01/20/2013 - #Syria - Homs, Bab Amr - Dr. Mohammad, child martyrs inside the field hospital (graphic)

Defecting #Syrian Officer: Chemical Weapons Already Transferred to Hezbollah

09/12/12

The Syrian army has already used a small amount of chemical weapons in a battle near Baba Amr.
By: Yori Yanover

Photo Credit: zaman-alwsl.net

The Syrian news website zaman-alwsl.net conducted an interview with a defecting Major in the Chemical Warfare Corp of the Syrian army, who revealed the following:

The Syrian army has already used a small amount of chemical weapons in a battle near Baba Amr.

In November large arsenals of chemical weapons was transfer from storage facilities on Mount Qassioun near Damascus, which is under the control of the Syrian Air Force Intelligence, to several airports in Syria, in order to load them onto planes for bombing rebel targets.

The Aldemir military airport, on the otskirts of Damascus, is designated as the main base of operations from which aerial bombing with chemical weapons will be carried out.

A large part of Syria’s chemical weapons has been removed from storage at Mount Qassioun and transferred by civilian cars chauffeured from Hezbollah soldiers to Hezbollah strongholds in southern Beqaa Valley in eastern Lebanon.

The Syrian army is being aided by Iranian and North Korean experts in treatment and usage of its chemical weapons.

Over the past month and a half the Syrian army has been testing its chemical weapons in the area of Al Muslemia, east of Aleppo, under the guidance of Iranian experts.

23/10/12

#Syria, leaked from cell phone - Assad’s regime shelling Baba Amr with rockets!

Air strikes target #Syria rebel-held towns, activists say

23/09/12

Syrian aircraft carried out strikes on rebel bastions across the country on Sunday, especially in central Homs province and Deir Ezzor in the east, a watchdog said, as 31 people were killed nationwide.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said apartment blocks in Albu Kamal were targeted as rebels and soldiers battled on the ground in several districts of the town on the Iraqi border.

“The insurgents are trying to wrest control of this strategic town” in the oil-rich province of Deir Ezzor as well as the nearby Hamdan military airport, said the group’s head, Rami Abdel Rahman.

He said losing Albu Kamal would be “a deadly blow for the regime.”

In Homs, the country’s third largest city, government artillery and air raids targeted the outskirts of the Jubar, Sultaniya and Baba Amr districts where rebels hold positions, said the Observatory.

It added that three fighters were killed in clashes with the army in the village of Nakira just outside Jubar, while one civilian was shot dead by pro-regime gunmen elsewhere in the province.

The Britain-based group, which gathers information from a network of activists on the ground, said warplanes also raided Jebel al-Akrad in the coastal province of Latakia.

Several buildings collapsed under air strikes in the northwestern province of Idlib, Hama in central Syria and Daraa to the south, where one young girl was killed in shelling, according to the Observatory.

In the northern province of Aleppo, rebels destroyed two fighter planes on the ground in Orm, rebel Colonel Ahmad Abdul Wahab told AFP.

And in Aleppo city, where the revolt has centered for the past two months, a woman and a rebel were killed while fierce fighting broke out between rebels and troops in the northern Bustan al-Basha district, the watchdog said.

Residents have largely left embattled Bustan al-Basha, which has faced electricity and water shortages for the past week, witnesses told AFP.

Abu Mahmud, a pastry maker in his forties, said he is the only person left on his “deserted street.”

“I sent my family to stay with a relative in a remote neighborhood. But if I leave the rebels will move in,” he said. “This house is everything I have.”

In Damascus, two explosions were heard in the central Shaghur area. Ambulances were seen but there was no word on the nature of the blasts, the Observatory said.

To the west of the capital, the suburb of Maadameya al-Sham came under heavy shelling by regime forces, destroying several houses, it said.

The Local Coordination Committees, a network of activists on the ground, said the shelling was coming from the Mazzeh military airport, one of the largest in the country.

The LCC said the elite Fourth Division of the army was using mortars and artillery to target residential areas.

