Affu salamu bainakum, spread the salam among you... Sometime just a small word can bring the heart together.
Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 04, 2015
Search Syria
Different by search in google between Sweden and Syria which clearly show the reality of calamity upon Syrian volk under regime Assad brutallity.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Friday, October 25, 2013
Amal, young Syrian girl exposed to all kind of regime Assad crimes
True story about a girl named "Amal" being detained by Syrian Assad regime, where-in she experiencing torture in various ways including gang rapping by the Assad regime. Daily get tortured beside being forced to witness the torture of other detainees like cut the genitals of male prisoners and murder by the Assad regime.
Her life is destroyed and her fiance was killed. She keeping hope that all who did this will be tried for the crime, and sentenced to pay accounted for punishment.
Regime Syrian snipers targeting pregnant women
An X-ray shows a bullet lodged in a baby's head. The image would be chilling enough without knowing the child was still in its mother's womb when it became the target of snipers hiding in the shadows in northern Syria.
The mother survived. Her baby didn't. And it's not the only one.
Volunteer doctor David Nott, a British surgeon who's worked in several Syrian hospitals with the charity Syria Relief, says snipers are playing a "targeting game," and heavily pregnant women are on the hit list.
"Most of the children removed were seven, eight, nine months gestation, which meant it was fairly obvious to anybody that these women were pregnant."
Young children are also being targeted, Nott said.
Photos provided by Syria Relief show a young girl with painted nails lying in a hospital bed with head wounds. She appears no more than five years old. Another, around the same age, lies under a green sheet with a gaping wound to her forehead.
Nott said 90% of surgeries he performed on any given day were for sniper wounds.
On some days, the wounds were suspiciously similar.
"After a while we noticed that there were certain trends going on," Nott said.
"We had some days, say, 10 or 15 gunshot wounds of which eight or nine of them were targeted in one particular area. So for example, one day, we received say 15, 16 gunshot wounds and of that eight to nine were targeted in the left groin only.
"Then the following day they were targeted in the right groin only. So it seemed to me like there was some of thing going on -- a game going on -- between the snipers."
Knott said other local doctors he worked with told him they'd heard snipers were receiving little presents (like packets of cigarettes) for people they'd shot during the day.
Sunday, September 08, 2013
SYRIAN REVOLUTION
VETO is a short film sheds light on the current Syrian Revolution and the circumstances behind the transformation from peaceful movement to an armed revolution. VETO takes you through the last two years of this unbearable suffering with over 100,000 Syrian victims and more than 5 million displaced people, and a clueless world about how to stop this horrendous crime! VETO was made in 2012 and was nominated for the Documentary of The Year Award in Germany 2013 and was highlighted by several international media outlets.
يلقي هذا الفيلم القصير الضوء على الثورة السورية والظروف وراء تحولها من حركة سلمية إلى ثورة مسلحة، ويأخذك الفيلم خلال سنوات الثورة ليرصد المعاناة التي اودت يحياة أكثر من 100،000 سوري و تشرد أكثر من 5 ملايين شخص و مازال المجتمع الدولي متفرجا و متناسيا مهمته في وقف هذه الجريمة النكراء و قد رشح هذا الفبلم لجائزة افضل فيلم وثائقي في مهوجان سينما من اجل السلام في ألمانيا في عام 2013 وكان قد نال اهتمام خاص من قبل العديد من وسائل الإعلام العالمية
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Syrian letest news 03.2013
A suicide bomb ripped through a mosque in the
heart of the Syrian capital on 21.03.2013, killing a top Sunni Muslim
preacher, Sheikh Mohammad Said Ramadan al-Buti with-in at least 40
others were killed and more than 84 wounded.
Its was claim that this action was carry by Syrien rebel, however, everyone should remember the Hama massacre occurred in February 1982, under the orders of the country's president, Hafez Al-Assad, Bashar Assad father, conducted a scorched earth operation against the town of Hama in order to quell a revolt against the government of Hafez al-Assad. The Hama massacre, carried out by the Syrian Army supposedly under commanding General Rifaat al-Assad, President Assad's younger brother. Report stated that 10,000 to 40,00 Syrian citizens were killed. So, its is clear that this regime will do anything for them to keep in power.
