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Syria Kurd women set up battalion - #Syria

Around 150 Kurdish women in the war-wracked northern Syrian province of Aleppo have set up a fighting battalion, a monitoring group said on Saturday.

“The Kurdish popular committees have set up the first women’s battalion, comprising some 150 women fighters. The battalion is named the Martyr Rokan Battalion,” said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

“While women are now fighting alongside the rebels, pro-regime forces and Kurdish militia, this is the first women’s battalion as such,” said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.

The Observatory circulated an amateur photograph of the battalion, showing scores of members in military fatigues, standing in rows before their female leadership.

“Women are now playing a major role in the fighting in Syria,” Abdel Rahman told AFP.

The women’s battalion was announced in Ifrin, the scene in late 2012 of violence pitting Kurdish fighters against Arab rebels fighting the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

Assad’s troops pulled out from majority Kurdish areas in 2012, and while Kurds have been split over the anti-regime revolt in Syria, most have chosen to remain neutral in the conflict.

An agreement in Ras al-Ain on the Turkish border last week brought an end to fighting between Kurds and Islamist rebels, though some activists have described the agreement brokered by a prominent Christian dissident as fragile.

The announcement of the Kurdish women’s battalion comes a month after pro-regime forces set up the National Defense Forces, a paramilitary unit in which women of all ages have been asked to volunteer.

Anti-regime activists have also distributed images of women fighters joining rebel ranks.

“Women are fighting on all the fronts now, though it’s possibly the Islamist rebel ranks that have the fewest women taking part in them,” the Observatory’s Abdel Rahman said.

A female activist in the coastal province of Latakia told AFP via the Internet that women often transport weapons and supplies for rebels as they are less likely to be searched at army and security checkpoints.

Source: afp.com

    • #Kurdish
    • #Kurd
    • #women
    • #female
    • #fighters
    • #war
    • #battalion
    • #katiba
    • #Aleppo
  • 3 months ago
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01/12/2013 - #Syria - Aleppo - Shabiha using innocent woman as human shield

    • #human
    • #shield
    • #women
    • #Aleppo
    • #Shabiha
    • #Shabeeha
    • #innocent
    • #cowards
  • 5 months ago
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#Syria Nov 21/12
Rima Dali,Kinda Zaour,Lubna Zaour,Ru’a Jafar, imprisoned today for this nonviolent protest via @ProfKhaf
The banner reads: Syria is for all of us. For the sake of the Syrian human, the civil society calls for stopping all military operations in Syria. You’re tired and we are tired. We want to live.
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#Syria Nov 21/12

Rima Dali,Kinda Zaour,Lubna Zaour,Ru’a Jafar, imprisoned today for this nonviolent protest via @ProfKhaf

The banner reads: Syria is for all of us. For the sake of the Syrian human, the civil society calls for stopping all military operations in Syria. You’re tired and we are tired. We want to live.

Source: twitpic.com

    • #Syria
    • #Women
    • #Arrested
    • #Protest
  • 7 months ago
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9 Nov 2012 #Syria : 8,000 Syrians flee to Turkey

Mass exodus overnight brings total number of refugees across border to 120,000

  • AFP and AP
  • Published: 13:37 November 9, 2012
  • Image Credit: AFP
  • Syrian people cross the border between Syria and Turkey on Thursday, to enter the town of Ceylanpinar in Turkey. Clashes broke out early in the morning in the Rasulayn region of Syria’s al-Hasakah province, a few hundred meters from Ceylanpinar, whose residents could hear the sound of mortar fire and intense shooting across the border.

Ankara: Some 8,000 Syrian refugees fled to Turkey overnight amid escalating clashes between rebel forces and troops loyal to Damascus near the border, a foreign ministry official said on Friday.

The latest influx brought the total number of Syrian refugees in Turkey to more than 120,000, added the official on condition of anonymity.

Meanwhile, Turkey’s state-run agency says 71 Syrian soldiers, including two generals and 11 colonels, have fled to Turkey.

Anadolu Agency says Friday the group arrived in the Turkish border province of Hatay seeking refuge. They were taken to a camp that shelters military defectors, including dozens of other generals.