The army also shelled the restive suburb of Douma northeast of Damascus, killing two civilians, the watchdog said.

It gave an initial toll of 31 killed—11 civilians, 12 soldiers and eight rebels—nationwide on Sunday.

-AFP

19/08/2012 Baba Amr, #Syria: Dr. Mohammed after Eid prayers

09/08/12

Syria Homs Baba Amr The Farouq

Battalion ambushed an armored

vehicle and kills the soldiers inside

30/07/2012 - #Syria - Homs, Baba Amr Stadium…

30/07/2012 - #Syria - Homs, Baba Amr Stadium…

#Syria forces pound Aleppo; thousands flee

The Assad government targets rebel positions. The U.N. says 200,000 people have left the city, but the opposition denies the military is driving out insurgents.

30/07/2012

BEIRUT — Syrian guns pounded rebel positions in Aleppo on Sunday, as panicked residents streamed from the besieged city and the opposition denied the military was driving out insurgents.

The United Nations said more than 200,000 people had fled the city in the last two days. The flight coincides with a military bombardment with artillery and helicopter gunships, the opposition says.

Many districts in the city of more than 2 million have been largely abandoned, witnesses said. Residents left the city or relocated to areas of town away from the fighting.

An unknown number of civilians remained trapped in Aleppo, said the U.N., which appealed to both sides to grant safe access to aid groups.

The battle for the northern city — Syria’s commercial hub — could be a decisive moment in the Syrian conflict, which began more than 16 months ago with street protests but soon evolved into an armed rebellion against the government of President Bashar Assad. The United States and other nations have warned of a possible bloodbath in Aleppo, about 200 miles north of Damascus, the Syrian capital.

Syrian authorities vowed Sunday that that the “terrorists” — the official term used by the government for armed rebels — would be vanquished. The official news agency said troops had inflicted “very heavy losses on the terrorists” in Aleppo, while “fleeing terrorists are being pursued and … their hide-outs are being raided.”

The opposition offered a conflicting narrative, asserting that rebels had held off the military assault while inflicting heavy losses on government troops.

Unverified video said to be from Aleppo and uploaded onto the Internet showed refugees fleeing, smoke rising from residential buildings, soldiers firing into city streets and rebels setting up checkpoints, among other images.

Reports Sunday indicated that government forces held back scores of tanks that are said to be massed outside the city, many near a stadium complex in the southwestern district of Hamdania.

Instead of a direct assault with tanks and troops, which are vulnerable on narrow streets, the government may rely on shelling and fire by helicopter gunships. That was the strategy employed this year in the central city of Homs, where weeks of shelling finally forced rebels out of the Baba Amr district and left much of the area in ruins.

“They want to do what they did in Homs,” Col. Abduljabbar Aqidi, a rebel commander, told Agence France-Presse in an interview. “The army can only use its aircraft or heavy artillery at a distance, shelling cities, destroying houses. It cannot enter the city.”

The opposition appears to have calculated that a counterattack that leaves much of the city in rubble will serve to erode whatever public support remains for the government. Destroying Syria’s most populous city looms as a high price for victory in Aleppo, once counted as a bastion of support for Assad.

“Most of the people, and even the middle class, are now with the revolution as they are watching Aleppo being destroyed by the regular army,” said one opposition activist speaking from the Firdous district, close to the historic old city.

But press accounts from the city also indicate that some residents are angry at the opposition for having provoked a military onslaught likely to cause widespread devastation.

Unlike the recent fighting in Damascus, where uprisings in scattered districts appeared spontaneous in nature, the rebel assault on Aleppo seems to be based on a plan. It began with a months-long campaign to seize many of the city’s suburbs and outskirts, easing the path for infiltration and opening supply routes from the Turkish border.

On July 20, rebels began occupying some of Aleppo’s outlying areas, from the southwest to the northeast. The districts appear to have been chosen because their residents, mostly members of Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority, were hostile to Assad’s government. Members of Assad’s minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, dominate his administration.

