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#Syria, ‘Assad blamed his sister for conspiring with rebels’

24/09/12

Syrian sources report Bushra Assad fled to Dubai with her children after disagreements with her brother made her fear for her family’s safety

Syrian President Bashar Assad blamed his sister Bushra for making contact with his rivals, a known anti-Assad news website reported Sunday. According to the website, that was the main reason for Bushra’s defection from Syria.

According to the report, the Syrian president’s only sister has fled with her five children to Dubai. Bushra Assad’s decision followed the death of her husband, Deputy Chief of Staff of the Syrian Armed Forces Assef Shawkat, who was victim to a bomb attack in Damascus in July.

According to an Al-Arabiya report, a source in Syria stated that Bushra decided to flee the country due to clashes within the Alawite minority, and since she was worried for the safety of her children and herself.

According to the Syrian source,some Alawite leaders fear that the entire sect would eventually be implicated because of Assad’s crimes against civilians.”

As a result, a few of the Alawite leaders have turned against Assad and are working alongside the opposition army in an attempt to take down the presidency.

    • #syria
    • #assad's regime
    • #assad's sister
    • #bombing
    • #damascus
    • #Alawites
    • #fleeing
    • #safety
  • 8 months ago
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18/09/12

#Syrians taking shelter in

abandoned schools


On the ground - towns in Aleppo Province are coming under heavy shelling.

Many of the people fleeing the violence are making their way to the town of Reef Idlib - and finding shelter in schools.

Source: youtu.be

    • #syria
    • #syrian civilians
    • #schools
    • #shelter
    • #aleppo
    • #shelling
    • #idlib
    • #fleeing
  • 9 months ago
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Strained #Syrian army calls up reserves; some flee

04/09/12

DAMASCUS (Reuters) - Syria is calling up former soldiers from the reserves to active army service in growing numbers, a sign of the strain of efforts to crush the 17-month-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.

Several fleeing reservists and a serving army officer told Reuters that thousands of men had been called up in the past two months to bolster the 300,000 strong army, and many of them are failing to report for duty.

“We have two choices: Stay and kill fellow Syrians, or desert, and be on the run from military courts,” said a legal assistant summoned for duty in Damascus. Like others interviewed for this article, he asked not to be identified for security reasons.

One army officer contacted in Homs said he believed that only half of those called up in recent months had reported for duty, although it was not possible to verify that figure or ascertain whether other units had experienced similar levels of reservists failing to report.

The officer said many units had suffered heavy losses battling rebels.

“There is a shortage of men. A lot of fighters have been killed, and we have desertions,” he said by telephone, sighing.

Most Syrian men are required to serve in the army for two years when they turn 18 or after finishing university. After a man has served, he remains in the reserves and can be called up for active duty.

Syria’s conflict has killed more than 20,000 people. Fleeing reservists said that whatever their political stance, they did not want to be part of the country’s civil war.

The fighting has intensified in the past two months, with rebels, often led by army defectors, launching advances in the capital Damascus and commercial hub Aleppo despite being massively outgunned by one of the region’s best-equipped armies.

Syrian authorities, who say they are fighting foreign-backed terrorists, have not given full details of military casualties. One anti-Assad monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, says nearly 6,000 soldiers and members of the security forces have been killed.

DEMAND RISING

The Homs officer said reservists had been called up for several months but demand had risen in the past two months, especially since the surge in fighting in Damascus and Aleppo.

“We have yet to need full army mobilization. But if the situation deteriorates in the coming months, we may need it. The country is in a state of war and we need everyone’s help.”

Residents in Damascus say checkpoints across the city now inspect young men’s IDs to check they are not fleeing army service or have not been called up from the reserves. Some deserters dare not leave their homes, fearing neighbors who might report them.

The legal assistant, who became a reservist after finishing his required military service in Syria’s special forces two years ago, said he was stopped at a checkpoint in the capital and taken to an army reserve center outside Damascus for a two-week training session.

He said he ran away from his training camp one night, and is now in hiding.

Syrian law requires men who served in the military to get army approval for passports, state jobs and even marriage licenses, which makes it more difficult for reservists to avoid a call-up.