Clashes between Syrian regime forces and rebels continued for a second day around the town of Ras Al Ayn, in Al Hasaka province in northeastern Syria, forcing Turkish authorities to keep schools in the neighbouring Turkish town of Ceylanpinar closed.

Turkish officials said Thursday the rebels had taken control of the border crossing in Ras Al Ayn but clashes continued around a security building.

Turkey is sheltering more than 112,000 Syrian refugees.

Source: gulfnews.com

    • #syria
    • #turkey
    • #refugees
    • #mass-exodus
    • #defections
    • #aid
    • #women
    • #children
    • #air-strikes
    • #shelling
    • #bombing
  • 7 months ago
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 8 Nov 2012 #Syria : Zaatari Syrian refugee camp in Jordan where 40,000 people queue for hours for their basic needs.
Photo courtesy @carolmalouf
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 8 Nov 2012 #Syria : Zaatari Syrian refugee camp in Jordan where 40,000 people queue for hours for their basic needs.

Photo courtesy @carolmalouf

Source: pbs.twimg.com

    • #syria
    • #refugees
    • #jordan
    • #zaatari
    • #basic
    • #desperation
    • #women
    • #children
  • 7 months ago
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2 Nov 2012 #Syria : Eastern Al-Bweda Escape from Death to Death  Massacre (Eng sutitles)

Source: youtu.be

    • #syria
    • #east
    • #al-bweda
    • #massacre
    • #shelling
    • #displaced
    • #air-strikes
    • #shelter
    • #women
    • #children
    • #pregnant
    • #buried
    • #rubble
  • 7 months ago
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Syria Crisis: Damascus Massacre Leaves Dozens Dead Outside #Syrian Capital, Say Activists

26/09/12


A Free Syrian Army fighter cries near the body of his comrade in front of Dar El Shifa hospital in Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

BEIRUT, Sept 26 (Reuters) - Opposition activists said security forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad killed more than 40 people in a small town outside Damascus on Wednesday, calling it a massacre.

The 18-month-old uprising against Assad’s rule has descended into civil war of late and grown increasingly bloody.

Video published by activists showed rows of bloodied corpses wrapped in blankets. The victims shown on camera appeared to be male, from 20-year-olds to elderly men.

“A massacre in the Dhiyabia area,” says the voice of an activist in one video. “God damn you, Bashar. The bodies are in the dozens. Look, Muslims, look what this dictator is doing.”

In one of the videos uploaded by activists, some of the men appeared to have been shot in the forehead, face or neck.

The assailants may have been rounding up potential rebel fighters. Some activists said women and children were also among the dead, but there was no footage of them available.

Activists said the number of killed in the town of al-Dhiyabia, southeast of the capital, might reach as high as 107. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based group with a network of activists across the country, said it could only confirm 40 dead.

The activists’ reports could not be verified because the Damascus government restricts foreign media access in Syria.

The Observatory says more than 30,000 people have been killed in the year and half of violence. More than 7,000 of those were soldiers, it said, while the rest were civilians, gunmen and army defectors. (Reporting by Erika Solomon; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: The Huffington Post

    • #damascus
    • #killings
    • #massacre
    • #FSA
    • #assad's army
    • #cival war
    • #muslims
    • #women
    • #children
    • #human rights
    • #war crimes
    • #crimes against humanity
  • 8 months ago
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22/09/12
More from Damascus’s female demonstration earlier tonight #Ruken Edin #Syria
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22/09/12

More from Damascus’s female demonstration earlier tonight #Ruken Edin #Syria

Source: twitter.com

    • #syria
    • #damascus
    • #demonstratioin
    • #women
    • #protests
  • 9 months ago
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Report: #Syria bombing women, children, 19.9.12

Black smoke rises over Aleppo, Syria, after government airstrikes on September 12, 2012. Syrian rebels have vowed to retake control of the large Hanano army base in Aleppo, a few days after loosing control of it to Syrian government forces. UPI/Ahmad Deeb 
License photo

Published: Sept. 19, 2012 at 1:45 PM

DAMASCUS, Syria, Sept. 19 (UPI) — Women and children were killed and injured by indiscriminate bombing carried out by Syrian forces in Damascus neighborhoods Wednesday, human rights groups said.

Rebel forces said they had chased government troops from a northern border crossing into Turkey after two days of fighting, The New York Times reported.