Some of Aleppo’s rebel-occupied districts, like Salahuddin and nearby Sikari, both in the city’s southeast, are home to people whose family roots are in nearby Idlib province, a hotbed of the insurgency.

Until recent days, Aleppo had largely been insulated from the violence raging in Syria’s provinces.

For much of the rebellion, Aleppo’s Sunni Muslim merchant class, as well as minority Christian and Kurdish populations, among others, were thought to have remained generally loyal to Assad. Many were wary of the opposition and the possibility of Iraq-style chaos. Some Christians see the rebellion, with its Islamist overtones, as a threat to religious tolerance.

In comments to reporters Sunday, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta said the Syrian government’s use of helicopter gunships will prove to be “a nail in Assad’s coffin.” He spoke at the beginning of a five-day Mideast tour.

patrick.mcdonnell@latimes.com

Marrouch is a special correspondent. Times staff in Reyhanli, Turkey, contributed to this report.

(03/07/2012) Homs, #Syria: Danny Abdel Dayem showing us the destruction over the city of Baba Amr

#Syria Inside Syria’s broken city of Homs
Inside Syria's broken city of Homs those left behind berate the West
Children play on the destroyed streets of Baba Amr 

The neat blast hole in the ceiling of one family’s dining room was sufficient explanation for the broken furniture and rubble with which it was filled. Wires dangled loosely. Against one wall stood a chest, its glass front shattered. But inside, the neat row of inverted Turkish coffee cups, eight red and eight yellow, sat unmoved and undamaged. There was even an intact light-bulb sitting on top.

The chest could be a symbol of the whole city of Homs, the focal point of the Syrian uprising. Parts are in good enough order, apart from painted-over graffiti. The five-star hotel that is the new base of the United Nations monitors is empty but smart and functioning.

Yet from a few hundred yards’ distance comes the sound of automatic gunfire, and a two-minute drive away you are on what remains a hot front line despite the dominance of regime forces and despite the ceasefire the monitors are here to observe.

And in this compact town, the destroyed streets of Baba Amr, scene of one of the conflict’s heaviest and deadliest bombardment, are a short walk away.

Along the main thoroughfares, the blackened holes of the apartment buildings stare down at the piles of broken bricks and burned out cars. Each building has its own sign of war – the smashed shutters of the shopfronts, the collapsed roof, the bedroom exposed to the daylight.

Stepping inside stirred a further eddy of dust from the crumbling concrete.

At first, it seemed like an empty film set. But we walked on, among the first journalists allowed in since the end of one of the most fearsome sieges of modern times, the few hundred residents who have not fled peered out from their broken walls.

A handful of black-clad women clustered around an outpost of the Red Crescent. A few more gathered around a man who had been allowed by the army to bring in a small selection of vegetables.

Children pointed excitedly to the ruins, their new playground, running in and out of the piles of detritus.

Few people were prepared to talk, but one man was upset enough on learning he was talking to a Briton to damn the perfidy of David Cameron, who had seemed to want to help but had “done nothing”.

“He is a liar, a liar,” he said. “It was just talk, talk, talk. Nobody helped us. The whole world was against us.”

Another man described how he had been held in prison for 50 days – though not long enough to avoid the savagery of February’s bombardment that finally drove the Free Syrian Army’s Farouq Battalion from the suburb. It was a humiliating retreat which may have marked the turning point of this war.

“Every day for thirty days the shells came. They started at six in the morning and ended at eight at night. In between, there was not a minute’s peace.”

Ask where the FSA went, and there is a nervous silence. Some things still can’t be discussed. “We lived here, they killed us, and they will kill us,” said one resident, succinctly. The army SUVs and pickup trucks come in threes, driving without stopping down the centre of the road.

But it is no secret where the “armed groups” went. Many went to Khaldiyah, which touches on the city centre and which, though heavily shelled, seems a tougher nut to crack.

