Home Page - Gulf in the Media
HomePoliticsEconomy                               Set Gulfinthemedia.com as home page
 Print  Send This Page
Save Listen to this Article
Flames go higher and higher   

Gulf Today - 26 July, 2012
Author: Khaled Yacoub Oweis & Erika Solomon

Syria sent thousands of troops towards Aleppo on Wednesday, where attack helicopters have been pounding rebel fighters, stepping up its assault on the country's largest city to combat a growing revolt against President Bashar Al Assad.

Syria’s 16-month-old uprising has been transformed from an insurgency in remote provinces into a battle for control of the two main cities, Aleppo and the capital, Damascus, where fighting exploded last week.

Assad’s forces have launched massive counter assaults in both cities. They appear to have beaten rebels back from neighbourhoods in the capital and are turning towards Aleppo, a commercial hub in the north.

Syrian forces fired artillery and rocket barrages early on Wednesday at the northern Damascus suburb of Al Tel in an attempt to seize it from rebels, causing mass panic and forcing hundreds of families to flee the area, residents and opposition activists said.

The 216th mechanised battalion headquartered near Tel started bombarding the town of about 100,000 people at 3:15am (0015 GMT) and initial reports indicated residential apartment blocks were being hit, they said.

“Military helicopters are flying now over the town. People were awakened by the sound of explosions and are running away,” Rafe Alam, one of the activists, said by phone from a hill overlooking Tel. “Electricity and telephones have been cut off.” Opposition activists said thousands of troops had withdrawn with their tanks and armoured vehicles from Idlib province near the Turkish border and were headed towards Aleppo.

Rebels attacked the rear of the troops withdrawing from the region, activist Abdelrahman Bakran said from the area.

Military experts believe an overstretched Syrian army is pulling back to concentrate its efforts on fighting insurgents in Aleppo and Damascus, important power centres for the government, while leaving outlying areas in the hands of rebels.

Turkey said crossings with Syria would be closed from Wednesday in response to worsening security conditions. Fighting around Aleppo has shifted hostilities towards the north and Syrian rebels have seized several posts on their side of the frontier with Turkey in the past week.

In Aleppo, helicopters were seen firing missiles throughout on Tuesday, residents said. Rebels were battling government forces by the gates of the historic old city. Troops fired mortars and shells at rebels armed with rifles and machine guns.

“I heard at least 20 rockets fired, I think from helicopters, and also a lot of machine gun fire,” a resident near one of the areas being shelled, who asked to be identified only by his first name Omar, said by telephone.

“Almost everyone has fled in panic, even my family. I have stayed to try to stop the looters; we hear they often come after an area is shelled.” Residents said fixed-wing jets had also flown over the city, followed by loud noises, although there were contradictory reports as to whether they had fired. Video footage posted by activists appeared to show a warplane firing its guns.

Assad’s forces have occasionally launched air strikes from fixed-wing jets on other cities during the uprising, but tend to rely on helicopters for air strikes in urban areas.

The uprising has entered a new and more violent phase in the past 10 days since rebels poured into Damascus in large numbers.

Last Wednesday, an explosion killed four members of Assad’s inner circle inside a security headquarters, a blow that wiped out much of the top echelon of his military command structure and shattered the reputation for invulnerability that his family has held since his father seized power in a coup in 1970.

Western powers have been calling for Assad to be removed from power for many months, and now say they believe his days are numbered. But they fear that he will fight to the end, raising the risk of sectarian warfare spreading across one of the world’s most volatile regions.

Syria raised the alarm even further on Monday by confirming that it had chemical and biological weapons. In a statement that may have been intended to reassure the world but seemed to have the opposite effect, it said it would not use poison gas against rebels, only against external threats.

Assad’s international protector Russia added its voice on Tuesday to those of Western countries warning him not to use chemical weapons. Western diplomats said Russia may have pressed Syria to make Monday’s statement after the United States and Israel openly discussed their worries about chemical weapons.

US President Barack Obama said the world would hold Assad and his entourage accountable if they used chemical weapons.

Brigadier General Manaf Tlas, a member of Assad’s inner circle who fled Syria this month, appeared on television in his first public comments since defecting. He called on troops to abandon the government.

