally against Assad.

Dec. 30, 2011 Al Jazeera

At least 32 people have been reported killed during fresh protests against
the Syrian government, as hundreds of thousands of demonstrators flooded
streets across the country.

Activists said the deaths came on Friday as protesters, emboldened by the
presence of Arab League observers in the country, took to the streets
after noon Muslim prayers.

The UK-based Syrian Human Rights Observatory said more than half a million
people turned out for the largest demonstrations in months.

Al Jazeera's Dorsa Jabbari, reporting from Beirut in neighbouring Lebanon,
said the demonstrations were taking place in 18 different provinces across
Syria.


"One of the biggest demonstrations is near the capital, Damascus.
Activists have called on all residents to try and reach the centre of
their cities. In Damascus ... they are being met by security forces who
have used tear gas, according to many of the residents nearby," she said.

"We know that large demonstrations are also under way in the city of Hama,
[in] Homs, as well as [in] Idlib, where we've seen images of observers
themselves along with the demonstrators in the midst of it all."

Omar Hamza, a witness to the clashes between security forces and
demonstrators in the Damascus suburb of Douma on Friday, said government
forces shot at protesters who gathered at a mosque in the city.

"More than 100 people are injured right now," he told Al Jazeera. "It is a
very bad situation in Douma today."

Hesitant to speak

The violence comes as the Arab League observer team in Syria continues its
mission aimed at determining whether President Bashar al-Assad is
implementing a peace plan to end the violence.

Our correspondent said protesters on Friday were eager to show the
observers the situation on the ground and have their stories heard, but
some residents were more hesitant to speak.

"[The observers] are being followed by Syrian forces as part of the
agreement, so they are responsible for their safety. So some residents
don't feel they have the freedom to speak in front of Syrian authorities
in front of the observers," she said.

Syrian activists called on Thursday for the removal of the head of the
Arab League monitoring team in a new blow to the credibility of the
mission.

The opposition has condemned the observers' presence as a farce to enable
Assad to buy time and avoid more international censure and sanctions.

The 60 Arab League monitors are the first set of observers allowed in to
the country during the nine-month uprising.

Their remit is to ensure that the government is complying with the terms
of the regional bloc's plan to end the crackdown on protests.

Activists doubtful

Syrian activists, however, doubt Arab monitors are getting the access they
need to be able to give a fair assessment of the violence that the UN
estimates has left more than 5,000 people.

A member of the observer team told Al Jazeera the situation in Syria was
"very dangerous".

The official, who declined to be named, said there was constant shelling
in the city of Homs with some areas under control of the Free Syrian Army,
an umbrella group of armed anti-government fighters.
Observers plan to visit protest hubs in the country

The source said he believed the Arab League mission was certainly going to
fail.

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Hadi Abdullah, an activist in Homs, said that
monitors witnessed the crackdown on protests, but he was suspicious on how
they would report it.

"The observers saw a lot of violence in the city. They saw how security
forces shoot at protests. They also saw the bodies of dead people,"
Abdullah said.

"The monitors also saw destruction in the city. One of the observers asked
residents of Baba Amr neighbourhood ‘How can you live in this place?'"

International diplomats from China, Russia and the US have urged Syria's
government to facilitate the observer mission.

The Arab League plan, endorsed by Syria on November 2, calls for the
withdrawal of the military from towns and residential districts, a halt to
violence against civilians and the release of detainees.

The Syrian government says most of the violence has been perpetrated by
"armed terrorist groups" that are working against the government.


Emboldened by monitors, Syrians hold huge protests
By ZEINA KARAM | Associated Press – Dec. 30, 2011

BEIRUT (AP) — In the largest protests Syria has seen in months, hundreds
of thousands of people took to the streets Friday in a display of defiance
to show an Arab League observer mission the strength of the opposition
movement.

Despite the monitors' presence in the country, activists said Syrian
forces loyal to President Bashar Assad killed at least 22 people, most of
them shot during the anti-government demonstrations.