Walk up from the clock tower in the central square, between the governor’s offices and the Lord Suites Hotel – “spotlessly clean and modern” according to the Lonely Planet guide, a comic thought now – and soon the bullets are cracking. From a side street comes the thud of a rocket-propelled grenade.

It is not clear why: there is no advance on either side, and regime officials may be right in claiming some of the firing is for show, to herald the monitors’ arrival.

The heaviest shooting, though, is at night, long after the monitors have retreated to their hotel.

An army major reckons there are 4,000 fighters holed up in the suburb.

That, too, contradicts the official line that the FSA is nothing more than a handful of criminals, bolstered by foreign fighters and jihadists.

But then the official line is flexible, and perhaps has to be now the monitors are here to see for themselves. The government is now prepared to admit it shares in the responsibility for the disaster that has befallen a city where now smashed open-air cafés and rooftop restaurants speak of a more relaxed past.

The governor of Homs, Ghassan Abdul-Al, looked embarrassed as he claimed the army’s treatment of Baba Amr was proportionate to the rebels’ use of rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and small arms.

But he was only appointed a year ago, after his predecessor was sacked because of his initial response to the protests, and he was prepared to go beyond the standard formula that “some mistakes were made”.

He hoped things might have been different if he had been in charge. “I think I might have been less aggressive,” he said. “Because we see – and as you find – there is a big reason for this uprising. We did not serve the people, not as they should be.”

For Syria to serve the people of Homs now seems almost impossible. Mr Abdul-Al said there were plans to redevelop Baba Amr – the reason, he said, pictures of a brieze-block wall along one side of the suburb have circulated the internet. It is not a “New Berlin Wall”, he said, but merely a replacement for a protective barrier by the railway line.

Baba Amr certainly looks like a place that needs to be levelled. But before anything new can rise from the ashes, its people must be reconciled to those who reduced it to this state. That task lies beyond the building of walls.

#Syria: The Battlefield Of Homs

Despite heavy losses in the Bab Amr district of Homs the Free Syrian Army (FSA) still controls large areas of the city.

The FSA stronghold is the Khaldia district but it manages to keep the Syrian army out of other quarters as well.

The area is devastated. High rise buildings have collapsed, their floors pancaked one on top of the other.

Shops and houses have also been destroyed by artillery fire. Rubble is strewn everywhere, and there appears not be a single building which is not in some way damaged.

There are still hundreds of civilians living in Khaldia among the FSA fighters who say they are there to protect them.

The Syrian Government calls the FSA terrorists and insists it needs to push them out of Homs in order to liberate the city.

The sound of gunfire is constant. The clatter of small arms fire mingles with that of heavy machine guns and the occasional explosion.

To get from one district to another the locals use a variety of routes including clambering through the wreckage of peoples’ houses to get from one place to another whilst avoiding gun fire.

In many streets, sheets of tarpaulin hang from one side to the other to prevent army snipers from having a clear line of sight into Khaldia.

To cross some smaller streets, which the snipers can see clearly, people break into a sprint to cross.

The Homs National Hospital is now in the hands of the FSA.

They took it from government forces a few weeks ago after an assault through the streets involving dozens of fighters attacking from two directions.

They say they lost several men in the attack but it has dislodged the Government troops from what was a strategically important vantage point.

The FSA commander in Homs, Abdul Razzack Tlas, told Sky News that the Government responded by shelling the hospital.

It is so badly damaged that it can never be used as a hospital again without being completely rebuilt.

The remains of 80 bodies, which had been lying in a hot makeshift morgue for months, have only just been removed.

The stench of death around the hospital remains overwhelming. Even hardened fighters were covering their faces with cloth and retching at the smell.

Abdul Razzack Tlas claimed his men are heeding the UN ceasefire but said; “The Government is not respecting any of Kofi Annan’s six points. The FSA is abiding by the plan and we are only here to protect the people.”

The Government says the opposite and that it only responds to acts of violence by “armed terrorist gangs”. The UN has said that neither side is completely abiding by the ceasefire.

