Tag: Damascus

  • UNICEF issues blank statement on Syria

    UNICEF issues blank statement on Syria

    UNICEF issued a blank “statement” on Tuesday to express its outrage at mass casualties among Syrian children in the besieged enclave of Eastern Ghouta and neighboring Damascus.

    “No words will do justice to the children killed, their mothers, their fathers and their loved ones,” the release from UNICEF’s regional director Geert Cappalaere began.

    There followed 10 empty lines with quote marks indicating missing text, and an explanatory footnote.

    “UNICEF is issuing this blank statement. We no longer have the words to describe children’s suffering and our outrage,” it said.

    “Do those inflicting the suffering still have words to justify their barbaric acts?”

    Read Also: UNICEF launches worldwide campaign ‘Every Child Alive’

    Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have been besieging almost 400,000 civilians trapped inside Eastern Ghouta for years, but the siege has tightened this year and attacks on the enclave have intensified.

    Siege tactics and indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas contravene the internationally-agreed “rules of war”.

    Pro-government forces carried out air raids on Eastern Ghouta overnight on Monday and early on Tuesday, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

    The observatory said no fewer than 100 people were killed in air raids, rocket strikes and shelling of the area on Monday.

    NAN

  • Turkey detains 666 over social media criticism of Afrin operation

    Turkey detains 666 over social media criticism of Afrin operation

    Turkey Ministry of Interior on Monday said that since the country launched its operation in Syria’s Afrin district, police have detained 666 people, over social media posts opposing the military campaign.

    “Since the start of Operation Olive Branch, 666 people have been detained over the terrorist propaganda in social media,” the ministry said in a statement.

    Harlem Dessir, the Organisation for Security and Co-operation ( OSCE ) Representative on Freedom of the Media, denounced the detention of hundreds of people in Turkey over their public criticism of the operation.

    Desir urged Ankara to reverse its hard-line policy and release the dissenters.

    Read More: Turkey seeks arrest of ex-CIA officer over coup plot

    The Turkish Armed Forces, on Jan. 20, launched Operation Olive Branch against the Kurdish forces in Afrin, an area controlled by the U.S.-backed Kurdish People’s Protection Units ( YPG ).

    The operation has been conducted jointly with the Free Syrian Army forces.

    Damascus has firmly condemned the operation as an assault on Syria’s sovereignty and urged all the parties to exercise restraint and called for respect of Syria’s territorial integrity.

    NAN

  • Syrian rebels evacuates Damascus suburb

    Hundreds of Syrian rebel fighters began a process of leaving the besieged Damascus suburb of Barzeh on Monday as part of an evacuation deal agreed with the government, state television and a war monitor reported.

    State-run Ekhbariya television cited its reporter there as saying the evacuation of fighters from Barzeh for the rebel-held Idlib province in northwest Syria had begun to be implemented but without giving further details.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, reported that buses had arrived in Barzeh at dawn and a group of hundreds of fighters and their family members had started to board them.

    The Observatory said more people would leave Barzeh over the coming days as part of the same deal.

    Barzeh is in northeast Damascus near the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta oasis district of towns and farms and has been the site of intense fighting between insurgents and the Syrian army in recent months.

    On Sunday, the army advanced under intense bombardment in the Qaboun district, which adjoins Barzeh in the same besieged enclave, the Observatory said.

    A military media unit run by the armed Lebanese Shi’ite group Hezbollah, an ally of the Syrian government, reported on Monday that several Red Crescent ambulances had also arrived at the rebel-besieged towns of al-Foua and Kefraya near Idlib.

    Those two towns were part of a mutual evacuation deal that also included two towns besieged by government forces and involved exchanging thousands of people between the warring sides last month.

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has promoted the use of such evacuations, along with what his government calls “reconciliation” deals for rebel-held areas that surrender to the government, as a way of reducing bloodshed.

    However, the United Nations has criticised both the use of siege tactics which precede such deals and the evacuations themselves as amounting to forcible displacement.

    Many of those who have left other besieged areas of Syria have also relocated to Idlib, a mostly rural province abutting the Turkish border which is a major rebel stronghold.

  • Deadly blast hits Damascus

    At least seven people have been killed by a blast in the centre of the Syrian capital Damascus.

    The Sana state news agency put the number of dead at eight, and said 50 were injured by the blast in Hijaz square. An activist group said 20 people were hurt.

    According to BBC report, No group has said it was behind the blast but Sana blamed it on “terrorists” – its term for rebels.

