Kenickie
Bluelight Crew
The Al Jazeera woman who has jailed by Syria and then shipped to Iran is free, and surprisingly, still has all of her fingers and toes.
9 hours 10 min ago - Syria
Al Jazeera's Zeina Khodr has just spoken to a Lebanese resident of Bekaya, a town on the border with Syria.
He says that he can see Syrian army and plainclothes security personnel raiding homes in the town of Areda, on the Syrian side of the border.
The man says most of Areda's residents have fled the town for Lebanon.
He reported that there was no gunfire being heard in the area at the moment.
3 hours 21 min ago - Syria
Russian envoy says Assad must be given a second chance - tweets @SyrianK2011
Russian Ambassador to Lebanon Alexander Zasypkin said on Thursday that President Bashar al-Assad should be granted a second chance to implement reforms.
“Russia sees the need to give Syrian President Bashar al-Assad a new chance to implement reforms in his country and solve internal problems without any foreign interferences in Syrian affairs,” the National News Agency quoted Zasypkin as saying.
He added that his country “was and still is keen on the security and stability of the region.” - nowlebanon.com
3 hours 2 min ago - Syria
US tells Assad to lead transition or leave - tweeted by @bmangh
The United States told Syria’s President Bashar Al Assad on Wednesday to lead a transition or step down and slapped him with sanctions in its latest effort to press him to end deadly violence against his people.
The news came as Syrian forces were accused of killing at least eight people in a besieged border town and as Assad said the two-month-old revolt against had been mishandled by the authorities but was now drawing to a close. - Khaleej Times
..i.1 hour 46 min ago - Syria
There is heavy army deployment in the Damascus suburb of Douma, telecommunication was blocked a while ago.
While, high security measures have been taken in the Edleb region to prevent residents of neighboring villages from reaching the city for Friday’s demonstrations.
Russia and China know how to mind their own business and respect the sovereignty of sovereign nations...
So the fuck what? What sort of isolationist non-global fantasy world are you living in? A third of those bullshit examples were U.S. troops simply being deployed to U.S. property to protect civilians during uprisings or violent national upheaval. Another third either occurred within the U.S. itself or are simply standard deployments of military bases in foreign countries. Pick up a history book sometime, then make a list of all the "British military interventions" during a century when they were the world's superpower. Or the French. Or the Spanish.
Stop being retarded.
Interventionism has hardly done your country much good has it?
he main reason the US is despised and bankrupt.
Quite the contrary. We're still the most powerful country in the World for that reason.
The United States isn't bankrupt.
10 hours 53 min ago - Syria
We're receiving reports from Homs that roughly 15 tanks and at least 2,000 Syrian security forces personnel have pulled back from Talkalakh into Homs.
A crowd of at least 3,000 people was seen apparently celebrating the return of the troops. Traffic was completely blocked for hours on the 60km stretch of road from the Lebanese border (where Talkalakh is located) to Homs. Pro-government demonstrators were also firing guns skywards.
When asked whether they supported the government, a driver who was part of the procession said:
We must celebrate if we don't want any trouble."
Others, however, responded to the same question with:
We won against the terrorists."
10 hours 53 min ago - Syria
The US State department has been tweeting to remind the world that the US has designated Syria as a "State sponsor of terror" since 1979.
We reject the Syrian government’s justification of its tactics as necessary to maintain “stability.” The Asad regime remains the source of instability as it foments violence by meeting peaceful protests with deadly force and mass arrests. Despite the Syrian government’s violent repression and blatant disregard for the human rights of its citizens, the Syrian people continue to call for their legitimate demands to be met. The Syrian people have made clear that the status quo is unacceptable and that the Syrian government must meet their legitimate aspirations and end the killing, torture, and arbitrary detentions of protestors and activists.
10 hours 2 min ago - Syria
Syria's Local Coordination Committees, who have coordinated protests against the government, say they want today to be marked as "Azadi Friday". "Azadi" is the Kurdish word for "freedom". (It also carries that same meaning in several other languages, including Farsi and Urdu.)
9 hours 5 min ago - Syria
According to the Syrian Revolution 2011 Facebook group, anti-government protesters this Friday will have a "surprise" for the government.
Damascus and Aleppo are preparing a surprise for the regime and the shabiha [thugs]. We will not be tolerant with the security forces or shabiha. We won't let them arrest us and we will be like a thorn in their throat."
8 hours 25 min ago - Syria
Al Jazeera's Zeina Khodr has just been on the bulletin, live from Wadi Khaled, just a few hundred metres from the Syrian border with Lebanon.
