Search This Blog
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
79 killed as Syrian forces pound protest hubs
KAL PORUSH:
The Syrian regime’s rocket and shell bombardment of protest hubs has left
another 79 civilians dead, activists said, as Washington closed its Damascus
embassy and Britain recalled its ambassador.The opposition Syrian National
Council (SNC) said the regime was surrounding Homs with tanks on Monday ahead
of “a major offensive” and warned of a “genocide” in the central Syrian city.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 42 civilians were
killed in Homs alone in another day of blood-letting, and warned the death toll
was likely to rise with many of the dozens of wounded in critical condition.State
media reported the deaths of three soldiers and said a “terrorist group” blew
up an oil pipeline in Homs.The army also launched an assault on the Zabadani
area near Damascus with heavy tank shelling, killing at least ten people,
according to the Britain-based Observatory.It also reported civilian deaths in
Rastan, Hula and Qusair, all towns in Homs province, as well at Sarghaya, near
Damascus, in the northern city of Aleppo and in Idlib, northwest Syria.A
resident of Homs told AFP the latest assault began with unprecedented barrages
of rockets, mortar rounds and artillery shells.“What is happening is horrible,
it’s beyond belief,” said activist Omar Shaker, reached by telephone as loud
detonations were heard in the background.“There is nowhere to take shelter,
nowhere to hide,” he said. “We are running short of medical supplies and we are
only able to provide basic treatment to the injured.”One video posted on
YouTube apparently showed a field hospital hit by shelling in the Baba Amro
district and wounded patients lying on stretchers on the floor amid pools of
blood and shattered glass.Footage shot by a BBC undercover team in Homs showed
buildings ablaze in rebel neighborhoods as they were pounded with heavy
weapons.Damascus blamed the bloodshed in Homs on “terrorist gangs” using mortars.The
violence comes as Western powers seek new ways to punish Damascus amid growing
outrage over Saturday’s veto by Russia and China of a U.N. Security Council
resolution condemning Syria for its near 11-month crackdown on dissent.U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the veto a “travesty.”White House
spokesman Jay Carney warned Syria ’s
allies that backing President Bashar al-Assad was a “losing bet.”The State
Department said it had closed the American embassy in Syria and withdrawn
remaining staff after Damascus refused to address security concerns.Senior
State Department officials told CNN that two embassy employees left by air last
week and 15 others, including Ambassador Robert Ford, left overland through
Jordan on Monday morning.The Polish government is to provide emergency consular
services to any American citizens remaining in Syria.U.S. President Barack
Obama shied away from talk of military intervention and vowed to pursue
diplomatic means.“It is important to resolve this without recourse to outside
military intervention and I think that’s possible,” he said in an NBC
television interview.Britain recalled its ambassador to Syria
“for consultations,” Foreign Secretary William Hague told parliament.“We will
use our remaining channels to the Syrian regime to make clear our abhorrence at
the violence that is utterly unacceptable to the civilized world,” Hague said.Belgium
also recalled its ambassador from Damascus.French President Nicolas Sarkozy
said, after meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel, that he would call Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev to discuss the international response to the crisis.Neither
France nor Germany, he said, would accept the “blocking” of action on Syria.Russia
and China both defended their vetoes, with Moscow condemning as “hysterical”
the West’s angry reaction.Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Foreign
Intelligence Service chief Mikhail Fradkov are due in Damascus on Tuesday, as
news reports said the mission could try to persuade Assad to quit.China called
on both sides of the conflict to halt the violence that has claimed the lives
of at least 6,000 people since March, according to opposition activists.The
Syrian National Council said the “genocide” in Homs showed the regime was
“increasing the pace of its crimes and repression.”Saudi Arabia called for
“critical measures” on Syria and warned of an impending “humanitarian disaster”
after the failure of the UN resolution.The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council,
of which Riyadh is the leading member, is to meet on Saturday on Syria, on the
eve of an Arab League ministerial meeting at the organization’s Cairo
headquarters.EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton and Brazilian foreign
minister Antonio Patriota on Monday underscored their support for the Arab
League effort to end violence in Syria.Referring to Arab League chief Nabil
al-Arabi, Ashton at a meeting in Brasilia said she and Patriota discussed “how
much we support him on the Arab League’s initiative and the importance of
seeing that leadership (being) able to support the people of Syria into a
future free of bloodshed.”Meanwhile the British-born wife of Syria’s president
has spoken in support of her husband for the first time since the uprising
began, a British newspaper reported Tuesday.“The president is the president of
Syria, not a faction of Syrians, and the first lady supports him in that role,”
The Times quoted Asma al-Assad as saying in an email sent via an intermediary
from her office.