Shaykh Muhammad al-Yaqoubi say: "We strongly condemn the bombing of mosques and the killing of people inside them. We have no doubt that the regime is responsible for the killing of Dr. Bouti, as we have reliable information on this. In fact, we were working towards to convince him defect from the regime and move outside Syria. The last article we wrote refuting his stance entitled "To Dr Bouti: Wake up from Your State of intoxication" had reached him, and he had begun thinking seriously about breaking away. One of his inner circle was assisting in this effort, Dr. Bouti was preparing to declare something against the regime on Friday as a suprise. We have no doubt that the regime was listening in on all his discussions, and therefore decided to get rid of him."
Its was claim that this action was carry by Syrien rebel, however, everyone should remember the Hama massacre occurred in February 1982, under the orders of the country's president, Hafez Al-Assad, Bashar Assad father, conducted a scorched earth operation against the town of Hama in order to quell a revolt against the government of Hafez al-Assad. The Hama massacre, carried out by the Syrian Army supposedly under commanding General Rifaat al-Assad, President Assad's younger brother. Report stated that 10,000 to 40,00 Syrian citizens were killed. So, its is clear that this regime will do anything for them to keep in power.
Shaykh Muhammad al-Yaqoubi say: "We strongly condemn the bombing of mosques and the killing of people inside them. We have no doubt that the regime is responsible for the killing of Dr. Bouti, as we have reliable information on this. In fact, we were working towards to convince him defect from the regime and move outside Syria. The last article we wrote refuting his stance entitled "To Dr Bouti: Wake up from Your State of intoxication" had reached him, and he had begun thinking seriously about breaking away. One of his inner circle was assisting in this effort, Dr. Bouti was preparing to declare something against the regime on Friday as a suprise. We have no doubt that the regime was listening in on all his discussions, and therefore decided to get rid of him."
Friday, October 12, 2012
SYRIA - SIGN OF A GREAT COMING CHANGE
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One by one, the dictactor which a puppet of shadow goverment (Freemason etc) after the colonize era, to make Islamic world stay weak and behind, now falling down.
The wave of Arab unrest that began with the Tunisian revolution reached Syri
One by one, the dictactor which a puppet of shadow goverment (Freemason etc) after the colonize era, to make Islamic world stay weak and behind, now falling down.
The wave of Arab unrest that began with the Tunisian revolution reached Syri
a
on March 15, 2011, when residents of a small southern city took to the
streets to protest the torture of students who had put up
anti-government graffiti. The government responded with heavy-handed
force, and demonstrations quickly spread across much of the country.
By the late summer of 2012, the country was in a full-blown civil war. More than 21,000 people, mostly civilians, were thought to have died and tens of thousands of others had been arrested. By September 2012, 234,000 Syrian refugees had registered in neighboring countries — about half of whom left during August, while tens of thousands more have not registered. In addition, about 2.5 million Syrians needed aid inside the country, with more than 1.2 million displaced domestically, according to the United Nations.
Control of towns and cities seesawed between rebel forces that were poorly organized but increasingly well armed and confident, and a government that was too weak to stamp out the rebellion but strong enough to prevent it from holding territory.
The danger of the fighting setting off regional conflict seemed to rise with every month, with destabilizing effects seen in Lebanon and Iraq. But it was the possibility of a clash between Syria and its former ally Turkey that drew the most worry, particularly after Turkey shelled targets across the border in October 2012 after a Syrian mortar attack killed five of its civilians. Since Turkey is a Nato member, the fighting there could deepen international involvement.
President Bashar al-Assad, a British-trained doctor who inherited Syria’s harsh dictatorship from his father, Hafez al-Assad, had at first wavered between force and hints of reform. But in April 2011, just days after lifting the country’s decades-old state of emergency, he set off the first of what became a series of withering crackdowns, sending tanks into restive cities as security forces opened fire on demonstrators. In retrospect, the attacks appeared calculated to turn peaceful protests violent, to justify an escalation of force.
The conflict is complicated by Syria’s ethnic divisions. The Assads and much of the nation’s elite, especially the military, belong to the Alawite sect, a minority in a mostly Sunni country. While the Assad government has the advantage of crushing firepower and units of loyal, elite troops, the insurgents should not be underestimated. They are highly motivated and, over time, demographics should tip in their favor. Alawites constitute about 12 percent of the 23 million Syrians. Sunni Muslims, the opposition’s backbone, make up about 75 percent of the population.