Syria’s sealed-off rebels #Syria

In this Saturday April 21, 2012 photo, a Syrian man leaves his home carriying a suitcase as he walks in a destroyed alley damaged from Syrian army forces shelling, at Bab Sbaa neighborhood in Homs province, central Syria.(Credit: AP)

A GlobalPost journalist whose name has been withheld for security reasons, reported this story from Baba Amr, Syria. Hugh Macleod and Annasofie Flamand contributed reporting and wrote the story from Beirut, Lebanon. This article originally appeared on GlobalPost.

BABA AMR, Syria — For Syrians on both sides of the concrete wall that now surrounds this neighborhood, the comparisons to the region’s longest running conflict are unavoidable.

Global Post

“When my wife described the wall to me I immediately thought of the wall built by the Israelis to isolate Palestinian villages and towns in the West Bank,” said Abu Annas, formerly a resident of Homs’ devastated Baba Amr district.

“I can understand that Israel built a wall to protect Israeli settlers from Palestinians. But I cannot understand how a national government builds a wall to separate its citizens from each other.”

Since forcing the retreat of rebel fighters from Baba Amr after a brutal month-long bombardment in February, government forces have constructed a massive concrete wall to seal off the former opposition stronghold.

A reporter for GlobalPost recently visited Baba Amr and the wall, describing it as up to 10-feet high and made of cement. It’s still so new there is no graffiti. Since most residents have long fled, the neighborhood behind the wall has become “a dead land for cats and dogs,” as one former resident described it.

Soldiers and secret police guard the few narrow passages through the wall, arresting any male aged between 13 and 60, said Annas, whose wife and young daughter recently went to check on what remained of their home inside Baba Amr.

“They spent half an hour arguing with the security officer who said his men would have to check them before they passed through,” he said. “She came back crying, saying, ‘There is no Baba Amr.’”

Those houses not destroyed in February’s siege have been taken over by soldiers, Annas said. Electricity and phone lines have been cut for months and now cars cannot enter, nor delivery trucks, meaning shops are almost all closed.

Activists in the area said the neighborhood — once home to some 28,000 people — has now been all but abandoned, with only about 1,000 still living inside the wall.

In other Sunni-majority opposition neighborhoods throughout Homs, such as Karm al-Zeitoune, where whole families were killed in recent sectarian massacres, and Deir Balbah and Qarabes, the majority of residents have also fled.

With the UN-Arab League ceasefire plan in tatters — at least 462 people have been killed since April 16 when the UN resolved to send ceasefire monitors, according to the opposition Local Coordination Committees — and veto-wielding Russia blaming the armed opposition for the majority of attacks, the Assad regime appears to be taking steps to re-exert long-term security control and collectively punish rebellious communities.

On Saturday, Abu Bakr Saleh, a spokesman for the Baba Amr media center who lived through the bombardment, said other security measures were preventing residents from traveling between Baba Amr and neighboring Joubar neighborhood, to the far southwest of the city.

Last week, GlobalPost witnessed continued shelling in Khaldiyeh and Bayada, Sunni-majority neighborhoods in north Homs that support the opposition and lie adjacent to Zahara, a neighborhood of mainly Allawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, to which the ruling Assad family and a majority of government elites belong.

Cairo Street, which leads from north Homs into Zahara in the east of the city, has been renamed “Death Street” by locals after the deadly snipers deployed to rooftops, presumably to protect the pro-regime neighborhood.

On their first visit to Homs on April 21, members of the advance team of UN observers, the first of 300 due to be deployed to monitor violations of the ceasefire agreement, were forced to take cover after shots rang out as they walked down Cairo Street from Bayada.

“The regime will not adhere to the Annan plan and the near future will prove that,” said Omar, a 24-year-old member of the rebel Free Syrian Army, told GlobalPost in an interview at his home in Homs’ Deir Balba.

“The regime is preparing for the post-Annan cease-fire by building walls around Sunni districts to block our movement and is digging a long trench around Homs two meters wide.”