Maldives president quits amid protest
Maldives
president quits amid protest
KAL PORUSH:
Maldives
President Mohamed Nasheed announced his resignation Tuesday following weeks of
public protests over his controversial order to arrest a senior judge.Nasheed
presented his resignation in a nationally televised address Tuesday afternoon
after police joined the protesters and then clashed with soldiers in the
streets."I don't want to hurt any Maldivian. I feel my staying on in power
will only increase the problems, and it will hurt our citizens," Nasheed
said. "So the best option available to me is to step down."Nasheed
was expected to hand over power to Vice President Mohammed Waheed Hassan.The
resignation came after weeks of protests in this Indian Ocean island nation
known more for its lavish beach resorts than political turmoil.It marked a
stunning crash for Nasheed, a former human rights campaigner who defeated the
nation's longtime ruler in the country's first multiparty election. Nasheed was
also an environmental celebrity, traveling the world to persuade government's
to combat the climate change that could send sea levels rising and inundate his
archipelago nation.Nasheed fell out of public favor after he ordered the
military to arrest Abdulla Mohamed, the chief judge of the Criminal Court.The
arrest came after the judge ordered the release of a government critic, calling
his arrest illegal.The vice president, Supreme Court, Human Rights Commission,
Judicial Services Commission and the office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights have all called for Mohamed to be released.The
government accused the judge of political bias and corruption. It said that the
country's judicial system had failed and called on the U.N to help solve the
crisis.After weeks of protests, the crisis came to a head Tuesday when hundreds
of police started demonstrating in the capital, Male, after officials ordered
them to withdraw protection for government and opposition supporters protesting
close to each other. The withdrawal resulted in a clash that injured at least
three people.Later, troops fired rubber bullets and clashed with the police.
When Nasheed visited the police and urged them to end the protest, they refused
and instead chanted for his resignation.The Maldives ,
an archipelago nation of 300,000 people, is a fresh democracy, with 30 years of
autocratic rule ending when Nasheed was elected in 2008. Nasheed is a former
pro-democracy political prisoner.Hassan, the vice president, has previously
worked for the United Nations, including as the head of its children's fund in Afghanistan .
Maldives protest today
Maldives protests boil over, police join against government
KAL PORUSH:
Opposition-led protests in
the Maldives boiled over on Tuesday with some police officers
defying orders to break them up and instead joining in an assault on the
military headquarters in the capital Male.