Fadi, a former artillery specialist, said he was called by the army for active duty and given 48 hours to prepare to leave his coastal city of Tartous.

“I was terrified. I don’t want my baby daughter to grow up fatherless. My wife is crying non-stop. If I have to be on the run for the rest of my life, I won’t report for duty,” he said.

A member of Assad’s minority Alawite sect, Fadi, 30, is trying to find a way to bribe a security officer to let him flee the country.

Many Alawites like Fadi have stood by Assad, fearing sectarian retribution from the Sunni Muslim majority leading the revolt. “If my community found out what I was trying to do, they would call me a traitor,” he said. “No one would help me hide.”

“GO, DIE”

The army officer in Homs said men under 30 or men who had recently completed their army service were being called up by military headquarters first, as well as men who had specialized in artillery or armored vehicles units.

Even opponents of Assad have been called up. Tamouz, a 28-year-old playwright who was arrested earlier this year for opposition activism, said he was called up for military service last week and fled the next day.

“I did my service in the infantry,” he said. “Nowadays, that basically means: ‘Go, die.’”

Syrian state television shows video loops of young soldiers shooting their weapons and marching in training drills to the sound of the national anthem, “Protectors of the Home.”

The legal assistant said that before he escaped he had trained with 200 conscripts from all around the country.

“The officer training us tried to raise our spirits, he would smile and play patriotic songs. Some people seemed excited, but most of us were scared and felt deflated.”

Once neutral, he said he was forced to pick sides in the conflict after his callup, and is now working with the opposition. “Why should we spend our whole lives serving the Assad family?”

(Reporting by a journalist who cannot be identified for security reasons; Writing by Erika Solomon; Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: Yahoo!

    • #syria
    • #fsa
    • #assad's army
    • #reserves
    • #defections
    • #battles
    • #aleppo
    • #damascus
    • #homs
    • #idlib
    • #martyrs
    • #fleeing
    • #cival war
    • #SOHR
    • #deserters
    • #Tartous
    • #alawites
    • #sunni muslims
  • 9 months ago
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#Syria, Activists, Jets pound east Damascus, thousands flee

29/08/12

Syria Live Blog

Activists: Jets pound east Damascus,

thousands flee

August 29, 2012 - 18:36

Syrian air and ground bombardment has killed at least 27 people in neighbourhoods on the eastern edge of Damascus on Wednesday, in a military campaign to halt rebel hit-and-run attacks against loyalist forces, opposition activists said.

Many more were killed when troops briefly entered several districts after the shelling and air strikes, carrying out summary executions before withdrawing, they said.

Thousands of families fled the area in the largest displacement from the capital since the start of the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, activists in the area said.

Al Jazeera is unable to independently verify reports of violence, as the Syrian government has placed strict restrictions on reporting.

[Source: Reuters]

Source: blogs.aljazeera.com

    • #syria
    • #bombing
    • #airstrikes
    • #damascus
    • #assad's army
    • #FSA
    • #executions
    • #fleeing
    • #shelling
    • #Al Jazeera
  • 9 months ago
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#Syria Live Blog Reports of women and children fleeing government bombing campaign near Jordanian border

23/08/12

In the town of Harrak on the Syrian-Jordanian border women and children were fleeing what they say was a Syrian government bombing campaign.

Residents say more than half of the town’s houses have been destroyed - here’s an image cut from footage coming out of the area:

Source: blogs.aljazeera.com

    • #syria
    • #women
    • #children
    • #fleeing
    • #Syrian-Jordanian border
    • #assad's regime
    • #bombings
    • #destruction
    • #devastation
  • 10 months ago
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#Syria: refugees tell of the horrors of the flight from Aleppo

30/07/12

Only a few roads are still open for refugees to escape Aleppo. Those leading northwards from Syria’s commercial capital have not yet been sealed off by President Bashar al-Assad’s forces - and perhaps a tenth of the city’s population of about 2 million has fled along them.

By Damien McElroy, Aleppo province, Magdy Samaan in Cairo and Ruth Sherlock in Beirut

8:03PM BST 30 Jul 2012

Once in relative safety, those who made the journey describe the scenes they left behind. “The first time we were shelled on my street ten days ago, I rushed to the area and found three bodies with their heads blown off,” said Hassan Farouk, a grocer. He had just reached a relative’s house in Marea village, 10 miles north of Aleppo, along with his wife and eight children.