The rebels overran the post at Tal Abyad, south of the Turkish town of Sanliurfa, early Wednesday in Raqqa Province, CNN reported. Rebel forces took the Tal Abyad border gate, tearing down the Syrian flag, burning pictures of Syrian President Bashar Assad and firing guns in the air. Turkish forces on the other side of the crossing joined in the celebration, the report said.

Thousands of Syrian civilians have sought refuge from the conflict in neighboring Turkey, where the government is sympathetic to the rebel effort to oust Assad.

In Damascus, activists said residents of the southern suburb of Hajar al-Aswad were desperate as government forces closed in under cover of airstrikes and heavy artillery, the BBC reported. Thirty people were killed in the capital Wednesday, including three civilians who died when government forces bombed a bakery, CNN said.

Amnesty International said civilian casualties had risen dramatically from indiscriminate air and artillery strikes in the cities of Idlib and Hama. Rebel forces say the death toll has exceeded 26,000 since the conflict began last March.

“They are using in equal measure air-delivered, large, old, Soviet-era unguided bombs — free-fall bombs — the opposite of smart bombs,” said Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International senior crisis response adviser. “They are dropped over an area. There’s no way you can target them at a specific target or specific building.”

Assad has discussed the possibility of using chemical weapons, and even of transferring them to Hezbollah, said a Syrian general who has defected to the opposition.

The Syrian Network for Human Rights said it had documented the deaths of 148 people Wednesday, including 13 women, 10 children and one under torture. The government put the total for the day at 60 “terrorists” killed, a state-run TV station reported.

More than a third of the deaths, 56, occurred in Damascus and the surrounding area, SNHR said. Another 34 died in Aleppo, where activists said government forces bombarded central areas surrounding the Old City.

Sixteen were reported killed in Idlib and Dier Alzoor.

Assad huddled with Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi. Iranian television said the meeting was set to “exchange views with different Syrian groups to find a way out of the crisis which would be acceptable for all parties,” CNN reported.

Source: upi.com

    • #women
    • #children
    • #bombings
  • 9 months ago
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#Syria, Hungry for peace

16/09/12

A group of women protesting outside the Arab League headquarters in Cairo against international inaction on Syria. (Image via Facebook)

On August 26, after hundreds of Syrians were found dead in Daraya, a town outside Damascus, Alia Mansour, a member of the Syrian National Council’s General Secretariat, announced that she was going on a hunger strike to protest the world’s silence over the massacres in her home country. Only a few days later, other activists from around the world joined Mansour. Today, as she ends her hunger strike, 53 other activists continue the protest. NOW Lebanon speaks to Mansour about her initiative and to fellow hunger striker Lina Tibi about their mission.    

“It was dawn and everyone was asleep,” said Mansour. “I was receiving the news, and the number of those found dead in Daraya was increasing dramatically; it was first 250, then it increased to 300, then later 44o… Now it is somewhere over 1,200, 700 of which are documented by name.  The fact that we Syrians have become just numbers was ripping me apart. I then announced that I was going on a hunger strike,” she told NOW.

When Mansour first decided to strike, she contacted other members of the SNC to propose they join her as opposed to only writing a statement of condemnation over the Daraya massacre. “I wanted it to be an outcry,” she said. “An outcry from the council to the Syrian people to say ‘We’re with you,’ and to the international community to say, ‘Enough with the silence.’”

Although there was no official position from the SNC in support of Mansour’s move, four other SNC members joined her hours later and issued their own statement calling upon activists from all around the world to join them.

“Our colleague Firas Kassas in Germany announced he was on hunger strike and was able to demonstrate for 10 days in front of the German Foreign Affairs Ministry. We wanted to organize something of the sort here in Lebanon, but we were not able to due to the security situation,” said Mansour.

The next day activists from nearby countries joined the strike. Today over 53 people from Lebanon, France, Jordan and Egypt—both Syrians and not—have joined the campaign. Although they differ on the specifics of their demands, all agree on denouncing the massacres in Syria and the paralysis of the international community. The SNC members and some other activists went further and stressed the need for direct intervention and for imposing a no-fly zone and humanitarian corridors.

