Tag: Bashar-Assad

  • Trump team lack positive shifts- Russia

    Trump team lack positive shifts- Russia

    Russia’s deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov on Tuesday said that Moscow was concerned that contacts with the Donald Trump administration had not yet led to positive shifts in the relations between the two nations.

    Russian news agencies quoted Ryabkov as saying that as nuclear powers Russia and the United States cannot afford to keep their relations at such a low level.

    NAN reports that tensions between the two countries have soared over the conflict in Syria, with Russian President Vladimir Putin backing Syria’s government and the U.S. opposing it.

    On April 12, Trump also said that relations with Russia “may be at an all-time low” following Syria’s use of chemical weapons on April 4, and the U.S. airstrike that followed.

    Stopping just short of accusing Russia of complicity with the sarin gas attack against civilians April 4, Trump said it’s “certainly possible” that Russia had advance knowledge of the use of chemical weapons by its ally.

    “I like to think they didn’t know. But they could have. They were there,” he said.

    Trump said he had no regrets about the decision to launch 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian air base two days later, saying Syrian leader Bashar Assad left him no choice by gassing innocent children.

     

  • Attacks hit 2 major Syrian cities, kill 54 people

    Attacks hit 2 major Syrian cities, kill 54 people

    Two car bombs exploded in a pro-government neighborhood in the central Syrian city of Homs yesterday, killing at least 40 people just hours after one of the deadliest mortar strikes in the heart of the capital, Damascus, killed 14, officials and state media said.

    The attacks came a day after President Bashar Assad declared his candidacy for the June 3 presidential elections, a race he is likely to win amid a raging civil war that initially started as an uprising against his rule. Such attacks are common in Homs and Damascus, and there was no immediate indication that Tuesday’s violence was directly related to Assad’s announcement.

    State news agency SANA said the attack in Homs struck in the Abbasiyeh neighborhood – a predominantly Christian and Alawite area. It said at least 40 people were killed and another 116 wounded. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the death toll from the double car bombing at 37, including five children. It said more than 80 were wounded.

    Such discrepancies in casualty figures are common in Syria in the immediate aftermath of attacks.

    In Damascus, several mortar shells slammed into the predominantly Shiite neighborhood of Shaghour in the morning hours, killing 14 people and wounding 86, Syria’s official SANA news agency and state TV reported. The Observatory said 17 people were killed.

    It was one of the deadliest mortar attacks in central Damascus since the conflict began in March 2011.

    No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks.

    Rebels fighting to oust Assad from power have frequently fired mortars into the capital from opposition-held suburbs, many of which have been under a crippling government blockade for months, with no food and medicine allowed to reach trapped civilians inside.

    Armed opposition groups have also attacked Syria’s cities with car bombs in the past months. An al-Qaida-linked group has previously claimed responsibility for several car bombs in the capital and other cities.

    SANA blamed the attacks on terrorists – a term used by Assad’s government for rebels.

    Also yesterday, the international chemical weapons watchdog said it will send a team to Syria to investigate recent allegations about the use of chlorine gas in the war.

    The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said in a statement that the Syrian government has agreed to the mission, and will provide security in areas under its control. The OPCW the team is expected to depart for Syria soon.

    Syrian opposition forces have accused the government of attacking rebel-held areas with chlorine gas several times in recent months. Syria denies the allegations.

    A joint U.N.-OPCW mission is already in the process of eliminating Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile. It has removed more than 90 percent of Syria’s declared chemical stockpile.

    While chlorine was first deployed militarily in World War I, it is no longer officially considered a warfare agent and was not among the chemicals declared by Syria when it joined the chemical weapons treaty.

    Meanwhile, four more presidential hopefuls declared their candidacy in Syria’s June 3 presidential election, bringing the total number of registered contenders to 11, state TV said.

    Syria’s opposition and its Western backers have criticized the decision to hold presidential elections while the country is engulfed in fighting.

    Syria’s Foreign Ministry rejected the criticism, saying the decision was “sovereign” and warned that “no foreign power will be allowed to intervene” in the process.

    In Tehran, meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham welcomed the elections, saying the vote will be “an opportunity for peace and stability” in Syria.

    Iran has backed Assad throughout the conflict, providing his government with millions of dollars in economic aid and military support through its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah.

    “We think the election is a step closer to ending the crisis, stopping the war and support for peace and stability in Syria,” Afkham said.

  • Syria: Mosque hit  with barrel bomb

    Syria: Mosque hit with barrel bomb

    •Weapon shipments by March

    Syrian forces dropped a crude bomb on a mosque that was being used as a school in a rebel-held neighborhood of a key northern city yesterday, killing at least five people, including children, activists said.

    The bombing – one of at least seven around Aleppo, came amid an intensified campaign by President Bashar Assad’s government to take back parts of the city that were seized by rebels in mid-2012.

    Far from the battlegrounds in Syria, Assad’s biggest international ally expressed confidence the government would return to the U.N.-hosted peace talks in Geneva that are trying to find a solution to the conflict.

    Russian deputy foreign minister and Moscow’s special envoy to the Middle East, Mikhail Bogdanov, said he was sure the Syrian government would take part in the second round of the talks. Syria’s crisis, which erupted as a peaceful uprising against Assad’s rule in March 2011 but descended into an armed revolt and full-blown civil war has killed more than 130,000 people and forced almost a third of the country’s prewar population of 23 million from their homes.

    Syria’s opposition points to the air raids, especially the use of barrel bombs – crude devices packed with fuel, explosives and scraps of metal – in civilian areas, particularly over Aleppo, as evidence that Assad has little interest in peace.

    The mosque targeted yesterday in Aleppo – the Uthman Bin Affan mosque in the Masaken Hanano district – was used as a religious school for children, said activist Hassoun Abu Faisal of the Aleppo Media Center.

    He said children were inside when it was hit with a barrel bomb. The Local Coordinating Committees, another activist group, says five people were killed in the strike. It wasn’t immediately clear how many of the victims were children. Abu Faisal said 10 people were killed but conflicting casualty tolls follow such attacks are common.

    The Russian government says Syria should complete the shipment of its chemical weapons out of the country by 1 March, weeks behind schedule.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov told the RIA Novosti news agency that the authorities in Damascus were planning “a large shipment” this month.

    Last week, the US said Syria had given up only a fraction of its stockpile.

    However, US and British officials last week expressed concern over the Syrian authorities’ failure to meet a series of deadlines for the shipment abroad of its most toxic chemical agents and key precursor chemicals.

    So far, only around 30 tonnes out of 1,300 – 4% of the “priority one” chemicals and roughly the same percentage of “priority two” chemicals – have been removed. The removal of priority one chemicals was due for completion by 31 December, while the deadline for the shipment of priority two material is today.

     

    Hassoun Abu

  • Russia, Arab League propose direct Syria talks

    Russia and the Arab League said they want to broker direct talks between the Syrian government and opposition in a bid to end the country’s civil war.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said violence was “a road to nowhere.”

    The move comes as the opposition Syrian National Coalition is due to begin a two-day meeting in Egypt to discuss a framework for a possible solution.

    Some 70,000 people have died since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began in March 2011, the United Nations says.

    The BBC reports that although the Syrian government and the opposition are talking about dialogue, that still seems a distant prospect.

    Mr. Lavrov said the Kremlin and the Arab League wanted to establish direct contact between the Syrian government and the opposition.

    Speaking in Moscow, where he hosted league officials and several Arab foreign ministers, the Russian foreign minister said that sitting down at a negotiating table was the only way to end the conflict without irreparable damage to Syria.