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News, April 2012

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Syrian Troops Attack Damascus Suburb Despite UN Truce Monitors

By ZEINA KARAM | AP

Arab News, April 22, 2012, 16:51

BEIRUT:

Syrian troops stormed and shelled districts in a suburb of the capital Damascus Sunday, activists said, a day after the Security Council voted to expand the number of UN truce monitors from 30 to 300 in hopes of salvaging an international peace plan marred by continued fighting between the military and rebels.

An eight-member team is already on the ground in Syria, and since Thursday has visited flashpoints of the 13-month-long conflict. Fighting generally stops when the observers visit an area, but there has been a steady stream of reports of violence from towns and regions where they have not yet gone.

The cease-fire and observer mission are part of international envoy Kofi Annan’s plan for ending the violence in Syria and launching talks between President Bashar Assad and those trying to oust him. Syria’s opposition and its Western supporters suspect Assad is largely paying lip service to the cease-fire since full compliance could quickly sweep him from power.

So far, the regime has kept up its attacks on opposition strongholds, though on a smaller scale than before the truce deadline.

Mohammed Saeed, an activist based in the Damascus suburb of Douma, said two people were killed Sunday by indiscriminate firing in the sprawling district, which was the scene of intense clashes between rebels and security forces before the UN-brokered cease-fire went into effect more than a week ago.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based opposition group with a network of activists on the ground, confirmed the deaths. It also reported that a third person was killed overnight in the village of Hteita outside Damascus when troops opened fire from a checkpoint.

It was not immediately clear what prompted the attack on Douma. Saeed said loud explosions that shook the city early Sunday caused panic among residents, some of whom used mosque loudspeakers to urge people to take cover in basements and in lower floors of apartment buildings.

“This UN observers thing is a big joke,” Saeed said. “Shelling stops and tanks are hidden when they visit somewhere, and when they leave, shelling resumes.”

His comments reflect a widespread lack of faith among many Syrians in the UN cease-fire plan, which calls for ending violence, withdrawing troops and heavy weapons from populated areas, releasing detainees and allowing peaceful demonstrations.

The Security Council approved a resolution Saturday expanding the UN observer mission from 30 to 300 members, initially for 90 days. The expanded force is meant to shore up a cease-fire that officially took effect 10 days ago, but has failed to halt the violence, which the UN says has killed more than 9,000 people since March 2011.

Special envoy Kofi Annan welcomed the vote on Sunday, calling it a “pivotal moment” in the process of stabilizing the country and urged all Syrians to uphold the cease-fire.

“The government in particular must desist from the use of heavy weapons and ... withdraw such weapons and armed units from population centers,” he said.

He said the presence of observers would help create the conditions conducive to launching the much-needed political process and called on the Syrian government and the opposition “to prepare to engage in such a process as a matter of utmost priority.”

UN chief Ban Ki-moon has accused Assad of violating the truce, and said Saturday that “the gross violations of the fundamental rights of the Syrian people must stop at once.” Rebel fighters have also kept up attacks.

The eight-member advance team has visited the Damascus suburb of Arbeen, the southern province of Daraa, and the battered opposition stronghold of Homs. The monitors have not visited Douma yet.

Five monitors who toured Homs Saturday encountered unusually calm streets after weeks of shelling, and activists said it was the first quiet day in months. Two observers stayed behind in Homs to keep monitoring the city, after the rest of the team left that evening.

Amateur video posted on the Internet showed the observers, protected only by bright blue helmets and bulletproof vests, walking through rubble-strewn deserted streets lined by gutted apartments buildings. They were thronged by residents clamoring for foreign military help to oust Assad.

In one video, two monitors are seen sitting in a room listening to a Syrian man asking them to stay in Homs.

“We want you to stay, please stay. ... When you come, shelling stops, killing stops. It’s our blood,” the man says as an observer nods his head.

UN observers tour central Syria, establish liaison with all parties

DAMASCUS, April 22, 2012 (Xinhua) --

The spokesman of the advance team of UN observers said the group visited two central regions and established contacts with all parties there on Sunday.

Briefing reporters in the capital Damascus late Sunday, Neeraj Singh said the team visited Hama province and Rastan town near flashpoint Homs province.

The spokesman, who is an Indian national, refused to give further details on the observers' activities because "the precise details are premature to talk about."

Singh went on to say that the team is preparing for the arrival and deployment of more observers.

A day earlier, the UN Security Council unanimously decided to approve the deployment to Syria of up to 300 unarmed UN military observers in order to monitor a fragile ceasefire between the Syrian government forces and opposition fighters.

The task assigned to the UN observers, Singh said, is to establish liaison with all parties in the conflict-torn country and make logistic arrangements.

On the ground, seven unarmed military observers are already in place, two of whom were dispatched to Homs on Saturday. Many more are expected to arrive in Syria by next week.

The advance team of international observers arrived last week after Syria accepted the UN-backed truce aiming to solve the crisis politically.

Since their arrival, violence has to some extent declined; however, attacks and deaths are reported to be taking place on a daily basis.

Editor: Mu Xuequan




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