In a further attempt to appeal to the monitors, dissident troops who have
broken away from the Syrian army said they have halted attacks on regime
forces to reinforce the activists' contention that the uprising against
Assad is a peaceful movement.

While opposition activists are deeply skeptical of the observer mission,
the outpouring of demonstrators across Syria underscores their wish to
make their case to the foreign monitors and take advantage of the small
measure of safety they feel they brought with them.

The nearly 100 Arab League monitors are the first that Syria has allowed
into the country during the uprising, which began in March. They are
supposed to ensure the regime complies with terms of the League's plan to
end Assad's crackdown on dissent. The U.N. says more than 5,000 people
have died as the government has sought to crush the revolt.

Friday's crowds were largest in Idlib and Hama provinces, with about
250,000 people turning out in each area, according to an activist and
eyewitness who asked to be identified only as Manhal because he feared
government reprisal. Other big rallies were held in Homs and Daraa
provinces and the Damascus suburb of Douma, according to Rami Abdul-Raham,
who heads the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The crowd estimates could not be independently confirmed because Syria has
banned most foreign journalists from the country and tightly restricts the
local media.

Haytham Manna, a prominent Paris-based dissident and human rights
defender, said the observers' presence has emboldened protesters to take
to the streets in huge numbers.

"Whether we like it or not, the presence of observers has had a positive
psychological effect, encouraging people to stage peaceful protests — a
basic condition of the Arab League peace plan," he told The Associated
Press.

The observers began their mission Tuesday in Homs, often referred to by
many Syrians as the "Capital of the Revolution." Since then, they have
fanned out in small groups across Syrian provinces, including the restive
Idlib province in the north, Hama in the center and the southern province
of Daraa, where the revolt began.

The orange-jacketed observers have been seen taking pictures of the
destruction, visiting families of victims of the crackdown, and taking
notes.

On Friday, they were within "hearing distance" from where troops opened
fire on tens of thousands of protesters in the Damascus suburb of Douma,
activist Salim al-Omar said. They later visited the wounded in hospital,
he added.

Despite questions about the human rights record of the man leading the
monitors, tens of thousands have turned out this week in cities and
neighborhoods where they were expected to visit.

The huge rallies have been met by lethal gunfire from security forces,
apparently worried about multiple mass sit-ins modeled after Cairo's
Tahrir Square. In general, activists say, security forces have launched
attacks when observers were not present. But there have been some reports
of firing on protesters while monitors were nearby.

Omar Shaker, an activist and resident of the battered neighborhood of Baba
Amr in Homs, said the observers were "laughable," often walking around
with outdated cameras and without pens.

"Still, the bombardment and killings have decreased here in their
presence. We see them as a kind of human shields, that's all," he said.

Shaker said around 7,000 protested Friday in Baba Amr — the first
demonstration in the besieged district in more than a week.

"People are feeling optimistic," he said. "We've been protesting and dying
for 10 months. We have the feeling that the worst is over and the end is
near," he added.

In Douma, up to 100,000 people protested Friday. Amateur videos posted on
the Internet by activists showed demonstrators carrying away a bleeding
comrade after being hit by a gas canister.

"Look, Arab League, look!" the cameraman is heard shouting. The
British-based Observatory, which relies on a network of activists on the
ground, said the regime used nail bombs against protesters in Douma. The
report was confirmed by Douma activist al-Omar.

In another video, a huge crowd packed a main street in Homs, singing
anti-Assad songs and dancing in unison. The crowd sang, "We will die in
freedom," to the festive beat of a drum, as the unidentified cameraman
proclaimed, "For months we didn't hear anything on Friday" because of the
crackdown. "But because of the observer committee, they didn't fire a
single bullet."

"Victory is close, god willing," he said.

Thousands turned out in the city of Idlib to welcome the observers,
filling a large square, waving olive branches and flags, and chanting,
"The people want the fall of Bashar."