“I address you... as one of the Syrian Arab Army’s sons who reject the criminal behaviour of this corrupt regime. The honourable people in the military would not accept these crimes,” he said on Al Arabiya television.

Tlas is a member of the Sunni Muslim majority, and his defection was seen as a sign that the Sunni establishment had abandoned Assad, a member of the Alawite minority sect.

Elsewhere in the country, activists said government troops and pro-Assad militia known as shabbiha had attacked a mosque in a village northwest of the city of Hama.

“Troops and shabbiha left the roadblock on the edge of Shariaa and crossed the main road and began firing automatic rifles on the worshippers as they were entering the mosque,” activist Jamil Al Hamwi said by telephone from the area.

“We have confirmed the names of 15 bodies and it is estimated there is a similar number still to be collected from the streets,” said Hamwi, who uses a pseudonym for security reasons. The account, like others from activists, could not be confirmed. Syria restricts access by international journalists.

At least nine people were killed in army shelling of Al Herak, a town south of Deraa, the cradle of the revolt against more than four decades of Assad family rule, activists said.

Video posted on the Internet showed the shattered bodies of a veiled woman and six children in colourful pyjamas, some of them very young. Four lay on one doctor’s table.

In Damascus, troops were trying to snuff out rebel resistance in several areas, including Barzeh, near the centre, and the southern districts of Hajar Al Aswad, Asali and Qadam.

The ferocity of the Syria conflict has only worsened, with 1,261 people killed since fighting intensified in Damascus on July 15, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which compiles reports from anti-Assad activists.

That made last week by far the bloodiest in an uprising in which activists say at least 18,000 people have been killed.
 