A Reuters witness on Tuesday saw soldiers launch tear gas grenades at a
crowd of about 500 people, including several dozen police officers in uniform,
who were trying to smash their way into the Maldives National Defense Force
(MNDF) headquarters.The violence on the archipelago best-known as a luxury
beach getaway destination is the worst out of more than three weeks of
protests.They started after President Mohamed Nasheed ordered the military to
arrest the top criminal court judge, whom he accuses of being in the pocket of
former president Maumoon Abdul Gayoom.That set off a constitutional crisis that
has Nasheed, widely credited with ushering in full democracy to the Indian
Ocean archipelago with his election victory in 2008, in the unaccustomed
position of defending himself of acting like a dictator. Gayoom's 30-year rule
was widely seen as autocratic.Gayoom's opposition Progressive Party of the Maldives
accused the military of firing rubber bullets at protesters and spokesman
Mohamed Hussain "Mundhu" Shareef said "loads of people"
were injured. He gave no specifics.Presidential spokesman Paul Roberts denied
the government had used rubber bullets, but confirmed that around three dozen
police officers defied orders overnight and smashed up the main rallying point
of the ruling Maldivian Democratic Party."This follows Gayoom's party
calling for the overthrow of the Maldives' first democratically elected
government and for citizens to launch jihad against the president,"
Roberts said.The protests, and the scramble for position ahead of next year's
presidential election, have seen parties adopting hardline Islamist rhetoric
and accusing Nasheed of being anti-Islamic.It has also shown the longstanding
rivalry between Gayoom and Nasheed, who was jailed for a combined six years
after being arrested 27 times by Gayoom's government while agitating for
democracy.(Additional reporting by Ranga Sirilal in Male Writing by Bryson
Hull; Editing by Ed Lane)
Anti-Putin protest
Anti-Putin protesters show staying power in Russia
KAL PORUSH :
Vladimir Putin's opponents vowed on Sunday to
press on with demonstrations against his 12-year domination of Russia
after tens of thousands attended a march which kept up the momentum of their
protest movement."We'll be back," the organizers said on a social
network site, one day after demonstrators defied the cold to stage the third
mass rally since anger mounted over alleged fraud in a parliamentary election
won by Putin's party on December 4.Waving flags and banners, protesters marched
within sight of the red-brick Kremlin walls and towers on Saturday, chanting
"Russia without Putin!" and "Give us back the elections!"Although
Putin's supporters also held a big rally in Moscow on Saturday, warning against
the threat of instability, the size of the opposition march suggested Putin
faces a protracted challenge as he prepares to return to the presidency in
March 4.Such protests were unthinkable six months ago and were sparked by
demands for fair elections, but they have grown into one of the biggest political
threats to the former KGB spy since he was first elected president in 2000.Putin
is all but certain to win a six-year term as head of state in March, but his
authority has been damaged and a pause in protests over the long New Year
holiday has not deterred people who protested in large numbers on December 10
and 24.The longer the protests continue, the bigger the threat they pose to
Putin's legitimacy, even though the opposition is only loosely united and
contains groups as diverse as nationalists, leftists, liberals and
non-affiliated environmentalists."When I saw the thermometer was at minus
22 C (-7.6 F) in the morning, I thought no more than 10,000-15,000 people would
turn up. Thank God, I was very wrong. Muscovites turned out to be more
determined, stronger and persistent than I thought," opposition politician
Boris Nemtsov wrote in a blog."We face a protracted hard struggle against
cynical, ruthless rogues and thieves. It's a marathon which we have to
win," wrote Nemtsov, a cabinet minister in the 1990s, before Putin rose to
power.The next big protest is expected to be on February 26, the week before
the presidential election, or soon after it, the organizers say.
Bahrain protest 06 02 2012
KAL PORUSH
Bahraini
opposition parties, launching a week-long ‘sit-in’ for political reforms at a
mass rally, swore Sunday to take their campaign to the center of last year’s
democracy protest in the capital Manama.“This is a dress rehearsal for the
return. We will return! We will return! Soon our sit-in will not be here but at
the Pearl Roundabout,” said poet Ayat al-Qormozi, who became a face of the Arab
Spring movement after she was jailed for reading out a poem criticizing the
king at Pearl Roundabout. She was addressing a crowd of over 10,000 at a rally
in Manama, where anti-government protests last year were crushed by Bahraini
forces and troops from neighboring Saudi Arabia.Pearl Roundabout, a large
traffic junction in Manama where the protesters camped out and rallied for a
month, has since been closed off by security forces who monitor the area
closely.Bahrain, a key U.S. and Saudi ally in their stand-off with Iran across
the Gulf, has been in turmoil since the uprising broke out last year, inspired
by revolts in Tunisia and Egypt.The opposition are trying to sustain pressure
on the government, dominated by the Sunni Muslim Al-Khalifa family, ahead of
the Feb. 14 anniversary of the uprising. The reforms they want include an
elected government - the first in the Gulf – and reduced powers for the
Al-Khalifa family.Sheikh Ali Salman, leader of the largest opposition party
Al-Wefaq, called on activists to keep the protests peaceful, but warned that
intelligence agencies and pro-government militias would act as agent
provocateurs in coming weeks.He called on activists to use only Bahraini flags
during the sit-in and to avoid using party or sectarian symbols.Opposition
groups draw wide support from Bahrain’s majority Shiite population, which
accuses the ruling elite of political and economic marginalization. The
government says Shiites have a sectarian agenda coordinated with Iran – which
they deny.Salman said the protest movement would continue after Feb. 14 and the
country would not return to normal until the ruling elite ended its monopoly on
power and the 14 prominent figures convicted for leading the protests – who are
on hunger strike this week – were released.“This people will not calm down and
there will be no calm or stability while they are behind bars,” he said.“These
symbolic figures did not call for violence or use violence. They expressed
views that you can agree with or not, but that’s part of freedom of expression.