Friday prayers are still underway, but we are expecting protests to take place in a number of areas. The opposition has called for massive protests around the country. I managed to speak to a leader of a Kurdish party in the north - now it's worth pointing out that over the last two months the Kurds have turned out in large numbers in various cities and towns in northern Syria. But the Kurds really have stopped short of calling for the toppling of the government.
"Only a few days ago, the Kurdish political parties united and issued a joint statement. In that statement they are still giving the Syrian president a chance, saying 'initiate reforms'. The Kurds really could tip the balance in Syria. Yes, they've taken to the streets, but it seems that they are still willing to talk.
"They are the largest ethnic minority, and there's a considerable population of Kurds, really, in the second-largest citym, Aleppo, which has so far remained relatively quiet. We saw protests there, but confined to the university campus in Aleppo. So it would be interesting to see whether or not the turnout will be large, but we have to bear in mind that there is a heavy security crackdown in protest hubs such as the central [cities] of Homs and Baniyas, and all across the southern countryside, the Deraa governate.
"Hundreds of Syrians now live in border villages - just 200m [away from me] is the Syrian border, you can actually see the Syrian army. They've reinforced their positions, they've laid siege to the town of Areda, and behind Areda the town of Talkalakh, one of the protest hubs.
"Every Syrian refugee I've spoken to here say they will not accept anything less than the toppling of the Syrian government. For them, there is no compromise.
"I also asked them whether or not President Obama's speech yesterday, calling on President Bashar to initiate the process of democratic reform or leave - they're saying that this is a positive move, and they would like the international community to put more political pressure in their words. But the opposition seems to be divided, and this is where the problem lies. You have the opposition inside Syria still saying that ... yes, we could still work with the Syrian government if they initiate political reforms, if they reform the security. But you have those abroad - the opposition groups abroad - saying 'No, there is no way to hold any sort of dialogue with the Syrian government'. So this really weakens the opposition and the protest movement in Syria."
8 hours 13 min ago - Syria
Pro-democracy protestors in the central city of Homs are attempting to evade the army and secret police and gather in a main square by using side streets in the Old City where security has not deployed, according to an eyewitness who spoke to Al Jazeera.
With tanks deployed around Homs, especially in the Baba Amer and Sultaniyya areas, and checkpoints on most main streets, some 2,000 protestors are using a technique which succeeded on Wednesday, when protesters started in small neighbourhoods and made their way to Homs’ main squares unhindered.
Secret police and soldiers have begun searching all passing cars for weapons, the eyewitness said.
“This is an illusion. The regime wants to create in the minds of people the impression that there are terrorists and armed groups among them, which is absolutely not the case,” he said.
“We didn’t use any weapons before and we have no intention of using violence. The protests started peacefully and will carry on like that. We expect anything today – they have already shelled Baba Amer before so anything is possible.”
8 hours 4 min ago - Syria
Thousands of pro-democracy protesters are marching in the Syrian city of Baniyas, despite a heavy security presence, says the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
In Qamishli, thousands of Syrian Kurds are shouting "Freedom!" in a large pro-democracy rally, Reuters reports, citing witnesses.
In the southern Damascus suburb of Hajr al-Aswad, thousands of pro-democracy protesters are calling for the "fall of the regime".
In Homs, a rights campaigner says that Syrian security forces are firing live ammunition at pro-democracy protesters, Reuters reports.
7 hours 46 min ago - Syria
AFP reports that hundreds of pro-democracy protesters have taken to the streets in Ain Arab, a mainly Kurdish region near Aleppo, chanting "No to violence, yes to dialogue" and "We are not Islamists or Salafists, we want freedom".
The news agency was getting its information from Radif Mustapha, the head of a Kurdish human rights group, via telephone.
"No one is calling for the downfall of the regime," he said, as the demonstrators could be overheard shouting "azadi, azadi" or "freedom" in Kurdish.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says that thousands of men, women and children are on the streets of Baniyas, calling for freedom and the lifting of a siege on several cities by security forces. SOHR says many of the men were marching bare-chested, in an attempt to prove that they were unarmed.
Hassan Berro, an activist, told AFP that protests were also taking place in Qamishli, Amuda and Derbasiyeh.
Berro said that security forces were not intervening to stop those protests at this point.
7 hours 43 min ago - Syria
An activist has told Reuters that Syrian security forces have fired live rounds into crowds gathered for at least two separate protests in Homs.
The Syrian Observatory Human Rights, meanwhile, says that the protests in Baniyas as the largest since such protests began about nine weeks ago.