By the late summer of 2012, the country was in a full-blown civil war. More than 21,000 people, mostly civilians, were thought to have died and tens of thousands of others had been arrested. By September 2012, 234,000 Syrian refugees had registered in neighboring countries — about half of whom left during August, while tens of thousands more have not registered. In addition, about 2.5 million Syrians needed aid inside the country, with more than 1.2 million displaced domestically, according to the United Nations.
Control of towns and cities seesawed between rebel forces that were poorly organized but increasingly well armed and confident, and a government that was too weak to stamp out the rebellion but strong enough to prevent it from holding territory.
The danger of the fighting setting off regional conflict seemed to rise with every month, with destabilizing effects seen in Lebanon and Iraq. But it was the possibility of a clash between Syria and its former ally Turkey that drew the most worry, particularly after Turkey shelled targets across the border in October 2012 after a Syrian mortar attack killed five of its civilians. Since Turkey is a Nato member, the fighting there could deepen international involvement.
President Bashar al-Assad, a British-trained doctor who inherited Syria’s harsh dictatorship from his father, Hafez al-Assad, had at first wavered between force and hints of reform. But in April 2011, just days after lifting the country’s decades-old state of emergency, he set off the first of what became a series of withering crackdowns, sending tanks into restive cities as security forces opened fire on demonstrators. In retrospect, the attacks appeared calculated to turn peaceful protests violent, to justify an escalation of force.
The conflict is complicated by Syria’s ethnic divisions. The Assads and much of the nation’s elite, especially the military, belong to the Alawite sect, a minority in a mostly Sunni country. While the Assad government has the advantage of crushing firepower and units of loyal, elite troops, the insurgents should not be underestimated. They are highly motivated and, over time, demographics should tip in their favor. Alawites constitute about 12 percent of the 23 million Syrians. Sunni Muslims, the opposition’s backbone, make up about 75 percent of the population.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Have a heart for Syria
A grim catalogue of torture has emerged from former detainees describing their treatment in Syria’s detention centres since the predominantly peaceful protests against President Bashar al-Assad’s government began in March 2011. This report reveals that all the various security forces are routinely torturing and ill-treating detainees held in the context of the protests and unrest, using methods of cruelty mostly used for decades. The torture carried out appears to be part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population as part of Syrian government policy to crush dissent.
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/MDE24/016/2012/en/708c3f40-538e-46a9-9798-ebae27f56946/mde240162012en.pdf
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Syrian Revolution Update | تحديث الثورة السورية
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A video describing recent atrocities that are taking place in Syria. Dedicated to all those who sacrificed their lives in the pursuit of liberating Syria.
A video describing recent atrocities that are taking place in Syria. Dedicated to all those who sacrificed their lives in the pursuit of liberating Syria.
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Violence continued across Syria
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Syria defied international calls to halt attacks on rebel enclaves as at least 89 people were killed nationwide Saturday on the eve of a constitutional referendum that the opposition sees as a ploy by President Bashar Assad's regime.
Assad
presented the revised charter — which allows for at least a theoretical
opening of the country's political system — as an effort to placate
critics and quell the 11-month uprising against his rule.
But the vote is unlikely to overshadow a new round of international condemnation and calls that Assad leave power.
The new charter would create a multiparty system in Syria, which has been ruled by the same family dynasty since Assad's father Hafez seized power in a coup in 1963. Such change as unthinkable a year ago.
After
11 months of bloodshed, however, Assad's opponents say the referendum
and other promises of reform are not enough and have called for a
boycott of the vote.
Assad was
roundly criticized Friday at a major international conference on the
Syrian crisis in Tunisia, where U.S., European and Arab officials began
planning a civilian peacekeeping mission to deploy after the regime
falls. President Barack Obama said Friday of Assad's rule: "It is time for that regime to move on."
On Saturday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Assad's crackdown belied promised reforms.
"That
kind of logic unfortunately renders any kind of reform meaningless," he
said. "To fight on the one hand with your people and then to claim that
there is reform is contradictory."Still, Assad enjoys substantial support in many parts of the country. Some have benefited from his policies, others fear chaos or sectarian civil war if he falls.