“A few days later a family of six was killed. I tried to pick up the bodies but they were in pieces and I could not complete the task,” added Mr Farouk. “After that my children begged me to leave.”

The tactics of both sides have endangered civilians. By seizing parts of Aleppo, the rebels knew they would draw the retaliation of a regime that cannot afford to lose the city. The United Nations estimates that 200,000 of Aleppo’s citizens have fled since Saturday.

Mr Farouk and his family walked until a car stopped and offered them a lift. “We carried what we could and walked for two hours. My children are aged between four years old and 16, but Zaindeen, one of my children, is disabled so I had to carry her and my wife carried my youngest,” he said.

“Eventually a van stopped and took us here

Hardly any food supplies or other relief is available to the refugees. Various countries have promised aid worth tens of millions of dollars for refugees who escape over the border into tented camps in Turkey, but there is little or no help in northern Syria.

People depend on the compassion and solidarity of their extended families. The Farouks are alternating between staying with brothers and cousins. “We spend two nights in one place and then move on,” said Mr Farouk.

Osama Hansbo, a 28-year old factory worker, left Aleppo with his family of five after the machinery plant where he worked was hit by crossfire. “I have no savings and I am very grateful for a schoolroom to live in,” he said. “I give thanks to God to be away from the shelling.” The fledging authorities in rebel-held areas have opened schools and government offices to house the most needy.

Many of those who remain inside Aleppo are waiting for the safest moment to escape. Omar, who was born and raised in the city, said that his cousin was still living there with his two sons and two daughters, all under the age of 11. “He told me that he is waiting for a calm moment, a break in the fighting, to leave,” said Omar. “He told me he has watched the behaviour of his children change; they are more serious and sullen, they don’t play any more and they seem to have lost touch with the present. The children don’t sleep any more and they leap out of bed in panic at the sudden bursts of gunfire.”

The Gello and Kino families arrived in Marea better prepared than many: Hassan Gello even managed to bring 14 cages containing his breeder stock of coloured budgerigars. At their new schoolroom home, the vegetables piled up on the desks were donated by local villagers. How long charity can support the refugees is open to question. Turkey has closed its border with Syria; meanwhile the struggle for Aleppo, the epicentre of the local economy, threatens to impoverish the entire region. As far away as Greece, 1,800 troops have been deployed to guard the border with Turkey and prevent an inflow of Syrian refugees.

Local leaders direct their anger at the outside world. “The civilised societies have not reacted so far. This is a bad sign for countries that pride themselves on their values,” said Abu Mahmoud, the mayor of Marea. “Sometimes I think they are more interested in watching the Olympic Games than helping the victims of barbarity.”

Source: mcaf.ee

    • #syria
    • #horror
    • #fleeing
    • #aleppo
    • #refugees
    • #fsa
    • #assad
  • 10 months ago
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#Syria refugees brave mines, machineguns

A young Syrian refugee who fled the violence - Source: Reuters

Published: 12:07PM Saturday April 07, 2012 Source: Reuters

Syrian forces are pressing a military offensive and laying mines near the border with Turkey in an attempt to block a flow of refugees and supplies for insurgents, rebel activists and a Turkish official at the frontier said.

Syrian army activity, visible across olive groves from the small Turkish border village of Bukulmez, comes days before a ceasefire deadline agreed by President Bashar al-Assad.

The flow of refugees to Turkish camps nearby swelled to 2,800 on Thursday as violence in the bordering Idlib province worsened.

“The whole of northern Idlib has become another Baba Amr,” said Ahmed Sheikh, a law student and activist, referring to a district of the town of Homs devastated by shelling in the past two months.

It was impossible to verify reports from the many refugees fleeing Syria since foreign correspondents’ access to the country is strictly limited by the Damascus government.

A Syrian helicopter could be seen hovering over mountains on the Syrian side of the border in clear view of refugees at a camp. A Reuters television journalist with experience in the area said it was the first time since the crisis began that he was aware of Syrian aircraft flying close to Turkey.

Villagers reported hearing artillery along the border.