The verdicts were based on confessions under torture. The verdicts are void.”Opposition
parties have tried to set themselves apart from youth activists who clash
regularly with police by arranging marches and rallies in advance with the
authorities. Many youths, angered by what they say is continued harsh policing,
say this approach is not bringing results.Activists say the ongoing violence
has taken the total dead over the past year to more than 60, some from tear gas
inhalation or from being hit by cars in pursuit of youths. The government
disputes the causes of death.
Saturday, February 4, 2012
syria proteat 04 02 2012
KAL PORUSH
“[Arab states] should expel Syrian ambassadors and sever diplomatic relations and economic dealings [with Syria] until the regime complies with the demands of the Syrian people,” Ali al-Salem al-Dekbas, head of the 88-member committee, said in a statement.
Arab states have turned decisively against Assad in recent months over a crackdown on opponents of Assad that the United Nations says has killed at least 5 000 people in 11 months.
Assad’s government says it is fighting foreign-backed insurgents, and most deaths have been among its troops.
Western and Arab nations are trying to overcome Russian resistance to a UN Security Council resolution backing an Arab League call for Assad to give up power. The diplomacy has taken on new urgency since activists said overnight that Assad’s forces had killed more than 200 people in the city of Homs.
Tunisia started a procedure on Saturday for withdrawing its recognition of Assad’s government.
Dekbas said Arab states should confront the Russian delegate to the United Nations, whose delay in taking action “allows for a continuation of....killing of the Syrian people”.
He condemned what he said was “the international community standing and watching” violence in Syria, which he described as “crimes against humanity”.
Friday, February 3, 2012
Bahrain protest
Bahrain player sentenced for protesting
Bahrain 's main opposition party says one of the detained
national team players has been convicted of participating in anti-government
protests and sentenced to two years in prison. Al Wefaq party says in a
statement that Mohammed Hubail was convicted and sentenced on Thursday during
closed-door proceedings in Bahrain 's special security court. The court was set up under
martial law imposed in March to quell Shiite-led demonstrations against a Sunni
monarchy. At least two of his teammates, including Hubail's brother and Bahrain soccer star Alaa, have been in custody since the
crackdown began.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Syria violence
Syria violence And U.N
The new bloodshed came as
activists reported a grim milestone in the 8-month-old revolt: November was the
deadliest month of the uprising, with at least 950 people killed in gunbattles,
raids and other violence as protesters demand the ouster of President Bashar
Assad.The U.N. estimates more than 4,000 people have been killed since the
uprising began in the middle of March, inspired by the Arab Spring revolutions
sweeping the Middle East."In light of the manifest failure of the Syrian
authorities to protect their citizens, the international community needs to
take urgent and effective measures to protect the Syrian people," Navi
Pillay, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, told an emergency meeting
of the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva. Pillay on Thursday characterized
the conflict in Syria
as a civil war.International intervention, such as the NATO action in Libya
that helped topple Moammar Gadhafi, is all but out of the question in Syria.
