Wednesday 18 January 2012
January 18, 2012 by sks
Filed under News, Syrian Revolution
Syrian Uprising 2011 Information Centre: SUMMARY (18/01/2012): At least 18 martyrs have fallen (11 civilians and 7 defected members of the security forces) as the regime continues it’s crackdown and there was fighting between Assad’s forces and the Free Syrian Army in Homs, Idlib and Daraa provinces. However, today belongs to Zabadani, where they held off an attack by Assad’s forces for 5 days and where residents are celebrating the ceasefire tonight. Be sure to check out today’s protests there. Syria – Wednesday 18/01/2012 – Google Maps
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights: The body of martyr Abed Al-Kafi Muhsen Al-Weess was handed to his parents in Baba Amr in Homs. The martyr, who was arrested by security forces on 5/01/2012, was killed under torture. http://www.youtube.com/
IDLIB (18/01/2012): This video shows the town of Kafar Takharim (pop: 30,000) in Idlib province, close to the Turkish border where there have been reports of heavy gunfire and fighting between the Free Syrian Army and the regime’s forces since last night.
Kafar Takharim 18/01/2012
Ayman al-Khattib, 16 years old from Talbisah, Homs province. He was killed on 17/01/2012, when he was shot by security forces while at school
UPDATE (18/01/2012): Despite some shelling this morning it appears as if the ceasfire agreement between Zabadani and Assad’s forces is holding and that the regime’s units are withdrawing from the area. It seems as if the Free Syrian Army has won a small victory. However, we remember that last April the regime did a deal with protesters in Baniyas but this agreement was shortlived. Within less than a month, the regime had brought in reinforcements, broken the deal and resumed it’s assault on the town. Meanwhile, there has been no break for Homs, where several districts remain under attack. The video shows Bayadah neighbourhood.
Homs, Bayadah 18/01/2012
HAMA: This video shows children playing in Hama – Syria’s 4th city. They are acting out a funeral. Another game we have seen is “protesters and shabeeha.” Of course far too many children have not just been play acting these events but actually living them – at least 422 children have now been killed, 410 arrested and many thousands more have lost a parent, sibling or friend.
Hama
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NOW! Lebanon
[local time]
19:54 Syrian security forces’ gunfire killed 20 on Wednesday, Al-Arabiya television quoted activists as saying.
19:11 Al-Jazeera television is broadcasting live footage of an anti-regime protest in Syria’s Daraa.
18:15 The Syrian pound has plunged to a record low on the black market, trading on Wednesday at 71 Syrian pounds against the dollar in a sign of growing economic woes.
18:04 A Qatari proposal to dispatch Arab troops to Syria could be discussed at a meeting of Arab League foreign ministers over the weekend but is not on the agenda, a bloc official said on Wednesday.
17:10 British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Wednesday there was “growing evidence” that Iran was supplying weapons to Syria to help in the crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.
16:07 Syrian security forces’ gunfire killed 10 people on Wednesday, Al-Arabiya quoted activists as saying.
15:33 Al-Arabiya television quoted on Wednesday unnamed sources in Syria’s Zabadani as saying that the Syrian army withdrew from the city after “a huge military campaign and continuous shelling for four days,” adding that the military campaign ended after negotiations with the Free Syrian Army.
15:30 Five people were killed by Syrian forces’ gunfire on Wednesday, Al-Arabiya television reported.
15:17 The Muslim Brotherhood has rejected an Iranian proposal to play a leading role in Syria’s government in exchange for President Bashar al-Assad staying in power, one of its leaders told Al-Hayat newspaper.
14:14 European Union foreign ministers are set to slap fresh sanctions on Syria next week, adding 22 individuals and eight companies to an existing blacklist, EU diplomats said Wednesday.
13:38 A YouTube video purportedly filmed on Tuesday shows a Syrian regime tank shooting randomly in the Homs neighborhood of Al-Bayyada.
13:28 A YouTube video purportedly filmed on Wednesday in Edleb’s Habeet shows dozens of people gathered chanting and calling on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to “leave.”
13:24 A YouTube video purportedly filmed on Tuesday in the city of Zabadani – which is near Damascus – shows a tank on fire. The filmmaker can be heard saying that Free Syrian Army troops set fire to the tank belonging to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces.
13:08 Syria’s state-owned media on Wednesday accused Qatar of arming and financing opponents of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.
11:35 Beijing on Wednesday defended the Arab League’s widely criticized observer mission in Syria, as the UN Security Council struggled to agree on a resolution on Damascus’ crackdown on dissent.
11:28 Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday defended Russia’s trade with Syria amid growing controversy over a mysterious shipment that reportedly delivered a supply of arms to Damascus.
10:05 Russia, a permanent veto-wielding member of the UN Security Council, will reject any use of sanctions or deployment of troops over the unrest in Syria, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday.
9:02 Kataeb bloc MP Elie Marouni said in an interview published on Wednesday that Turkey is considering international intervention in Syria.
7:52 UN Security Council diplomats held prolonged talks Tuesday on a proposed Russian resolution on Syria without getting closer to UN action on the bloodshed, diplomats said.