But the ongoing violence in Syria, and questions about the human rights
record of the head of the Arab League monitors, Sudanese Lt. Gen. Mohamed
Ahmed Mustafa al-Dabi, are reinforcing the opposition's view that Syria's
limited cooperation with the observers is merely a ploy by Assad to buy
time and forestall more international condemnation and sanctions.

One of Assad's few remaining allies, Russia, voiced its approval of the
observer mission so far, calling the situation "reassuring."

The Local Coordination Committees, an activist coalition, said at least
130 people, including six children, have been killed in Syria since the
Arab League observers began their one-month mission.

On Friday, activists said security forces fired on protesters in Daraa,
Hama, Idlib and Douma. In the central city of Homs, six people who were
reported missing a day earlier were confirmed dead.

The Observatory reported 22 people were killed nationwide, most of them
shot while protesting. The Local Coordination Committees activist network
reported 32 were killed. The differing death tolls could not be
immediately reconciled.

The Arab League plan, which Syria agreed to Dec. 19, demands that the
government remove its security forces and heavy weapons from cities, start
talks with the opposition and allow human rights workers and journalists
into the country. It also calls for the release of all political
prisoners.

Pro-Assad groups turned out for rallies in Damascus and several other
cities, waving portraits of the president, in an apparent bid to show that
the regime has popular support.

Also Friday, the rebel Free Syrian Army said it has stopped its offensive
against government targets since the observers arrived, in a bid to avoid
fueling government claims that it is facing armed "terrorists" rather than
peaceful protesters.

"We stopped to show respect to Arab brothers, to prove that there are no
armed gangs in Syria, and for the monitors to be able to go wherever they
want," breakaway air force Col. Riad al-Asaad, leader of the FSA, told the
AP by telephone from his base in Turkey.

"We only defend ourselves now. This is our right and the right of every
human being," he said, adding that his group will resume attacks after the
observers leave.

The Free Syrian Army says it has about 15,000 army defectors. The group
has claimed responsibility for attacks on government installations that
have killed scores of soldiers and members of the security forces.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Mass protests in Homs as Arab monitors visit

Estimated 70,000 demonstrate in Syria's protest hub, with Arab League
observers expected to return on Wednesday.

Dec. 27, 2011 Al Jazeera



Syrian government forces have reportedly fired tear gas and live rounds at
thousands of protesters in Homs, as Arab League monitors finished their
first day of observation in the city that has been the centre of the
anti-government protest movement.

Arab League peace monitors are on a mission to assess whether Syria has
halted its nine-month crackdown on protests against President Bashar
al-Assad.


The delegation met the governor and toured Homs on Tuesday. They will
continue touring the area on Wednesday, the Syrian television channel
Dunia said.

"I am returning to Damascus for meetings and I will return tomorrow to
Homs," Sudanese General Mustafa Dabi, head of the mission, told the
Reuters news agency. "The team is staying in Homs. Today was very good and
all sides were responsive".

This came as activist groups said 35 people had been killed across the
country on Tuesday. Activists earlier said dozens of people were killed in
Homs on Monday.

The 50 observers, who arrived in Syria on Monday, are split into five
teams of 10, according to Reuters.

Teams are also visiting Damascus, Hama and Idlib.

Mass protests

Activists, meanwhile, reported that some 70,000 protesters have tried to
march to the centre of Homs, and that security forces have been firing
tear gas in an attempt to break up the protests.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights earlier said a group was gathering
in Khalidiya, one of the four parts of Homs where there has been heavy
bloodshed as armed rebels fight security forces using tanks.

Footage posted online showed big crowds of anti-government protesters in
the neighbourhoods of Bab Sbaa and Khaldiyeh and a funeral march in Ghouta
area. Pro-Assad rallies were also reported in two other neighbourhoods.

