You picked a fine time to go broke
UN. Then again, we all go for broke these days. Killers who don’t want to stop,
governments that don’t want to intervene, governments that do want to
intervene, and rebels who cannot afford to give up. Meanwhile, there is this
little miracle child in North Korea who feels left out. What can a UN do?
Friday April
5, 2013
News
Rebels
say take army post near Syria's southern border Fighters from the Free
Syrian Army said they captured the Um al-Mayathen post on the main
Damascus-Jordan highway in heavy fighting overnight that ended a siege that
lasted more than a week. Dozens died in the clashes they said. "It (the
garrison) is a major defense and now we will lay siege to the border crossing
and cut their (the Damascus government's) supply lines," Abu Omar,
commander of the Lions of the Sunna Brigade, told Reuters by phone.
Putin
insists peace talks the only way to end Syria's 'massacre' Speaking to
the German ARD television in remarks released by the Kremlin on Friday, he
rejected the Western criticism of Russia for its continuing supply of weapons
to Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime. Putin said that such shipments don't
violate international law, and he criticized those who send weapons to the
Syrian opposition. Putin said that peace talks should spell out the future of
Syria and provide guarantees to all parties.
Syria:
Humanitarian aid, a lifeline for displaced people The displacement of
millions of people across Syria has resulted in complete dependency on
humanitarian assistance in some parts of the country. Crossing front lines and
finding ways to reach people in need is becoming more urgent than ever before.
Report:
Hamas training Syrian rebels in Damascus area The Times reports that
the military unit of Hamas, which broke ties with former ally Syrian President
Bashar Assad in the wake of the insurgency, began training the rebels in the
Damascus neighbourhoods of Yalda, Jaramana and Babbila. “The Kassam Brigades
have been training units very close to Damascus," a Western diplomat with
contacts in both the Assad regime and the Syrian opposition told the London
daily newspaper. "These are specialists. They are really good.” According
to the Times, Hamas has assisted in the digging of a tunnel beneath Damascus in
preparation for an attack on the city, a skill that Hamas has honed smuggling
supplies from Egypt into the Gaza Strip.
Western
sanctions put squeeze on ordinary Syrians, regime unfazed “We’ve been
without electricity in the entire city for about two weeks now. We’ve only had
a few hours of water too, as it takes electricity to pump water through the
city,” he told The Daily Star over Facebook, adding that it was not unusual for
hospitals to go for much of the day without power due to the lack of diesel for
generators, and some have even stopped their services. “Sanctions only hurt
normal people. The regime doesn’t care, and gets the weapons and fuel for its
army from Russia, while the ordinary people suffer from high living costs and
outages.”
Obama
to meet regional leaders on Syria The White House said Jordan’s King
Abdullah II would meet with Obama on April 26… Obama will then host Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on May 16… Obama will also host Crown
Prince Sheikh Mohammad bin Zayed al-Nahayan of the United Arab Emirates on
April 16, and will meet with Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani on
April 23. Turkey, Jordan and Qatar have strongly backed the 2-year-old revolt
against Syria’s President Bashar Assad.
Rebels
look to extend gains from Raqqa Raqqa – a predominantly Sunni city that
sits at a strategic gateway between Aleppo in the northwest, Deir al-Zor to the
east and Homs in the center – fell to the rebels March 4 after a combined
attack led by Islamist brigades. The fall of the city was swift and
coordinated. Units from the Islamist Nusra Front and the Salafi al-Sham
brigade, in coordination with other Islamist brigades, easily overran Syrian
army units positioned at checkpoints around the city, sparsely manned by one
army unit, Division 17.
Special
Reports
Syria
in ruins: Photos capture shocking devastation caused to war-torn country
Buildings are in tatters and fallen drainpipes lay across the road after fierce
fighting in Deir al-Zor in the war-torn country.
My
new paper, prepared for a briefing in Washington, D.C. that took place on
January 15, 2013, is now out and is titled “Syria
2013: Rise of the Warlords.” It should be read in conjunction with my
previous briefing “The
Shredded Tapestry,” and my recent essay “The
Creation of an Unbridgeable Divide.”
Below the Radar
* The Kurdish Majority city of Qamishly in the northeast corner of
Syria has been ben witnessing some interesting developments of late. The city,
in a sense, is being administered in accordance to an unofficial power-sharing
arrangement of sorts allowing both regime representatives as well as leaders of
local Kurdish parties, especially the PYD to take part in administering the
city and its surroundings. Both sides in fact maintain a strong military presence
on the city, the Kurds through the Popular Defense Committees (YPGs), and the regime
through the local police force and loyalist militias. But power is really on
the side of the Kurds, if the YPGs wanted to take complete control of the city,
they could probably do it with minimal resistance. Indeed, yesterday,
following an incident in which pro-regime forces killed three Kurdish activists,
Kurdish groups held a major funeral in which thousands of people showed bearing
arms. The YPGs also attacked several regime checkpoints killing three and arresting
7. The situation remains tense. http://youtu.be/Iii7MaGA0M0
* Meanwhile, in the Arab-majority
city of Deir Ezzor also in the northeast, a new rebel group has been making a
name for itself and is projecting itself as a tribal alternative to Jabhat
Al-Nusra (JAN). Its founders, said to be Syrians based in Saudi Arabia and are
disciples of the late Syrian religious scholar, Nasser Al-Din Al-Albani, seem
to be trying to imitate the Sahwa movement in Iraq that challenged Al-Qaeda’s dominance
in Sunni majority areas there. The group is called Jabhat Al-Assalah wa Al-Tanmiya
(JAT), or the Front for Authenticity and Development, but it has so far garnered
little attention beyond the borders of Deir Ezzor. This video shows a recent “exploit”
by JAT members against their loyalist prisoners http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=493388297388460
JAT was formed in early November 2012. This is their YouTube channel http://www.youtube.com/user/alasalawatanmya
This is their Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/alasalawatanmya?fref=ts
Video Highlights
Like marauding killer sharks, pro-regime tanks keep roving around the
outskirts of the town of Daraya in Damascus Suburbs http://youtu.be/W25DzJVO9NY Pounding
their way in http://youtu.be/VCs0ognV_5w
and out http://youtu.be/vhqpRha8IQg
Other parts of town are targeted by missile launchers http://youtu.be/RjKuzVFbuXg , http://youtu.be/EHfbI2BGHX0 The result a
wasteland http://youtu.be/9TA587zQ40E
To the East, the town of Eastern Ghoutah continue to come under
aerial bombardment and missile attacks: Saqba http://youtu.be/OdQDH2AKiR0 Kafar
Batna http://youtu.be/UhN82JQkzWg
, http://youtu.be/7pv3Kj33q8g Zamalka
http://youtu.be/X7kbLmZbkTM Jisreen
http://youtu.be/gjQVBljS7Ss The
pounding reaches the neighborhood of Jobar in Damascus City http://youtu.be/Txs29FU_3Zc , http://youtu.be/8I52ZGJ3vnU
In Aleppo City, clashes in and around the Kurdish-majority neighborhood
of Sheikh Maqsoud intensify http://youtu.be/TKBsaXfmXPM
Despite the climate of panic that ensue following attacks, people rush to help
the wounded http://youtu.be/Vn8SDZBFj-o
Elsewhere in Aleppo and across Syria, rallies like this one in Boustan
Al-Qasr http://youtu.be/Aqx84g0oIFk
and this one in Al-Wa’er neighborhood (Homs City) http://youtu.be/5yl7-zbOqaU took place
as is the case on Fridays.
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