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Reuters: UK urges tougher Syria sanctions, Russia issues warning
Britain called on Wednesday for harsher sanctions on Syria, where an Arab monitoring mission has failed to halt bloodshed in a 10-month-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.
But Russia underlined divisions at the United Nations, saying it would work with China to prevent the Security Council from approving any military intervention in Syria.
Damascus may let the monitors stay on after their mandate expires on Thursday, but Assad’s foes say the Arab League peace effort has failed and the U.N. Security Council should step in.
Arab foreign ministers, due to consider their next step at the weekend, are split over how to handle Syria, as is the U.N. Security Council, which has failed to adopt any position.
British Prime Minister David Cameron accused Iran and Lebanon’s Shi’ite Hezbollah movement of helping to prop up Assad, whom he described as “a wretched tyrant”.
“Britain needs to lead the way in making sure we tighten the sanctions, the travel bans, the asset freezes, on Syria,” Cameron told parliament in London.
European Union governments are expected on Monday to expand the list of people and Syrian companies and institutions targeted by EU sanctions, diplomats said in Brussels.
An EU diplomat said 22 extra people would be affected by asset freezes and travel bans. EU companies would also be prohibited from doing business with about eight additional companies or institutions. Current EU sanctions target 30 entities and 86 Syrians.
RUSSIAN WARNING
But Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned the West against contemplating any kind of foreign intervention to end Assad’s 10-month crackdown, which the United Nations says has killed more than 5,000 civilians.
“We will insist – and we have an understanding with our Chinese colleagues that this is our common position – that these fundamental points be retained in any decision that may be taken by the U.N. Security Council,” he told a news conference.
“If somebody intends to use force … it will be on their conscience. They will not receive any authority from the Security Council,” said Lavrov, who also emphasized that Moscow and Beijing oppose any sanctions against Syria.
Russia joined China in October to veto a Western-backed resolution against Assad’s government, saying the domestic opposition shared blame for the violence and that it would have opened the door for military action like NATO’s Libya operation.
Moscow submitted its own draft resolution last month and proposed a new version this week.
Syria is a leading buyer of Russian arms, and a Russian-operated ship carrying what a Cypriot official said was bullets arrived in Syria last week from St. Petersburg after being held up in Cyprus.
Washington said it had raised concerns about the ship with Russia, but Lavrov refused to give any explanation. “We don’t consider it necessary to explain ourselves or justify ourselves, because we are not violating any international agreements or any Security Council resolutions,” he said in Moscow.
SUDANESE DEFENCE
Hundreds of killings on both sides of the Syrian violence have been reported since the Arab League sent observers last month to see whether Damascus was respecting a peace plan. Critics say the observers have only provided Assad with diplomatic cover and more time to crush his opponents.
However, Sudan defended the mission which is led by one of its generals. “Day by day, they are achieving more and more,” Foreign Minister Ali Ahmed Karti told Reuters.
“They began with a limited number of monitors, and gradually they began to expand throughout the areas where there are some problems, and they are doing fine,” he said.
The appointment of Sudanese General Mohammed al-Dabi to lead the team alarmed rights activists, who say Khartoum committed atrocities in Sudan’s Darfur region on the general’s watch.
STRANGLED BODY
The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said security forces killed a civilian in a village in the northwestern province of Idlib on Wednesday and the body of a youth detained nearly two weeks ago turned up in Homs.
It said a soldier had been killed and five wounded in clashes between troops and army deserters in the Idlib village of Khaf Takharim. Three rebel soldiers were also wounded.
Syria’s state news agency SANA said the strangled body of a veterinarian doctor was found in Homs bearing marks of torture four days after he was kidnapped by an “armed terrorist group”.
The United Nations said on December 13 that Assad’s security forces had killed more than 5,000 people since the unrest erupted in mid-March. Nine days later, the government said “armed terrorist groups” had killed 2,000 security personnel.
Syria’s Muslim Brotherhood said Iran, an ally of Assad, had contacted it to try to mediate a political solution to the uprising but the effort had been rebuffed.
A senior Muslim Brotherhood member, Melhem al-Droubi, told Reuters the group had seen no details of the Iranian offer made on December 20 and it would not deal with Tehran unless it revoked its support for Assad.
“They (Iranian officials) asked about the possibility of the Brotherhood visiting Tehran, or Iran sending mediators to meet our leadership,” said Droubi. “We didn’t hear details about the offer and we didn’t open an opportunity for them to discuss it.”
The Arab peace plan required Syria to halt the bloodshed, withdraw troops from cities, free detainees, provide access for the monitors and the media and open talks with the opposition.
Qatar has proposed sending in Arab troops, an idea rejected by Syria and one likely to be resisted by its Arab allies.
A tenuous truce was holding on Wednesday in Zabadani, near the Lebanese border, where troops had been fighting anti-Assad rebels, residents said. But heavy machinegun fire and explosions rocked the troubled city of Homs, an opposition group said.
“As of now there is no shelling and no gunfire. It is quiet. But the army is still surrounding the area,” said one Zabadani resident who gave her name as Rita.
Syrian forces backed by tanks attacked the hill resort on Friday in the biggest military offensive against insurgents since the Arab monitors began work on December 26.
