Witnesses said the army pulled back tanks from Bab Amr, a flashpoint
neighbourhood in the city, ahead of the observers' arrival on Tuesday.
However, some activists said tanks had just been repositioned in other
areas of the city.

Also in Homs province on Tuesday, the SANA state news agency reported that
saboteurs blew up a gas pipeline in the area.

The latest explosion, blamed on "terrorists", is the fifth reported attack
on energy infrastructure since the outbreak of Syria's unprecedented
pro-reform protest movement in mid-March.

Arab monitors


Residents of Bab Amr try to talk to Arab League observers

Activists uploaded video footage onto the internet, which reportedly shows
residents of Bab Amr trying to speak to the Arab monitors, although Al
Jazeera cannot independently verify this.

"It shows a group of people from the Bab Amr neighbourhood having a
conversation with what we believe are members of the Arab League observer
mission," said Al Jazeera's Zeina Khodr, reporting from the Turkish town
of Antakya, near the border with Syria.

"They seem very desperate, and they seem as if the Arab League observers
are really their last hope. You hear the man telling them 'Come to my
neighbourhood, come to my street, people here are dying, there are snipers
on rooftops, we are not able to walk in the street'."

Khodr continued: "He repeatedly stresses the fact that 'We are unarmed, we
are unarmed civilians.'. Now this is what the protesters want the Arab
League to see, that they are not responsible for the violence but that
they have been victims of the violence," Khodr said.

Bab Amr has seen some of the heaviest fighting in recent months. A
resident also told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that people there were being
prevented from meeting with Arab League observers.

"More than 10,000 people here in Bab Amr have gone out to demonstrate so
they [security forces] are shooting randomly to prevent them from seeing
anyone," the resident said.

"There is a lot of tanks here in Bab Amr, but they are trying to hide
them... We can't see them [Arab League observers], we can't speak with
them, they are walking with the security forces. We can't reach them and
contact them."

'Element of surprise'

During their mission, the observer teams will use government transport,
according to their top official, General al-Dabi. Delegates insist the
mission will nevertheless be able to go wherever it chooses with no
notice.

"Our Syrian brothers are co-operating very well and without any
restrictions so far," al-Dabi told the Reuters news agency.

Other delegates said they expected to be able to "move freely between
hospital, prisons and detention centres all over Syria".

"The element of surprise will be present," Mohamed Salem al-Kaaby, a
monitor from the United Arab Emirates, said.

"We will inform the Syrian side the areas we will visit on the same day so
that there will be no room to direct monitors or change realities on the
ground by either side."

The observers' mission is part of a plan seeking to put an end to the
government's crackdown, which the United Nations estimates to have killed
more than 5,000 people since March.


Mass anti-Assad protest in Homs as monitors visit

By Mariam Karouny and Erika Solomon | Reuters – Dec. 27, 2011

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of Syrians have taken to the streets
in the flashpoint city of Homs to rally against President Bashar al-Assad
and plead for newly-arrived Arab peace monitors to bear witness to their
plight.

About 70,000 protesters marched towards the city centre on Tuesday where
security forces fired at them and lobbed teargas, activists said.

The military withdrew some tanks, in what the activists called a ploy to
persuade the monitors that the city was calm. Footage on the Internet
showed monitors confronted by residents as gunfire crackled around them.

The Arab League observers, who arrived in the country on Monday, want to
determine if Assad is keeping his promise to implement a peace plan to end
his military crackdown on nine months of popular revolt.

The monitors were due to return on Wednesday to Homs where crowds have
pleaded for them to visit the most violent neighborhoods. Activists say
tanks ran amok and scores of people have been killed in recent days.

Live broadcasts by Al Jazeera television showed tens of thousands of
protesters gathered on Tuesday in the Khalidiya district - one of those
yet to be visited by monitors - shouting and whistling and waving white
flags.

One activist held up a sign to the camera that read: "We are afraid when
the monitors leave they will kill and bury us."