A group of six women in Egypt organized a sit-in in Cairo in front of the Arab League headquarters near Tahrir Square. Syrian writer and poet Lina Tibi took up the hunger strike on September 4 and has been demonstrating in front of the league for nine days now. In a letter submitted to the new UN peace envoy for Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, Tibi stressed on the situation of women and children in Syria and called for direct intervention for their protection.

“We also stressed in our letter the need for Egyptian authorities to stop ships from passing through the Suez to Syria, because we believe that these ships are coming from Iran and China and contain weapons that are used against our own people.”

The women’s group in Egypt received a large amount of attention from the Egyptian media, MPs, intellectuals and activists.

But the wider hunger striking campaign received little media attention overall because the increasing number of massacres and war crimes has left little space for any news of activism, Mansour said. “We in the council hope that the hunger strike campaign will have an impact. However, we are giving the internal situation more priority to support the people inside,” she said.

“We are receiving letters from people inside Syria in appreciation of our support. We are also receiving letters from abroad stating that although not much can be done in terms of influencing the international community’s decisions, much is being done to influence civil society organizations abroad to spread the word of the massacres taking place so that NGOs will support us.”

Soon after the strike began, the coordination committee within the SNC issued a statement requesting the SNC members to end their strike. According to Mansour, the committee was afraid that members would retreat from their daily duties on the council.

“I received calls from other members asking that I end my strike… but I decided to continue working as I was fasting.  I have been carrying out my relief work and flying in out of the country as my strike continues. But it was a colleague comment that urged the need to end my strike. He told me I was no longer efficient.”

While Mansour ended her strike after almost three weeks of only subsisting on yogurt and water and occasionally a glass of juice, the women in Egypt stressed that they will not break their fast until they achieve their demands.

“It’s suicidal, I know, but we believe that our people inside Syria are on hunger strike by force, and so we will only end our strike when the Syrian people end theirs.”

“We will persist with our strike and we have called upon the world to support the women and children of Syria on September 22 with us for a day of hunger striking.”

Source: nowlebanon.com

    • #syria
    • #hunger strike
    • #women
    • #arab league
    • #Cairo
    • #SNC
    • #lebanon
    • #Daraya
    • #Germany
    • #France
    • #Jordan
    • #Egypt
  • 9 months ago
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14.9.12 “It’s every woman’s duty to participate in the revolution”: women fighters in #Syria

Daily News Egypt speaks to female revolutionaries

A Syrian woman holds an AK-47 during an anti-Bashar Assad protest after Friday prayers on the outskirts of Idlib, Syria  AFP PHOTO

A Syrian woman holds an AK-47 during an anti-Bashar Assad protest after Friday prayers on the outskirts of Idlib, Syria
AFP PHOTO

By Sherif Ali

When revolution came to her hometown of Aleppo, Samar was one of the first to join up. She marched in the protests. “I used to hide six Kalashnikovs [Russian-made assault rifles] each time I crossed over [the border] under my abaya.” Although legal and cultural restrictions remain for Syrian women, they are proud of the role they have played in their civil war.

In Antakiya, near the Turkish-Syrian border, Samar and her son, Anwar are sitting in a corner cafe, discussing smuggling  Anwar into Damascus with a transporter — someone who helps people to cross. “I am wanted by the regime, and my mum’s picture was on TV yesterday as a terrorist,” Anwar said proudly.

Samar’s support of the revolution is fierce, even fiercer than a mother’s instinct to keep her children out of harm’s way. She is sending her son to fight in Aleppo, because she can’t be there herself. “I am sending my son to fight in Aleppo, and I wish I had more children to send them to fight. If I had ten children, I would send them all to fight” Samar said.

The story doesn’t end with Samar. Thuwaiba, a woman from Tartus who lives in Canada, came to Turkey to run secret support missions to Syria. According to Firas, the transporter of Samar and her son, Thuwaiba is a brave fighter, and has been trained with weapons and in hand-to-hand combat. When asked about her role in the uprising, Thuwaiba demurred, but did tell me that when she heard the call of duty, she left her college-age daughter in Canada to join the fight.

Samar’s friend, who wanted to remain anonymous for fear of the Assad regime, is a professional TV producer and journalist, who defected to join the revolution. She is using her local knowledge and international connections to give support. “I was in Egypt meeting with Egyptian female journalists, to see how they can help us from there,” she said.