7 hours 30 min ago - Syria
In Midan, a conservative Sunni neighbourhood of Damascus, a demonstration by Abu Ayoub al-Ansari Mosque had barely begun before security forces fired tear gas on around 1,000 protesters, an eyewitness told Al Jazeera.
Several protesters were arrested, he said, including three of his friends.
At the nearby al-Hassan mosque, a protest is currently underway, according to a second eyewitness, with people chanting for an end to the military sieges imposed on Deraa, Baniyas, Homs and Douma and for freedom.
On April 29, Midan saw the largest anti-regime protests in the capital since the uprising began. There is a heavy security presence around the al-Hassan mosque, but the protest has so far have been allowed to proceed.
In Berze, a suburb northeast of Damascus between 500 to 700 protesters are marching from al-Diea Mosque towards to Salaam Mosque where they plan to join other protesters heading to the main square, according to an eyewitness there.
Again, there is a heavy security presence in Berze, said the eyewitness, but the protesters had so far been left alone.
7 hours 23 min ago - Syria
More reports of violence in Damascus, where an eyewitness has told Al Jazeera that pro-regime thugs with iron bars have attacked a group of 500 to 700 worshippers as they left the Dahabiyye Mosque in Bab Sriejeh, in the Old City, after Friday prayers.
Protesters had planned a demonstration to start after the prayers but the imam had warned against protests starting from his mosque. The thugs were waiting outside the mosque, said the eyewitness, suggesting they knew a protest was planned.
7 hours 2 min ago - Syria
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says that gunfire is continuing in Baniyas.
"The sound of gunfire is being heard now in Baniyas. The demonstration erupted although around 1,000 people from the city and around it have been detained in the last few weeks," a spokesman for the Observatory told Reuters.
Witnesses say large demonstrations are also taking place in Hama and Tel (north of Damascus). One witness said the combined crowd at two demonstrations in Hama was as much as 20,000.
6 hours 52 min ago - Syria
The Associated Press reports that three people have been killed after security forces opened fire on pro-democracy protesters in Homs, according to protest organisers. Details to follow.
6 hours 50 min ago - Syria
AFP says the number of people killed when security forces opened fire on protesters in Homs and Deraa is now five, including a child. The agency is citing witnesses.
The child and three other people were shot in Homs, and another person was shot in Sanamin, AFP says.
5 hours 58 min ago - Syria
Syrian secret police have killed at least nine people in Homs, including an 11-year-old boy, in an armed crackdown on protestors today, according to three separate eye witnesses who spoke to al-Jazeera.
The attack took place after the secret police had driven police cars into a demonstration of some 2,000 people in an attempt to break it up, said a second eyewitness. After hitting several protestors with the vehicles, one of the cars crashed into a wall, prompting the secret police to jump out and open fire.
5 hours 20 min ago - Syria
Responding to the crackdown on protest action in Syria, The Independent’s political correspondent Robert Fisk told Al Jazeera:
“In Egypt, at the end of the day, the army would not shoot its own people. In Syria and Libya, they will, because they defend the regime rather than the people, and that's the problem.
“In certain countries, but obviously Syria, we have a danger of a sectarian war. One of the things I learned from the people in Talkalakh is that when the army entered the town, they separated the Allawis and told them to go home, and then opened fire on the Sunnis. Now, is there a better way to start a civil war than to do that? So I'm very worried about Syria. I think there's a great danger of it breaking apart, but it's certainly in the Libya bracket for brutality.
Meanwhile, the Kurdish-majority areas of Syria’s north-east saw smaller than expected numbers of protestors, according to a Kurdish political activist, despite that today’s nationwide demonstrations had been dubbed by organisers as Azadi Friday, the Kurdish word for freedom.
4 hours 50 min ago - Syria
According to witnesses, in Qamishli around 3,000 protesters took to the streets calling for toppling the regime, a call that was echoed across the north.
While, in Amouda, some 6,000 protesters demonstrated, in Deir Basiyye around 2,000 and in Ain al-Arab around 2,000, he said. There were also protests in Ras al-Ain.
3 hours 46 min ago - Syria
In response to the first widespread participation of Assyrian Christians in the democratic uprising, Syrian security has raided the headquarters of the Assyrian Democratic Association in Qamishli and arrested 12 of its members, according to two activists who spoke to Al Jazeera.
"The new thing this Friday was the large participation of Christian Assyrians. There were hundreds of Assyrians with us and now the security men are arresting leaders from the Democratic Assyrian Organization," said a Kurdish leader in Qamishli.
"The regime is so afraid to see that Muslim Arabs and Kurds and Christians are demonstrating together against the regime. This the best answer to the regime who says that Salafists and radical Islamists are behind the demonstrations. Syrians want freedom."