The observers' visit is the first international intervention on the ground
in the country since the uprising began, and protesters hope what they
witness will prompt world powers to take more decisive action against
Assad.

The Syrian leader says he is fighting an insurgency by armed terrorists,
and that most of the violence has been aimed at the security forces.
International journalists are mostly barred from Syria, making it
difficult to confirm accounts.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based activist group,
said security forces killed 15 people across the country on Tuesday, six
of them in Homs. An activist network said 34 had been killed on Monday.

Some protesters shouted "We want international protection" in a video
posted on YouTube apparently showing an encounter with the monitors on
Tuesday. Some residents argued and pleaded with them to go further into
the Baba Amr quarter, where clashes have been especially fierce.

There was the sound of gunfire after a resident yelled at one monitor to
repeat what he had just told his headquarters.

"You were telling the head of the mission that you cannot cross to the
second street because of the gunfire. Why don't you say it to us?" the man
shouted, grabbing the unidentified monitor by his jacket.

Gunshots crackled nearby as two monitors and two men wearing orange vests
stood amid a crowd of residents, one begging the team to "come and see;
they are slaughtering us, I swear."

The head of mission said the first visit was "very good."

"I am returning to Damascus for meetings and I will return tomorrow to
Homs," Sudanese General Mustafa Dabi said. "The team is staying in Homs.
Today was very good and all sides were responsive."

Activist reports just before the monitors arrived on Tuesday said up to a
dozen tanks were seen leaving Baba Amr and others were being hidden to
fashion an impression of relative normality in the city while observers
were around.

"My house is on the eastern entrance of Baba Amr. I saw at least six tanks
leave the neighborhood at around 8 in the morning (0600 GMT)," activist
Mohamed Saleh told Reuters by telephone. "I do not know if more remain in
the area."

Al Jazeera's footage showed thousands of Syrians in the square in
Khalidiya, one of four districts where there has been bloodshed as rebels
fight security forces using tanks.

They were whistling and shouting and waving flags, playing music over
loudspeakers and clapping.

The protesters shouted "We have no one but God" and "Down with the
regime." An activist named Tamir told Reuters they planned to hold a
sit-in in the square.

"We tried to start a march down to the main market but the organizers told
us to stop, it's too dangerous. No one dares go down to the main streets.
So we will stay in Khalidiya and we will stay here in the square and we
will not leave from here."

WASHINGTON CONDEMNS VIOLENCE

The U.S. State Department condemned what spokesman Mark Toner called an
escalation of violence before the monitors' deployment.

"We have seen horrific pictures of indiscriminate fire, including by heavy
tank guns, and heard reports of dozens of deaths, thousands of arrests, as
well as beatings of peaceful protestors," Toner said.

"The monitors should have unfettered access to protestors and to areas
most severely affected by the regime's crackdown. They bear a heavy
responsibility in trying to protect Syrian civilians from the depredations
of a murderous regime."

"If the Syrian regime continues to resist and disregard Arab League
efforts, the international community will consider other means to protect
Syrian civilians."

Armed insurgency is eclipsing civilian protest in Syria. Many fear a slide
to sectarian war between the Sunni Muslim majority, the driving force of
the protest movement, and minorities that have mostly stayed loyal to the
government, particularly the Alawite sect to which Assad belongs.

Analysts say the Arab League is anxious to avoid civil war. Western powers
have shown no desire to intervene militarily in a volatile region of
Middle East conflict. The U.N. Security Council is split, with Russia - a
major arms supplier to Assad - and China opposed to any hint of military
intervention.

Assad's opponents appear divided on aims and tactics. He still has strong
support in important areas, including Damascus and the second city Aleppo,
and maintains an anti-Israel alliance with Iran.

(Additional reporting by Ayman Samir; Editing by Peter Graff)

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

'Scores killed' in day of Syria violence

At least 82 people reported dead after heavy fighting in Idlib, days before scheduled visit of Arab League observers.

