Articles

Khalifa lite compares Pharaoh Bashar with Gadhafi

Pharaoh Bashar = Pharaoh Mubarak = Pharaoh Ghaddafi

 

Turkey PM compares Syrian leader to Gadhafi

BASSEM MROUE, Associated Press BEIRUT (AP) — Turkey's prime minister compared Syria's president to Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, as Damascus defied international calls to end the crackdown on a 5-month-old uprising.

President Bashar Assad has unleashed tanks, ground troops and snipers in an attempt to retake control in rebellious areas. The military assault has escalated dramatically since the start of the holy month of Ramadan in August, killing hundreds and detaining thousands.

"We made our calls (to Gadhafi) but unfortunately we got no result," Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday. "The same thing is happening with Syria at the moment."

The conflict in Libya, which began a month before Syria's unrest, has descended into a civil war as Gadhafi defies calls to end the bloodshed. On Wednesday, Erdogan said he personally spoke to Assad and sent his foreign minister to Damascus, but "despite all of this, they are continuing to strike civilians."


Resistance to Pharoah Bashar come out every Friday after Juma

 

Turkey, a neighbor and former close ally of Syria, has been increasingly frustrated with Damascus' crackdown. But Turkey, Syria's most important trade partner, has not joined the U.S. and Europe in imposing sanctions.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also spoke to Assad, demanding the immediate end of all military operations and mass arrests, according to a statement issued Wednesday by the U.N. Assad said that military and police operations had stopped, the statement said.

With tension rising, the U.N. said it has temporarily withdrawn about two dozen "nonessential" international staff from Syria because of security concerns. U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq also said some family members of U.N. staff have been relocated to other countries.

The government insists its crackdown is aimed at rooting out terrorists fomenting unrest in the country. In comments carried on the state-run news agency, Assad appeared to lash out at the international reproach, saying his country will not give up its "dignity and sovereignty."

Human rights groups and witnesses accuse Syrian troops of firing on largely unarmed protesters and say more than 1,800 civilians have been killed since mid-March.

In Latakia, a Mediterranean port city that has been subjected to a four-day military assault, security centers were overflowing with detainees Wednesday, forcing authorities to hold hundreds of other prisoners in the city's main football stadium and a movie theater, said Rami Abdul-Raham, head of the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"Detentions centers are packed," he said.

A woman in Latakia died of her wounds Wednesday, two days after she was injured, according to the observatory and The Local Coordination Committees, another activist group. The LCC said a man was killed in the city late Tuesday. In the northwestern Idlib province, a bullet killed a man as he stood on his balcony, according to observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of people on the ground. Troops were carrying out raids in the area at the time.


Regime kills at funerals leading to more mass funerals leading to more killing

 

The regime's recent military operations have also targeted the central city of Homs, where security forces shot dead one person and wounded three during raids Wednesday, according to the observatory. In Damascus, the regime focused its raids on the predominantly Kurdish neighborhood of Rukneddine, where security forces detained dozens after cutting electricity in the area, the observatory said. The neighborhood has witnessed intense anti-regime protests in the past weeks.

Amateur videos posted online showed Syrian soldiers in SUVs and pickup trucks as they drove down a street, apparently in Latakia. The troop were greeted in the al-Ramel neighborhood by Assad supporters chanting "our souls and our blood we sacrifice for you Bashar."

Another video showed a military helicopter flying over the coast. The Associated Press could not verify the videos. Syria has banned most foreign media and restricted local coverage, making it impossible to get independent confirmation of the events on the ground.

Al-Ramel is home to a crowded Palestinian refugee camp where many low-income Syrians also live. UNRWA, the U.N. agency that aids Palestinian refugees, says thousands of refugees have fled the camp since Assad's forces began shelling the city in an operation that started Saturday.

"We have seen these same reports — we consider them credible —that Syrian forces fired into the U.N. Relief and Works Agency camp and that it has caused thousands of Palestinians to flee," said U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland, speaking to reporters in Washington. "This just speaks to the brutality and indiscriminate nature of the violence that Assad has unleashed."

UNRWA spokesman Chris Gunness said Wednesday the agency was providing assistance to about 2,000 displaced people at a temporary office outside the camp. Tunisia's foreign ministry said Wednesday it has recalled its ambassador to Syria because of the "dangerous" developments in the country. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain also have recalled their ambassadors as Arab states joined the chorus of condemnation in recent weeks.


Body of girl shot by Bashar's SS lies on street

 

The foreign ministers of Turkey and Jordan renewed their call on Damascus to immediately end its crackdown. In a joint news conference held on the sidelines of an Islamic nations' meeting to discuss famine in Somalia, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said: "The bloodshed must stop, all soldiers must be withdrawn from the cities and life in these cities must return to normal."

Associated Press writer Suzan Fraser contributed to this report from Ankara. Bassem Mroue can be reached at http://twitter.com/bmroue  Aug. 17, 2011 11:55 PM ET

 

http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-08-17-ML-Syria/id-50882e7f193b46b791aa39505c9821b1

 



Related Articles

FBI has 15,000 Muslim informants with $100K pay
888 reads
Another 15,000 on blacks to make sure they dont rebel. The KGB would be so amazed. 15000 x $100K = an ungodly number literally.

Palestinians Protest Against Bashar Assad in Jerusalem
903 reads
Even the oppressed Palestinian are protesting against pharaoh Bashars crimes.

London cops kill 3 with taser in 3 days
488 reads
I thought the London cops were not armed.

Russian attitude to Syria shifting against Pharoah Bashar
373 reads
Pharoah Bashar plan to kill his way to retain power is running out of steam even with his allies.

Pharoah Bashars's Syrian State Security (SS) Tortures to death
456 reads
See videos of before and after. Pharoah Bashars's Syrian State Security (SS) Tortures include children who are shaheed and videos sent to their parents as warning.

Libyans enjoy life without big brother leader Gaddafi
826 reads
big brother leader Gaddafi liked green so everything in the city was green and everyone had multiple pictures of dear big brother leader Ghaddafi to show they undying allegiance.

Khilafa lite 101: The Islamist economic revolution
670 reads
Step 1 remove corruption Step 2 remove interest/Usury Step 3. remove IMF/WB (see step 2)

Rise of Khilafa lite must be checked
332 reads
Pipes Israel and chosen cousin dual citizen Daniel Pipes

Is Israeli occupation better than Bashar's occupation
373 reads
Bashar's occupation of Syria has killed more innocent Muslim demonstrators but Israel is shooting fast to catch up.

Afghanistan: Logar resident dies in detention with foreign troops
553 reads
25 your old Afghan detainee dies after 2 days in NATO custody. Body found with throut slit and hands cut off. NATO claims death by natural causes (I kid you not)