Khodr Abdel Karim, a human rights activist in Qamishli, said: "This is a message from the regime to Syrian Christian not to participate in any of these demonstrations. It is the duty of every Syrian to claim them back from this arrest."
3 hours 42 min ago - Syria
At least 23 protestors have been killed across Syria today, according to Razan Zeitouna, a leading Syrian human rights researcher who spoke to Al Jazeera.
Activists have listed names of 23 protestors shot by Syrian security forces, with a further two victims yet to be fully identified.
Nine protestors were killed in Maret al-Naiman and Kafr Nabal, suburbs of Hama, nine were killed in Homs, including an 11-year-old boy, four were killed in Berze, a suburb of Damascus, and one person died in Sanamin, near Deraa.
3 hours 40 min ago - Syria
Security forces opened fire on protesters in Berze, a suburb north-east of Damascus, this afternoon, killing four protesters and wounding tens, an eyewitness told Al Jazeera.
"The protesters have all been shot in the legs and stomach," he said.
The protest began after Friday prayers where around 1,000 people marched through the streets chanting “peaceful, peaceful” and calling for the toppling of the regime.
The eyewitness told Al Jazeera that security forces had first attacked and beaten protesters with sticks and had then fired tear gas at them.
"Then they opened fire on us," he said, the sound of gun shots audible over the phone line as he spoke.
After the killing, security forces began detaining people, he said. "So people are afraid to go home for fear of being arrested."
The eyewitness said he had seen officers from the security services pouring fuel on a shop and a house in Berze before setting them on fire while protesters tried to stop them. Berze is now surrounded by police checkpoints and electricity to the town has been cut.
"I think they are doing it to blame us for sabotage," he said.
2 hours 36 min ago - Syria
Protestors in the far east of Syria have set fire to offices of the ruling Baath Party, according to two local leaders.
A video claiming to show the incident in Albou Kamal, on Syria's border with Iraq, shows thick black smoke pouring into the sky, but it is not possible to identity the building from which it is coming.
"The people here are very angry at this regime and the Baath Party," said a tribal leader from Deir Ezzour, the capital of the governorate.
"People want to overthrow the regime. There can be no dialogue with tanks and soldiers, no dialogue with security men who kill, arrest and smash the homes of civilians. We want democracy and freedom. We want to feel we are real citizens, not numbers."
An activist in Hassake, to the north of Deir Ezzour, confirmed news of the attack on the Baath Party offices.
1 hour 24 min ago - Syria
Hugo Chavez, the president of Venezuela, has jumped in to defend his "brother," President Bashar al-Assad of Syria.
Chavez tweeted that the Syria is the "victim of a fascist attack" - by which he meant the protests - after speaking with Assad by phone.
"Syria is the victim of a fascist onslaught. God help Syria!" Chavez wrote on his Twitter account.
1 hour 9 sec ago - Syria
Razan Zaitouna, a Syrian human rights lawyer, said dozens of people were killed on Friday.
Zaitouna said 12 people were killed in the town of Maaret al-Numan, south of Syria's second city Aleppo. Tanks had entered the town earlier in the day to disperse protesters.
She said another 11 were killed in the central city of Homs.
She said seven others were killed in Deraa, Latakia, the Damascus suburbs and Hama, where the current president's father, the late president Hafez al-Assad, sent the military to crush an armed Islamist uprising in the 1980s.
Syria has imposed a strict media blackout since the protests began and Al Jazeera has no way of independently confirming the death toll.
55 min 9 sec ago - Syria
Barack Obama, the US president, said in his speech that Syria was of "acute concern" for the United States and Israel, and outlined tough US measures against Damascus to Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister.
Obama said that Syria's actions amid a crackdown on demonstrators were an "acute concern" for Israel and said he outlined tough new sanctions that he imposed this week on President Bashar al-Assad.
His comments, spoken with Netanyahu at his side, came after his talks with the Israeli leader on Friday.
...21 min 9 sec ago - Syria
Lebanon should grant immediate asylum to Syrians fleeing violence in their country instead of detaining them, Human Rights Watch said Friday.
"Lebanon's security forces should stop detaining Syrian refugees who cross the border into Lebanon to escape violence and persecution in their country," the New York-based rights group said.
The rights group called on Lebanon to provide Syrian refugees "with at least temporary asylum, and above all refrain from deporting them back" to their country.
"Syria welcomed many Lebanese fleeing civil war back in 2006," said Nadim Houry, director of HRW's Beirut office. "Now it's time to return the favor.