According to Suhair Atassi, a female activist and a Syrian National Council member in Cairo, there is a female brigade in Dera’a numbering around 1,000. In Antakiya, I met rebel fighter, Bassel, on his way out of Syria after spending over a year fighting across the country. “There are women fighters in Dera’a. They learned to carry and use weapons to avoid rape, and fight the Assad regime. Fatima, my cousin, destroyed two tanks from her balcony by throwing bombs on passing tanks, but the poor woman’s house was destroyed as they shelled her building” he said.

Although the Syrian constitution and labour laws promised equality of the sexes, discrimination remained in Syria under the Assad regime. Although personal status law varies according to your religion, some women are required to have male guardians contract their marriages. Adultery laws are different for men and women, with harsher penalties for women in some cases. There were, until the uprising, two hundred so-called “honour killings” per year, where a woman is murdered because of the belief that she has brought dishonour upon her family or community. Honour-based murders are not considered a serious crime in Syria; they only carry a maximum of one year in prison.

Yet, women have done better until recently than their Middle Eastern neighbours, at least in terms of political representation. According to the World Bank and the Inter Parliamentary Union, Syrian women held 12 percent of seats in the (albeit toothless) parliament, compared to the average nine percent in other parliaments in the region. One of the two vice-presidents in Syria was female; although rumours are now circulating she has defected.

This complicated scenario– the remaining challenges to equality, coupled with better than average progress– begs the question; what has motivated Syrian women to revolt against a regime which supports them in the face of oppressive cultural norms?

When first asked, Samar said “it’s every woman’s duty to participate in the revolution, not necessarily with guns but with whatever they have in hand, negotiating for medicine sales, aid, hiding Free Syrian Army fighters. It was a must to sympathise with the injured rebels and provide them safe haven.”

But when pressed, she reveals a more complicated motivation – in a culture where men are expected to protect women, he can be shamed by a woman fighting in his place “Our participation is an encouragement for men to carry arms instead of us; we need men to go to the frontline and fight instead of us, while we can help by other means possible. A lot of men who were observers of the revolution are now following our example and joining the fight. I used to show the rebels how to dress like women and hide underneath the Khimaar [full body cover of Muslim women].”

As we know from the cultural phenomenon Rosie the Riveter – a World War II symbol of feminism and power in the U.S. – women’s roles can expand dramatically and unexpectedly in wartime. It seems that women everywhere rise to the challenge. In the recent Middle Eastern uprisings, women from Tunisia to Yemen have made themselves seen and heard, from fighting at the frontline, to tweeting news to the outside world. Most notably, the young Yemeni activist, Tawakkul Karman, won the Nobel Peace Prize for her role in the revolution in Yemen.

So what next for Syrian women? The post-revolution transitions in other Arab countries has allowed a previously oppressed conservative Islam to enter politics, primarily the Muslim Brotherhood, but also the Salafi an even more literal and strict approach to religion. Will the Syrian women go quietly back to their homes and raise their children, as US women did after World War II? Or will there be a second ‘women’s revolution’ in the Middle East? Samar and her friend, both have plans for after Assad’s regime. “There will be a sectarian and religious conflict after the fall of Assad regime, but we have our preparations.” It is difficult to imagine that these passionate and hard-working women will be satisfied with second-class citizenship for long.

Source: dailynewsegypt.com

    • #women
    • #wwomen fighters
  • 9 months ago
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13/09/12

#Syria, Rastan - women were looking for the remaining of the children

Source: youtu.be

    • #syria
    • #rastan
    • #rubble
    • #children
    • #women
  • 9 months ago
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27/08/12

#Syria, Urgent new massacre in Darya at least 35 martyrs, including children and the elderly

Source: youtu.be

    • #syria
    • #damascus
    • #daraya massacre
    • #women
    • #children
    • #massacre
    • #martyrs
  • 9 months ago
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27/08/12  SHOCKING, HORROR

Al-Hraak | Daraa | (+18) Massacre

of Women & Children, Child Screams

as she Holds Dead

Source: youtube.com

    • #syria
    • #al-hraak
    • #women
    • #children
    • #slaughter
    • #massacre
    • #war crimes
    • #crimes against humanity
    • #damascus
  • 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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