Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Video: Assad Regime Troops Storm Family Home in Syria


Lebanese Intellectuals Protest in Support of the Syrian People

Top: Lebanese intellectuals and journalists protest during a vigil sit-in to show their support to the Syrian protesters who demonstrate against the Syrian President Bashar Assad, at the Martyrs square, in downtown of Beirut, Lebanon, on Monday Aug. 8, 2011. Despite five months of blistering attacks on dissent, the Syrian regime has yet to score a decisive victory against a pro-democracy uprising determined to bring down the country's brutal dictatorship. President Bashar Assad still has the military muscle to level pockets of resistance, but the conflict has robbed him of almost all international support. Second: Lebanese singer Marcel Khalifa, right, holds a candle during a vigil sit-in held by Lebanese intellectuals and journalists against the Syrian regime to show their support to the Syrian ... protest against the Syrian President Bashar Assad ... Bottom: A Syrian citizen holds a candle as other holds an Arabic placard read:"Every two hours one martyr fall," during a vigil sit-in held by Lebanese intellectuals and journalists against the Syrian regime ... (AP Photo via Daylife: here; here; here and here).

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

BBCNews Update Video Brutal Crackdown in Syria

Rape of Men - A Weapon of War

Time Magazine's Global Spin blog writes:

In Kampala, Uganda, he meets a refugee who was kidnapped and then raped three times a day, every day, for three years. "There are certain things you just don't believe can happen to a man," he said.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Ramadan Carnage in Syria

 The Financial Times reports:
The Syrian regime marked the first day of the holy month of Ramadan with an all-out assault on the protest movement, shelling the restive city of Hama, raising pressure for international action and provoking accusations of a sectarian war against the country’s majority Sunni Arab population.

An intense bombardment was reported in Hama when people were gathered for evening prayers. Tanks first resumed their attack on the city, where at least 80 people were killed on Sunday, in the early morning, with the crackdown also reported to be continuing in the eastern oil producing town of Deir Ezzor and reaching Al Bukamal near the Iraqi border.

Tanks were also reported to have stormed the town of Zabadani, a protest hotspot close to Damascus. At least eight people were estimated to have been killed in Monday’s violence.

As world powers prepared for a meeting of the UN Security Council, where Russia has so far blocked condemnation of its ally in Damascus, the European Union added five new names to its list of Syrian officials subject to asset freezes and travel bans.
...
US officials said Mrs Clinton would meet Syrian activists abroad on Tuesday.

Even Moscow warned the Syrian regime on Monday against the use of force on civilians. In Turkey, an increasingly frustrated ally of Syria, President Abdullah Gul said the images from Hama on Sunday had “horrified us”.

Protesters in Hama, site of a 1982 massacre by President Bashar al-Assad’s father that residents thought would never be repeated, remained defiant however.
...
As Ramadan dawned across Syria on Monday, the military moved in to position for another attack on Hama.

“This morning at 7.30 suddenly the city was bombed,” said Omar Habbal, an activist. “It was a very big bombardment which continued for 20-25 minutes.”

According to Mr Habbal, many of the city’s barricades, taken down by security forces on Sunday, have been rebuilt.

“We won’t give up because we have got a very big lesson from [the southern province of] Deraa, where they [the regime] took the boys and killed them and took them to mass graves.”
...
In a letter to the army, Mr Assad repeated the regime’s claim that Syria was facing a foreign conspiracy designed to sow sectarian strife and “tear Syria into small statelets that compete to satisfy those who worked to slice them up”.

Opposition activists, however, say it is the regime, dominated by the Alawite minority in a majority Sunni country, that has been deliberately stoking sectarian tensions to maintain the loyalty of minorities and raise the spectre of civil chaos.

Arab television stations have been broadcasting the unforgettable spectacle of mosque minarets with clouds of smoke over them in the conservative Sunni city of Hama on the eve of the holy month of fasting.

The Muslim Brotherhood, whose Syrian branch, which is banned inside the country has hitherto been very careful not to play up the sectarian aspect of the crackdown, issued a statement saying Syria was witnessing “a war of sectarian cleansing”.

“The regime has linked its open annihilation with the crescent of Ramadan. It is a war on the identity and beliefs of the Syrian nation ... on Arab Muslim Syria,” said the Brotherhood statement, reported by Reuters news agency.

Activists and analysts believe the escalating crackdown will prove counter-productive, just as previous attacks on other cities injected new momentum into the uprising.

“It an act of frustration and despair,” said Hilal Khashan, a professor of political science at the American University of Beirut. “[Assad] knows it will backfire.”

Wissam Tarif, a human-rights activist based outside of Syria, said the question was whether the regime was willing to kill many more people to disrupt the protests, especially in Hama. In Ramadan, says Mr Tarif “every casualty will be emphasised – ...”.