Dec 20, 2011 Al Jazeera

Assad has decreed death penalty for anyone caught distributing arms with
"aim of committing terror acts" [Reuters]

At least 82 people are reported to have been killed in a day of violence
across Syria, less than a week before an Arab League delegation is due to
visit the country as part of a deal to end the bloodshed.

Activists reported the deaths on Tuesday after heavy fighting in the
province of Idlib and elsewhere.

The violence comes a day after at least 100 people were reported killed
across Syria, and just days before the scheduled arrival of a team of Arab
observers.

Al Jazeera’s Rula Amin, reporting from Beirut, said: "Activists and
opposition figures say killings in Idlib area are very large."

"Dozens have been killed but people differ who were among those killed;
some say they were defectors, others say armed men who oppose the
government," she said.

The team is to arrive in the Syrian capital, Damascus, later this week as
part of a deal signed between the government of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad and the Arab League in order to end the violence.

"It's a completely new mission ... and it depends on implementation in
good faith," Nabil el-Araby, the Arab League chief, told the Reuters news
agency on Tuesday.

He said that the initial team would go to Syria on Thursday, with the rest
due to arrive by the end of December. The Arab League wants to get 500
monitors into Syria by the end of this month.

"In a week's time, from the start of the operation, we will know (if Syria
is complying)," el-Araby said.

The advance team will include security, legal and administrative
observers, with human rights experts expected to follow, a League official
said.

Syria stalled for weeks before signing the protocol on Monday to accept
the monitors who will check its compliance with the Arab plan for an end
to violence, withdrawal of troops from the streets, release of prisoners
and dialogue with the opposition.

Change in stance

The change in stance had come as the Arab League threatened to ask the UN
Security Council to adopt its peace plan for Syria, broadening the chances
of international action.

As international pressure mounted, the UN General Assembly voted to
condemn Syria's use of force to quell protests, with Russia and China
abstaining instead of voting against.


Damascus said Russia, its longtime ally and arms supplier, had urged it to
sign the protocol on the Arab monitors.

Syria agreed to another Arab peace plan in early November, but the
violence raged on, prompting Arab states to announce financial sanctions
and travel bans on Syrian officials.

Elaraby said those measures would remain until monitors begin reporting
back. Arab ministers would decide the next step.

He said Gulf states would contribute about 60 of a 150-strong monitoring
team led by a Sudanese general, which would expect freedom of movement and
communication, including access to prisons and hospitals.

Journalists would also accompany the team, he said.

Al Jazeera's Amin said that "people on the ground hope that the observers’
presence on the ground would deter the government and would actually
decrease the level of violence and may even encourage more people to take
to the streets and put more pressure on the government".

"Now the government is betting that the observers would actually try to
verify some of its own account on what’s happening," Amin said.

"It's a very challenging task for the Arab League, they have never
undertaken such mission before, and the rules of engagement are still to
be worked out with the Syrian government.

"Will the monitors be able to travel freely on their own, will they feel
safe to travel to places like Idlib and Homs? Probably events on the
ground will dictate how will this mission evolve."

Meanwhile, the state news agency SANA said on Tuesday that Assad had
decreed the death penalty for anyone caught distributing arms "with the
aim of committing terrorist acts".

Violence continues

The Arab League deal does not appear to have ended the bloodshed.

Syrian pro-democracy activists are deeply sceptical about Assad's
commitment to the plan, which, if implemented, could embolden
demonstrators demanding an end to his 11-year rule.

In recent months, their peaceful protests have increasingly given way to
armed confrontations often led by army deserters.

Some opposition leaders have called for foreign military intervention to
protect civilians from Assad's forces.

The Syrian authorities have made it hard for anyone to know what is going
on in their troubled country. They have barred most foreign journalists
and imposed tight curbs on local ones.

The UN has said more than 5,000 people have been killed in Syria since
anti-Assad protests erupted in March, inspired by a wave of uprisings
across the Arab world.