HRW said it documented the detention by Lebanon's security forces of nine Syrian men and one child since May 15, allegedly for crossing illegally into Lebanon.
Deporting asylum seekers and refugees, Houry said, would "make Lebanon complicit with any harm they suffer at the hand of Syria's security services upon their return."
Security forces killed 44 people during anti-regime protests which swept Syria on Friday, a human right activist told the AFP news agency.
"Syrian authorities are continuing to use excessive force and live ammunition to face popular protests in various regions throughout the country," said Ammar Qurabi, head of the National Organisation for Human Rights.
He said said 26 people were killed in the province of Idlib and 13 in Homs. Two people were also killed in the eastern town of Deir Ezzor, one in Daraya, a suburb of the capital Damascus, one in the coastal city of Latakia and one in central Hama.
Al Jazeera has heard about more and more people being detained by Syrian authorities.
Amjad Baiazy, 29, was arrested in Damascus on May 12, 2011. A Syrian national usually residing in the UK, he is known for being outspoken about the injustices of the Assad regime. Baiazy's friends say there has not been much concrete information about his arrest.
This Facebook page was set up calling for his release.
Security forces have opened fire on mourners in Homs during a funeral for a protester killed there yesterday, an eyewitness told Al Jazeera.
Security forces opened fire on a crowd of around 1,000 mourners as they had left the Grand Mosque in the centre of the city. Gunshots were audible as Al Jazeera spoke to the eyewitness.
Funerals are taking place in the neighbourhoods of Al Wa’r, Hammediyye and by the Grand Mosque today in Homs today, where on Friday nine people were killed by security forces, including an 11-year-old boy from a nearby village.
Organisers of yesterday’s protests in Syria have released, for the first time, a map of the country detailing sites of protests, numbers killed and where live fire was used:
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In Homs more than 40,000 mourners are marching towards Tal-al-Nasser cemetery to bury several of the nine protesters who were killed in the city yesterday, a witness told Al Jazeera.
Funerals had begun from different mosques across the city but mourners had come together into a single large group which is heading to the cemetery on the outskirts of the city.
Security forces had initially opened fire on mourners and shot into the air to disperse crowds leaving the Grand Mosque, the witness said, but had since dispersed with the army pulling its tanks back when the size of the funeral procession became overwhelming.
“When we gather in large numbers we show our power. As individuals we are strong, but this is a stronger message,” said the witness. “We encouraged people to join us on this funeral march and people of all backgrounds and religions did.”
Government security forces and others in plain clothes have opened fire on a huge crowd of mourners in Homs killing at least two people and injuring more than twenty as they returned from funerals, an eyewitness told Al Jazeera.
More than 40,000 people gathered for the funerals of protesters killed yesterday and were walking back from the cemetery in Tal al Nasser on the outskirts of the city when security forces opened fire without warning.
The sound of gunfire and cries to help the wounded were audible over the phone as Al Jazeera spoke to the eyewitness.
The wounded have been taken to private clinics and homes as people fear the secret police will raid and arrests the injured from the main state hospital, he said, as they have done in previous such attacks.
A group known as Syrian Youth has called on Facebook today for a world wide sit-in on Monday May 23 in memory of protesters killed in Syria.
The group is calling for a silent, candle lit sit-in to be held in Damascus at 5.30 pm local time with other vigils held simultaneously around the world. Organisers are asking protesters not to bring any pictures of the dead or any banners and are asking people not to chant.
In response, the Coordination Committees of Damascus, a youth activist network which has helped organise protests, called for a boycott of the sit-in, rejecting what they said were conditions set by the regime.
In a statement, the Coordination Committees argued that by preventing protestors from chanting for freedom or calling out the names of the “martyrs of freedom” the sit-in would only serve to cover up the killings by Syrian security forces.
“Nobody has the right to prevent us from chanting for the souls of the martyrs and to remind the world what they died for,” a leading member of the committee said.
“There will always be people trying to speak for the opposition, but the real opposition is in the street. We are peaceful protesters and we don’t allow any conditions to distort the real picture of the revolution. This is not a hostile attitude towards anybody, but out of respect for the martyrs.”
...The Reuters news agency is reporting that Syrian security forces fired live rounds at a pro-democracy demonstration in the Damascus suburb of Saqba on Saturday, a witness said.
"A large demonstration calling for the overthrow of the regime had been going on since the afternoon. It felt like the whole of Saqba took to the streets. Security forces entered in the evening and started firing," said the witness, a resident of Saqba, speaking by telephone.
Quite the contrary. We're still the most powerful country in the World for that reason.
The United States isn't bankrupt.