Syria's Opposition says 'doors closed' to peace talks
Source : Gulf Times  
Date : 2013-06-09
Syria's main opposition coalition reiterated yesterday its refusal to participate in proposed international peace talks, saying recent developments in the civil war had "closed the doors" to any political initiative....
Syria asks Israel 'not to take action' against moving tanks in Golan Heights
Source : Kuwait News Agency  
Date : 2013-06-09
Syria has requested Israel not to take any military action against Al-Assad regime tanks fighting the opposition inside the demilitarized zone of Quneitra, a border post in the Golan Heights,...
Syrian copters fire rockets near Lebanese pro-revolt area
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-09
Syrian helicopters fired rockets near a Lebanese border area whose residents back the rebellion against President Bashar Al Assad, a security official said, in the latest incident rasing new concerns...
Syria: The death of a nation-state
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-08
During the Spanish civil war of 1936, a news story reported the deaths of 82 Moroccans, 53 Italians, 48 Russians, 34 Germans, 17 Englishmen, 13 Americans and 8 Frenchmen. Also...
Hezbollah's evil intentions exposed
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-08
Before writing this column, I remembered reading an article by Saudi columnist Sulaiman Abahusain, who is the deputy editor in chief of Alyaum newspaper....
Ideological leadership faces turbulent times
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-08
When I was studying politics, there was a teacher who served as a diplomat for about 35 years. He used to say that at foreign diplomacy level there is a...
Syria raid on Lebanese border area
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-06-08
Syrian helicopters fired rockets near a Lebanese border area whose residents back the rebellion against President Bashar Al Assad, a security official said, in the latest incident rasing new concerns...
UN appeals for record $ 5.2b in Syrian aid
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-06-08
The number of Syrian refugees in neighbouring countries could more than double to 3.5 million by the end of the year, the United Nations said on Friday as the global...
QC reaches out to refugees inside Syria
Source : Gulf Times  
Date : 2013-06-08
Qatar Charity (QC) has implemented two projects for the refugees inside Syria at an estimated cost of QR2mn....
Scholars urge 'Day of Support' for Syria rebels
Source : Gulf Times  
Date : 2013-06-08
A Muslim union headed by Doha-based scholar Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi yesterday called for a "Day of Rage and Support" for rebels fighting Syrian regime troops....
UN says can't accept Russia's offer of Golan troops
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-08
The United Nations yesterday thanked Russia for offering to replace peacekeepers from Austria in the Golan Heights but said an agreement between Israel and Syria bars all permanent members of...
Syria envoy violated diplomatic norms: Jordan
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-06-08
In yet another escalation of tensions between Jordan and Syria, Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh has accused Syrian Ambassador in Amman Bahjat Suleiman of "violating all the diplomatic norms" through...
Regime troops capture key villages
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-06-08
Syrian troops, backed by Hizbollah fighters, pressed on with their offensive on Friday in the country's opposition heartland, taking two small villages near a strategic town that was captured by...
Lebanon army slams 'plot' to embroil country in Syria war
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-08
The Lebanese army warned on Friday that a plot was afoot to embroil the country in the 26-month conflict in neighboring Syria, as deadly clashes between Damascus supporters and opponents...
Qusayr never mattered
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-07
In the end, it was sheer weight of numbers and the preponderance of Russian-supplied firepower that caused the Free Syrian Army to mount a tactical withdrawal from the town of...
What next after Syrian chemical weapons evidence?
Source : Gulf Times  
Date : 2013-06-07
France and Britain have both confirmed for the first time that chemical arms were used in Syria and Paris says a line has been crossed. So what next in a...
After Qusair, Syrian army sets sights on heartland
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-06-07
With fresh momentum from the capture of a strategic town in western Syria, President Bashar Assad's forces have turned their sights to driving rebel fighters from the country's densely populated...
Total 433 Results in 26 Pages
  8 
For more news, views and reports about this topic, please subscribe
to GRC website: www.grc.ae
Wed Jun 19, 2013| 10-شعبان-1434هـ
G8 calls for urgent Syria peace talks despite Russia split
Saudi Arabia tops Arab world with $ 12.2 bn FDI inflow
Iran ready to stop 20% enrichment
Abu Dhabi livestock and dairy show growth signs, says Scad
Suicide attacks kill 31 in Iraq
QCB move draws flak from investors
Ummah Party demands new Kuwaiti constitution
Oman central bank or fiscal reforms
US officials to hold talks with Taliban in Doha
NBK, VIVA sign USD 270 mln financing agreement
Interior Ministry seeks Interpol help against attacks by hackers
Saudi Arabia spends 5.6% of GDP on education
Urgent plan to control sewage overflows urged
AMF to provide $ 144m loan to Yemen on reform
Saudi role in Syria driven by fear of Shi'ite 'full moon'
EU says informal contacts on trade accord with GCC continues
    Newspaper Editorials
No headway to end Syrian conflict
Afghanistan's milestone
More>>  
    Opinions
US cohabitation with Hezbollah terror
What happened to the Arab superpowers?
More>>  
    GCC Press Agencies
Day's main stories from the GCC Press Agencies
    Reports
Syria and WMD: Deepening Uncertainty
Iraq Ten Years On
More>>  
    Bank Reports
GCC Cement Sector Quarterly – 1Q13
GCC Real Estate Quarterly – 1Q13
More>>  
    GRC Analysis
Building a Strong Saudi-Japan Relationship
Poor Gulf: Inequality and the Lack of Statistics
Whither GCC-US Relations?
    GRC Commentary
On Relations between Rulers and Citizens: The Need for a New Social/Political Contract in the GCC States
Key Issue Facing the Saudi Ruling House.
    GRC Book Review
Beyond Regionalism? Regional Cooperation, Regionalism and Regionalization in the Middle East
India, GCC and the Global Energy Regime: Exploring Interdependence and Outlook for Collaboration.
    GRC Press Release
Gulf Research Center press releases to the media
    GRC Publications
The Uneasy Balance: Potential and Challenges of the West's Relations with the Gulf States
Asia-Gulf Economic Relations in the 21st Century: The Local to Global Transformation
Assessment of the Security Situation in Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and the Arab Gulf States
    GRC Newsletters/Bulletins

Enter your email to get the Newsletter
Go
      
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | About Us |
Weather | Qibla Directions | Hijri Date Conversion Tool
Full Page :total time:0  |   40-- 40 Middle Page :0  --   | Right : 40 - 40--en--sess-enreq-en-coming