Several weeks ago Damascus said 1,100 members of the security forces had
been killed by "armed terrorist gangs".


LinkFierce fighting in northern Syria before Arab mission

By Erika Solomon and Dominic Evans | Reuters – Dec. 20, 2011

BEIRUT - Fierce fighting has continued in the northern Syrian
province of Idlib, with activists saying 50 people were killed there and
elsewhere on Tuesday, shortly before officials arrive to prepare for an
Arab League effort to end nine months of bloodshed.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 23 people were
killed in fighting with President Bashar al-Assad's forces in the northern
province of Idlib and 14 members of his security forces died in a rebel
ambush in the south. The overall death toll on Tuesday was at least 47, it
said.

Idlib, on Syria's northern border with Turkey, has seen fierce fighting
recently. The Observatory reported that security forces machinegunned
soldiers deserting their army base there on Monday, killing more than 60,
and said rebels had damaged or destroyed 17 military vehicles since
Sunday.

The state news agency SANA said security forces killed five "terrorists"
in Deraa province on Monday night. It also said Assad had decreed the
death penalty for anyone caught distributing arms "with the aim of
committing terrorist acts."

Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby told Reuters in Cairo that an
advance team would go to Syria on Thursday, with the 150 monitors due to
arrive by end-December.

"It's a completely new mission ... and it depends on implementation in
good faith," he said.

Syria stalled for weeks before signing a protocol on Monday to accept the
monitors who will check its compliance with an Arab plan for an end to
violence, withdrawal of troops from the streets, release of prisoners and
dialogue with the opposition.

"In a week's time, from the start of the operation, we will know (if Syria
is complying)," Elaraby said.

Syrian pro-democracy activists are deeply skeptical about Assad's
commitment to the plan, which, if implemented, could embolden
demonstrators demanding an end to his 11-year rule.

France said it hoped the monitors could carry out their mission quickly.
But it also said Assad had a record of broken pledges and that Monday's
violence showed there "isn't a moment to lose."

"For months we have seen Bashar al-Assad not keep to commitments he made
to his people and he has increased his efforts to play for time in the
face of the international community," Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard
Valero said.

In recent months, peaceful protests have increasingly given way to armed
confrontations often led by army deserters.

Some opposition leaders have called for foreign military intervention to
protect civilians from Assad's forces.

In a show of military power, state television said on Tuesday the air
force and navy both held live-fire exercises aimed at deterring any attack
on Syria by land or sea.

The Syrian authorities have made it hard for anyone to know what is going
on in their troubled country. They have barred most foreign journalists
and imposed tight curbs on local ones.

The British-based Observatory said three more people had been killed in
violence on Tuesday, two in the city of Homs and one in a village in Idlib
province, the scene of a sustained military crackdown in the past three
days.

SANA said a captain in the security forces had died of wounds inflicted by
"terrorists" a week ago in the city of Hama.

U.N. TOLL

The United Nations has said more than 5,000 people have been killed in
Syria since anti-Assad protests erupted in March, inspired by a wave of
uprisings across the Arab world.

Several weeks ago Damascus said 1,100 members of the security forces had
been killed by "armed terrorist gangs." An armed insurrection against
Assad has gathered pace since then.

Syria agreed to the Arab peace plan in early November, but the violence
raged on, prompting Arab states to announce financial sanctions and travel
bans on Syrian officials.

The United States and European Union have imposed sanctions on Syria,
which combined with the unrest itself have pushed the economy into a sharp
decline. The Syrian pound fell nearly 2 percent on Tuesday to more than 55
pounds per dollar, 17 percent down from the official rate before the
crisis erupted.

Arab rulers want to halt a slide towards a possible civil war in Syria
that could shake a region already riven by rivalry between non-Arab
Shi'ite power Iran and Sunni Arab heavyweights such as Saudi Arabia.