A Turkish foreign ministry official touring the camps in the area said there was new activity close to the border.

“The Syrians have been mining the border, especially the southern Idlib part which has been restricting the flow of refugees,” the official said. He declined to give his name.

Activists said mining was concentrated on southerly parts of Turkey’s border with Syria, from the town of Harem westwards to the coast.

“Assad is using the days granted to him by the international community to choke off the refugee movement to Turkey and the delivery of any kind of aid,” said Muhammad Abdallah, a rights campaigner from Idlib.

He said most of the border area from the Mediterranean coast was closed, leaving only a 10 km corridor along a valley near Rehanyi which the rebel Free Syrian Army controls.

“But I don’t expect this to last for long because we have seen nearby villages and towns come under intense helicopter, tank and artillery bombardment,” he said.

Highways cut

Still, refugees were getting through, the flow rising to 2,800 on Thursday.

Assad says his government is under attack from foreign-backed Islamist militants and denies his own troops have targeted civilians. He says support from Western and Arab governments for the rebels is only feeding the violence and obstructing a peaceful settlement.

In Ankara, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu demanded Assad keep his promise to cease military operations.

“At the moment the number of refugees to have entered Turkey is 23,835. If more refugees come then the United Nations and international community must take action,” he told reporters.

Under an internationally backed plan agreed with Damascus, government forces should cease operations and withdraw from settlements by April 10. Rebels should then cease fire within 48 hours.

UN special envoy Kofi Annan said on Thursday he had been told by Damascus that troop withdrawals were underway from Idlib, as well as Zabadani and Deraa. But UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Friday the conflict was worsening and attacks on civilian areas persisted.

The flow of refugees has been a big concern for Turkey which long saw Damascus as a regional friend but is now in the forefront of diplomatic opposition to Assad and gives refuge to civilian and military forces ranged against him.

Turkey fears that a complete breakdown in Syria would unleash a flood of refugees reminiscent of the half million who descended on Turkish territory from Iraq during the Gulf War in the early 1990s.

Ankara officials have cited such a development as one of the few that might make it consider establishment of a safe zone on the Syrian side. The presence now of Syrian troops so close to the border would make such a move perilous.

Abdallah said government forces were trying as far as possible to cut off refugees and intercept rebel aid well before the border. The two main highways into Turkey from Aleppo and the provincial capital of Idlib had been cut off by army roadblocks.

Control

A member of the FSA who goes under the nom de guerre of Abu Seif said that for government forces “the name of the game is control”.

“The tactic being used to stop the flow of refugees is heavy bombardment of strategic villages or towns on the border with Turkey. Then they mine around these towns and villages.”

An opposition activist said the refugee flow into Turkey varied greatly from day to day because government troops would find open areas and shut them down. Refugees would then probe for new crossings and then pour across until they were blocked.

One particularly dangerous crossing is the Orontes River, which marks the border and is famous for its strong currents. Syrian army tents could be seen pitched amid lush farmland on the other side.

“Behind the tents there are army machinegun positions. If Assad lets the people escape you would see hundreds of thousands of Syrians here,” said Mohammad Hijazi, who was elected as a representative of refugees in Boynuyogun camp, one of several camps Turkish authorities set up right on the border.

“Every time the regime is given a deadline it is a catastrophe. Assad interprets it as a licence for unlimited killing and another deadline is set,” Hijazi said.

Source: tvnz.co.nz

    • #Offensive
    • #Mines
    • #Activists
    • #Refugees
    • #Machineguns
    • #Turkey
    • #Border
    • #Camps
    • #Idlib
    • #violence
    • #Bashar al Assad
    • #Bukulmez
    • #Ceasefire
    • #Baba Amr
    • #Shelling
    • #Homs
    • #Damascus
    • #Fleeing
    • #Rehanyi
    • #Free Syrian Army
    • #FSA
    • #Helicopters
    • #Tank
    • #Bombarding
    • #Aid
    • #Ankara
    • #Ahmet Davutoglu
    • #UN
    • #International community
    • #Kofi Annan
  • 1 year ago
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Refugee life proves hard for some Syrians #Syria

As the political negotiations to end the crisis continue in Syria, as record numbers of Syrians are fleeing into neighbouring countries.