The insular nature of the regime makes the extent and character of that support hard to measure, and the regime has prevented most media from operating freely in the country during the uprising.
In the capital Damascus, where Assad retains support among religious minorities and the business class, many said they were eager to vote.
"This constitution is not for one faction against the other," said Suhban Elewi, a 55-year-old businessman who trades in antiquities. "It is for the nation and for all the Syrian people." Elewi said he planned to vote yes, and dismissed opposition calls to boycott the vote. "The country is going forward with them or without them," he said. Posters around town urged people to vote. "Don't turn your back on voting," one said.
Another — showing the red, black and white Syrian flag — touted new constitution. "Syria's constitution: Freedom of belief," it said, referring to clauses protecting religious minorities. Syrian Interior Minster Lt. Gen. Mohammed al-Shaar said more than 14,000 voting centers have been set up for more than 14 million eligible voters across the country.
But the suggestion of political reform led by Assad's regime rang hollow in many parts of the country, where government security forces continued their deadly crackdown on rebels seeking to end Assad's rule.
The violence could also prevent the vote taking place nationwide.
An activist in a neighborhood in the central city of Homs that government forces have besieged and shelled daily for one month laughed when asked about the vote.
The regime's relentless assault on Homs, which has emerged as the heart of the anti-Assad revolt, entered its fourth week with government shelling killing at least 19 people Saturday.
A spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross said the group's local chapter was not able to enter the area Saturday to evacuate wounded Syrians, two injured foreign journalists and the bodies of two others killed by government rockets this week.
American correspondent Marie Colvin and French photojournalist Remi Ochlik were killed Wednesday by shelling in Homs. Colvin's mother, Rosemarie Colvin, told the AP that "Absolutely no decision there has been made" on burial or funeral arrangements. "We're still hoping very, very strongly that they'll bring the two of them out," she said.
A team from the Syrian Red Crescent evacuated 27 people from the area Friday, seven of them wounded, but was not able to get out the journalists.
Spokesman
Hicham Hassan said the group would continue negotiating with Syrian
authorities and activists to get access to the area and that the Syrian
Red Crescent carried out evacuations elsewhere in Syria, including in
other neighborhoods of Homs.
Violence continued across the country.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 89
people were killed, including 23 from the army and security forces,
across the country. Nineteen of the dead were in Homs.
The
dead included citizen journalist Anas al-Tarshi, who filmed attacks and
people killed in Homs to post on activists websites. He was taking
wounded people to a field hospital when a shell struck his car, the
group said. Also killed in Homs was Ahmed Swaidan, an ex-player for a local soccer club, who died when a mortar fell on his house.
The
Syrian uprising began in March with mostly peaceful protests in a
number of the country's impoverished provinces. As security forces
violently suppressed them, killing thousands, the protest grew and
escalated into an increasingly armed insurrection.
The
U.N. said last month that 5,400 people had been killed since the
uprising's start. Hundreds more have died since. Activists put the
number at more than 7,300, but overall figures are impossible to confirm
independently.
___
Hubbard
reported from Beirut. Associated Press writers Christopher Torchia from
Istanbul and Frank Jordans from Geneva contributed to this report.
Saturday, November 05, 2011
'Deadly clashes' continue in Syria
Activists say 18 people have been killed by security forces in protests across Syria. The clashes come just days after the government said it would stop the violence against anti-government demonstrators.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Syria's, violence keep continues
President Bashar al-Assad, dictator of Syria, at first wavered between force and hints of reform. But in April, just days after lifting the country’s decades-old state of emergency, he launched the first of what became a series of withering crackdowns, sending tanks into restive cities as security forces opened fire on demonstrators.
Neither the violence nor Mr. Assad’s offers of political reform, rejected as shams by protest leaders, brought an end to the unrest.
Similarly, the protesters have not been able to withstand direct assault
by the military’s armored forces.
The conflict is complicated by Syria’s ethnic divisions. The Assads
and much of the nation’s elite, especially the military, belong to the
Alawite sect, a small minority in a mostly Sunni country.
Syria’s crackdown has been condemned internationally, as President Assad, a British-trained doctor, who had seem inherited iron-handed regime dictator from his father, Hafez al-Assad.
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