Reports of Assad’s forces digging trenches around the south and west of Homs, where Baba Amr is located, first emerged last November. A video journalist working with GlobalPost witnessed the trench during a visit to Homs this February. The purpose of the trench remains unclear, but it appears to be a another military tactic to hinder access to rebellious neighborhoods.

In Daraa, the first city to rise up against the regime and suffer a sustained military assault, GlobalPost recently witnessed a labyrinth of checkpoints and deployment of tanks, troops and snipers, effectively sealing off the population from surrounding areas and the capital.

The regime blames “armed terrorist groups” for the breakdown in the ceasefire agreement. Information Minister Adnan Mahmoud told state-run Syrian Arab News Agency last week that the “terrorists” had committed more than 1,300 violations.

Russia last week echoed a similar line. Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich accused the opposition of shifting “to tactics of terror on a regional scale,” claiming Western governments were arming the rebel fighters.

Rather, it appears post-revolutionary Libya, which strongly supports Syria’s opposition, has made the first serious effort to arm the rebels. On Saturday Lebanese authorities announced they had discovered guns and rocket propelled grenades aboard a ship attempting to dock in north Lebanon’s Tripoli, a Sunni-majority city also widely supportive of Syria’s opposition.

Omar, the young rebel fighter from Homs, said the FSA was now restructuring after suffering a strategic defeat in Baba Amr.

“We will adopt guerilla tactics,” he said. “We are fighting in small groups and moving from one district to another so we don’t let the regime block this district and kill us. The FSA leaders made a big mistake when they tried to hold Baba Amr.”

As the rebels seek new strategies for their armed struggle, the Assad regime has made its contempt of the international diplomatic effort clear. Assad himself revealed his scorn for last December’s Arab League monitoring mission in an email, first obtained and verified by the Guardian.

Writing to Hadeel Ali, his young media consultant, the president forwarded a YouTube video ridiculing the mission’s inability to spot hidden Syrian tanks, to which she responded, “Hahahahahahaha, OMG!!!”

That same contempt appeared to be on display more recently as Kofi Annan, the Arab League envoy, briefed the Security Council on a letter received from Syrian Foreign Minister Waleed Mualem on April 21. The letter stated that the government had now withdrawn all heavy armor and troops from population centers, the first step in Annan’s cease-fire plan.

But daily videos of smoke billowing above Homs and troops opening fire in urban protest centers have told a very different story.

Syrian officials see Annan’s plan as “a license for the regime to do more of the same,” the respected International Crisis Group, one of the only international think tanks able to still interview Syrian officials, wrote in its April 10 report.

“As the regime sees it, Annan’s mission, far from presenting a threat, can be a way to drag the process on and shift the focus from regime change to regime concessions,” ICG reported, “granting humanitarian access, agreeing to a ceasefire and beginning a vaguely defined political dialogue, all of which can be endlessly negotiated and renegotiated.”

As that process unfolds, the wall in Baba Amr stands as a physical symbol of the deep-seeded sectarian hatred that a year of relentless violence in Syria has engendered in former neighbors.

“The Sunni districts are hosting terrorists and armed gangs so the government should close them off by all means. If this needs a high wall, why not?” Haidar, a 35-year-old Allawite from Homs’ Zahara neighborhood, told GlobalPost.

A member of the Popular Committees, the official name for armed civilian militias fighting for the regime, Haidar said the possible collapse of the regime would mean no future for three million Allawites in Syria’s big cities. “We would return to our villages in the mountains,” he said.

“We have been occupying senior positions in the army, security agencies and government in Syria for four decades and we will keep the power in our hands, whatever this costs us.”

12/04/12 #Syria The regime buds a wall between Baba Amr and Insha’at, Homs.

*EXTREMELY GRAPHIC!* @KofiAnnan #Syria - Leaked video of Assad forces burning an activist alive in Baba Amr, Homs. NOT FOR THE FAINT HEARTED!

08/04/12 #Syria Warning, extremely graphic: Activist in Baba Amr, is beaten, set alight and executed.