In Turkey alone more than two thousand Syrians entered the country just in one day alone.

Al Jazeera’s Anita McNaught reports on how some Syrians struggle to adapt to life as a refugee.

Source: aljazeera.com

    • #Refugees
    • #Turkey
    • #Border
    • #Fleeing
  • 1 year ago
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Hazano, Idlib, #Syria: These residents are fleeing the town with clothes on their backs in the middle of the day to escape the constant shelling on their town Thursday 5/4/2012

    • #Hazano
    • #Idlib
    • #Fleeing
    • #Refugees
    • #Shelling
  • 1 year ago
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This is a footage of the #Syria-Turkey border, with pick-up trucks transporting the residents out of Tal Rif’aat 5/4/2012

    • #Turkey
    • #Border
    • #Trucks
    • #Fleeing
    • #Refugees
    • #Tal Rifaat
  • 1 year ago
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Turkey opens its doors to all Syrians fleeing regime.

Reacting to the Russian and Chinese veto to a United Nations Security Council resolution to stop the killings of civilians by Syrian security sources, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu said Turkey’s doors were “open to all Syrians who want to flee from oppression.” 

“We are ready to host them in our homes if necessary,” Davutoğlu added as part of a new stage to step up pressure on the Bashar al-Assad regime.

The move is interesting since Turkey has announced that there could be only two conditions for Turkish involvement in military action in the Syrian situation; a U.N. Security Council decision based on humanitarian reasoning or a massive flood of refugees into Turkey.

#Syria.

    • #Syria
    • #Turkey
    • #Fleeing
    • #Regime
    • #opens
    • #doors
  • 1 year ago
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SNN | #Syria Kafr Awaid massacre in Jab Alzawyieh, Idlib & an appeal to the world || @UN @European_Union || December, 20th, 2011

While the shelling on many of the villages of Jabl Alzawieh is still undergoing until this moment by tank shells and anti-aircraft bullets, for example: Kafr Awaid, Kansfra, Alftaira, Almozra, and Kokfeen. The electricity are cut off on most of Idlib areas. We had documented by name 53 names of the martyrs (the majority of them are civilians ) til this momentSerjeh in addition to many more wounded:

After the Syrian military, the security forces and Alshabiha raided most of the villages and the towns of Jabl Alzawieh using tens of the heavy weapons like tanks and military trucks. Many of the activists were fled to a jungle area west of Kokfeen which is next to Kafr Awaid and the Syrian army started shooting without stop at the activists for 5 hours continuously and shelling the area using tanks. Many women tried to break the besiege on the activists but they were not successful. The Syrian military raided almost all the villages in the area of Jabl Alzawieh, Idlib and they arrested many guys from the village of Kafr Awaid and they executed them immediately and that happened while many of the activists from all the villages take a refuge in the area.

The corpses were gathered in the northern mosque in Kafr Awaid while the Syrian army are threatening to attack the mosque in any moment. Activists were able to count more than 110 bodies in northern Kafr Awaid mosque and more than 11 bodies in Almozra mosque. The massacre left tens of wounded people as well.