    Syrian rebels have often attacked Damascus with bombs or mortars.

    Last month, an explosion near Damascus airport cut off power to large parts of Syria.

    Sana said Wednesday’s attack had hit the offices of the railway company.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based activist group, said there were conflicting reports about whether it had been caused by a bomb or a mortar shell.

    The explosion, BBC report explained, comes a day after the latest round of international diplomacy failed to fix a date for a long-delayed peace conference on the Syrian conflict.

    The UN-Arab League envoy on Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, had hoped to hold the conference in Geneva this month.

    But he said that after a day of meetings with senior diplomats he was not able to announce a date.

    Mr Brahimi said he was still “striving” for a summit by the end of the year.

    Attempts to set up a conference have been going on for months amid disputes over who should attend and its agenda.

    Meanwhile, aid agencies have warned that more than nine million Syrians, almost half the population, are now in need of humanitarian relief.

    The UN estimates that more than two million people have fled Syria since the unrest began in March 2011 resulting in a humanitarian crisis.

    Most have sought refuge in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt.

    More than 100,000 people are estimated to have been killed since the conflict began.

     

  • The road to Damascus

    The road to Damascus

    The Obama administration offered a decidedly mixed reaction Monday to a suggestion that Syria might be willing to turn over its chemical weapons to international authorities to avert a U.S military attack. For part of the day officials sounded dismissive, but as evening fell, the president himself acknowledged that the idea was, potentially, “a significant breakthrough.”

    It’s tough to know whether the offer is a meaningful one or an eleventh-hour stalling tactic by Syrian President Bashar Assad, but there’s no reason not to consider it seriously. The administration should “run it to ground,” as Obama suggested he would, even as it continues to plan what it will do in the event that the proposal falls apart.

    In the meantime, Obama will presumably continue his struggle to build support for a military strike, a plan that has divided the country and that faces an uphill climb in Congress. But this much is certain: The president will be more successful in that appeal if the government makes public the evidence it says it has amassed showing that the Syrian government carried out a chemical weapons attack in a Damascus suburb last month that killed hundreds of civilians.

    White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough said over the weekend that the attribution of the attack to Assad passed the “common-sense test.” But that won’t be enough for many Americans who remember how the U.S. invaded Iraq a decade ago on the flawed assumption that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. Nor will they be satisfied by assurances that more detailed information is being provided on a classified basis to members of Congress.

    In a speech Monday, national security advisor Susan Rice laid out the case against the Assad government: “Only the Syrian regime has the capacity to deliver chemical weapons on a scale to cause the devastation we saw in Damascus. The opposition does not. The rockets were fired from territory controlled by the regime. The rockets landed in territory controlled or contested by the opposition. And the intelligence we’ve gathered reveals senior officials planning the attack and then, afterward, plotting to cover up the evidence by destroying the area with shelling.”

    Plausible as this scenario may be, it consists of a series of assertions. If the administration is to quiet widespread doubts, it will have to declassify the conversations between government officials it says it intercepted (even if it redacted the officials’ names) and also make public satellite images that it contends contain evidence of the launching of rockets from government-controlled areas and preparations by government personnel for a chemical attack.

    Not every opponent of military action against Syria questions the administration’s account of who is responsible for the carnage captured on those unsettling videos. Some freely accept that the Assad government, if not Assad himself, ordered the attack, but worry about the consequences of even the “limited and tailored” operation the administration says it is planning. But there are other Americans who accept the “red line” Obama laid out but aren’t convinced that the Syrian regime crossed it. They’re entitled to the evidence.

    – Los Angeles Times

  • Twin blasts rock Damascus suburb

    Twin blasts rock Damascus suburb

    At least 20 people have been killed and many injured by two bomb explosions in a south-eastern district of Syria’s capital, Damascus, activists told the BBC.

    The Sana news agency said “terrorists” were behind the blasts in Jaramana.

    Television pictures showed firemen hosing down the charred wrecks of two vehicles. Several buildings also appeared to have been damaged.

    BBC says there were clashes between government forces and rebels there earlier on Wednesday.

    There has been fierce fighting in recent days in the countryside around Damascus, known as the Ghouta, particularly in eastern areas.

    The Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC), an opposition activist network, said 48 people were killed in the capital and its suburbs on Tuesday. It put the nationwide death toll at 131, including 12 children.

    The rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) overran an air force base in the Sayyida Zainab area, to the south of Damascus, and fought off several attempts by security forces to storm several suburbs, the LCC added.

    Activists estimate that more than 40,000 people have died since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began in March 2011.