But the European Union, the Arab League, Turkey
and others have piled on sanctions aimed at crippling the regime once and for
all.The EU's latest sanctions, which were announced Thursday, target 12 people
and 11 companies with travel bans and asset freezes. They add to a long list of
regime figures previously sanctioned by the EU, including Assad himself and
high-ranking security officials.The identities of those on the new list were
made public Friday in the EU's official journal. They include the ministers of
finance and the economy, as well as army officers.Also on the list are the
pro-government Cham Press TV and Al-Watan newspaper, as well as a research
center that the EU says provides support to the Syrian military in acquiring
equipment for the surveillance of demonstrators. Three oil companies, which the
EU statement said provide financial support to the regime, were also listed.
They include the Syria Trading Oil Company, which is responsible for Syria's
oil exports.Royal Dutch Shell PLC also said Friday it will halt its operations
in Syria to comply with the penalties.The economic sanctions will limit the
regime's access to cash at a time when Assad is relying more than ever on the
support of the business classes.Assad has spent years shifting the country away
from the socialism espoused by his father, which helped boost a new and vibrant
merchant class that transformed Syria's economic landscape — even as the
regime's political trappings remained unchanged.So far, the monied classes have
clung to the sidelines, but if the economic squeeze reaches them, it could be a
game-changer for the regime.Despite Friday's diplomatic squeeze, violence
continued.The most serious violence appears to have occurred in the Syrian town
of Talkalakh, where witnesses reported more than six hours of explosions and
gunfire starting at 3 a.m."We were hearing strong explosions and the crack
of heavy machine-gun fire," Ahmad al-Fahel, who lives on the Lebanese side
of the border, told the Associated Press by telephone. "It sounded as if
they were destroying the city."The town is within walking distance from Lebanon,
and at least two people were struck by bullets on the Lebanese side. They
included an 11-year-old girl and a 40-year-old man, Lebanese security officials
said, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.There was no
immediate word on casualties in Talkalakh. But deadly violence was reported
elsewhere in Syria,
in Homs and Idlib provinces. At
least nine people were killed nationwide, according to the Local Coordination
Committees, which is a coalition of Syrian activists groups.The reports of
violence, and the activist groups' death toll for November, could not be
independently confirmed. The regime has sealed the country off from foreign
journalists and prevented independent reporting.Assad is depending on the
strong support of Russia and China to withstand the sanctions and growing
worldwide isolation.Russia and China have vetoed a Western-backed U.N. Security
Council resolution condemning the bloodshed in Syria, arguing that NATO misused
a previous U.N. mandate authorizing use of force in Libya.On Friday, Russia's
Ambassador Valery Loshchinin, whose nation has sold arms to Syria, said
opposition groups are being armed and organized from abroad.He echoed the
Syrian government's argument that foreign powers looking to destabilize Syria
are behind the unrest — not true protesters seeking more freedom and the end to
dictatorship."Now, we hear, unfortunately, that the conflict in Syria
continues to be fueled by outside forces who are interested in further
destabilizing the situation," Loshchinin told the emergency meeting of the
U.N. Human Rights Council."Armed terrorist and extremist groups are being
armed and organized, supplied with weapons and money from abroad," he
said. "The situation in Syria
must be resolved in strict observance of international law and the provisions
of the United Nations Charter."But U.S. Ambassador Eileen Chamberlain
Donahoe accused the regime itself of stoking the conflict "with propaganda
about foreign conspiracies and domestic terrorism.""The propaganda is
fooling no one," Donahoe said. "The regime is driving the cycle of
violence and sectarianism."The 47-nation rights council passed a
resolution backed by 37 African, European, Asian, Arab and American members
chiding Syria
for "gross and systematic violations of human rights."Russia
and China were
among four countries to vote against the motion.The resolution also established
the post of a special human rights investigator to investigate abuses in Syria.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)