1- Mohammad Azo Haj Yasin || Idlib, Kansfra
2- Ahmad Ismaeel Haj Ali || Idlib, Kansfra
3- Mohammad Haj Ali || Idlib, Kansfra
4- Jamal Haj Ali || Idlib, Kansfra
5- Ali Saleh Alnajar || Idlib, Kansfra
6- Tarek Khalil || Idlib, Kansfra
7- Basel Khalil || Idlib, Kansfra
8- Adnan Alameen || Idlib, Kansfra
9- Mohammad Alhusain || Idlib, Kansfra
10- Mahmood Abd Alrahman Alsaeed || Idlib, Arnabeh
11- Ahmed Walid Alkasem || Idlib, Srjeh
12- Ismaiil Mustafa Majlawi || Idlib, Srjeh
13- Jafr Sulaiman Alshaikh || Idlib, Srjeh
14- Ameen Yosef Majlawi || Idlib, Srjeh
15- Alaa Draiii || Idlib, Srjeh
16- Mohammad Hasan Fayad || Idlib, Srjeh
17- Ahmad Abdo Aldaher (Imam the Northern mosque in Kafr Awaid)|| Idlib Kafr Awaid
18- Mohammad Abdo Aldaher || Idlib Kafr Awaid
19- Samer Mohammad Alkhanoos || Idlib Kafr Awaid
20- Adel Mohammad Alkhanoos || Idlib Kafr Awaid
21- Abd Alkarim Ahmad Alkhanoos || Idlib Kafr Awaid
22- Absi Ahmad Alkhanoos || Idlib Kafr Awaid
23- Yasser Aldadoosh || Idlib Kafr Awaid
24- Adnan Alismaiil || Idlib Kafr Awaid
25- The son of Jasem Aljarbooh || Idlib Kafr Awaid
26- Adnan Abd Alkarim Ameen Alddo || Idlib Kafr Awaid
27- Shaher Radwan Alshamali || Idlib Kafr Awaid
28- Hasan Mahmood Alnoshi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
29- Zuhair Ahmad Alnoshi (Alkubs)|| Idlib Kafr Awaid
30- Imad Ahmad Abdallah Aldaher || Idlib Kafr Awaid
31- Zuhair Ahmad Abdalla Aldaher || || Idlib Kafr Awaid
32- usab Abdalfatah Graibi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
33- Abd Amunem Ahmad Abdalhadi Alddo || Idlib Kafr Awaid
34- Alaa Mahmood Eidi Aldaher || Idlib Kafr Awaid
35- MOhammad Radwan Almustafa (Almuhr)|| Idlib Kafr Awaid
36- Ahmad Fawaz Aldaher || Idlib Kafr Awaid
37- Maree Khaled Mglaj || Idlib Kafr Awaid
38- Husain Khaled Muglaj || Idlib Kafr Awaid
39- Fadi Adnan Abdalrahim Muglaj || Idlib Kafr Awaid
40- Ahmad Abdalkarim Graibi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
41- Khaled Ahmad Graibi (Aljanoodi)|| Idlib Kafr Awaid
42- Drifter assistant officer Radwan Aljanoodi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
43- Fouad Aljanoodi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
44- The son of Fouad Aljanoodi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
45- Another son of Fouad Aljanoodi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
46- Asaad Abd Alrahim Maglaj || Idlib Kafr Awaid
47- Yussef Abd Alrahim Maglaj || Idlib Kafr Awaid
48- Mukhles Aljanoodi || Idlib Kafr Awaid
49- The drifted soldier Khaled Rajb Alhusain (Alsarhan) || Idlib, Alhbaid and he was killed in Kafr Awaid.
50- Fadi Adnan Almahmood || Idlib, Kafr Awiad
51- Yasser Ibrahim Alibrahim || Idlib, Kafr Awaid
52- Abd Alsalam Khaled Maglaj || Idlib, Kafr Awaid
53- Az Aldeen Khaled Maglaj || Idlib, Kafr Awaid.

An Appeal from the people in Jabl Alzawieh, Idlib:

To all the honest people and leaders in the world. We call on all human rights organizations and international humanitarian agencies, the Arab Ministerial Council, the UN Security Council and the High Commissioner of Human Rights, the Secretary General of the United Nations to speed up in rescuing us from the death policy that is pursued by the Syrian army and barbaric Alshabiha. The Syrian army is committing massacre against the civilians in Jabl Alzawieh, Idlib where they destroy the civilians’ houses, mosques, hospitals and they are using different kind of military weapons from tanks and anti-aircraft heavt machines. The humanitarian responsibility is upon you.
Signature
The people who remain in Jabl Alzawieh, Idlib
December, 20th, 2011

Source: facebook.com

    • #Jabal Zawiya
    • #Jabal Az-Zawiyya
    • #Kafr Awaid
    • #Kansfra
    • #Alftaira
    • #Almozra
    • #Kokfeen
    • #Electricity
    • #Idlib
    • #Wounded
    • #Serjeh
    • #Martyrs
    • #Shabiha
    • #Jungle
    • #fleeing
    • #Shelling
    • #Shooting
    • #Raids
    • #Refuge
    • #Kafr Awaid Mosque
  • 1 year ago
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