Jordanian warplanes destroy vehicles trying to cross from Syria

AMMAN/BEIRUT: Jordanian warplanes hit and destroyed several vehicles trying to cross the border from Syria, a government spokesman said Wednesday, underlining Amman’s concern about incursions from areas controlled by Syrian rebels.

A Jordanian security source said the targets appeared to have been Syrian rebels with machine guns mounted on civilian vehicles who were seeking refuge from fighting with government forces in southern Syria.

The Syrian state news agency SANA said no Syrian military vehicles were involved in the incident. “What was targeted by the Jordanian air force does not belong to the Syrian army,” a military source was quoted by SANA as saying.

“There was an attempt to infiltrate across the border from Syria by a number of vehicles,” said Jordanian government spokesman Mohammad al-Momani, also a Cabinet minister.

A Jordanian army statement said the incident took place at around 10:30 a.m. when several camouflaged vehicles attempted to traverse rugged frontier terrain and disregarded warnings not to proceed.

“After repeated warnings that [we] would not allow a violation of the border, a number of air force planes sent warning shots toward the vehicles, but they did not heed these warnings and continued,” it added.

“This forced the army to apply known engagement rules and to destroy the vehicles,” it said.

Photos taken from the air that appeared on several Jordanian news websites showed at least one civilian Chevrolet pickup damaged and another similar vehicle on fire in an unspecified desolate desert area.

No bodies appeared in the photos that a security source said had been released to the outlets by the military.

There was no identification on the vehicles. Such pickups are often used by smugglers in the border area.

Amman has tightened controls along the 370-km border to try to prevent Jordanian Islamist militants who have joined the rebels from crossing back into Jordan. They are seen as a domestic security threat.

Momani said the kingdom was increasingly worried about incursions from Syria. “We are worried about cases of infiltration … and reports that talk about armed groups that are close to the border and the absence of security there.”

Western diplomats say Jordan has been granted hundreds of millions of dollars from Washington in the past two years to beef up its boundaries with Syria. Amman has constructed scores of observation towers with the latest surveillance equipment.

Meanwhile, opposition activists accused President Bashar Assad’s forces of a new poison gas attack near the Syrian capital, posting footage of four men being treated by medics.

They said the attack, the fourth the opposition has reported this month, was in the suburb of Harasta. Reuters could not independently verify the footage or the allegation due to restrictions on reporting in Syria.

Activists posted a video on YouTube of four men being treated with oxygen. A voice off-screen gave the date and said Assad’s forces used “poison gas in Harasta.” It did not say if there were fatalities.

The face of one of the men appeared to be covered in vomit. He was shown shaking and moaning as doctors treated him. The voice off screen said chemical weapons were also used in Harasta Friday.

A U.N. inquiry found in December that sarin gas had likely been used in Jobar in August and in several other locations, including in the rebel-held Damascus suburb of Ghouta, where hundreds of people were killed.

When opposition activists reported that helicopters had dropped chlorine gas on the rebel-held village of Kfar Zeita Friday and Saturday, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power told ABC’s “This Week” the attack was so far “unsubstantiated.”

Source: Reuters

Three Al-Manar staff killed in Syria

BEIRUT: Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV station said three of its staff were killed Monday after the television crew came under attack in the Syrian town of Maaloula.

Al-Manar identified the men as reporter Hamzah Hajj Hassan, technician Halim Allaw and cameraman Mohammad Mantash. Several other crew members were wounded, the station said.

With a shaken voice, a teary-eyed anchorwoman announced the death of Hassan and Allaw, saying “takfiri terrorists” killed the men while they were covering the Syrian army takeover of Maaloula, a predominantly Christian town not far from the Lebanese border.

The station also broadcast footage of the bullet-riddled four-wheel drive vehicle that the four men were traveling in when the attack took place.

Offering condolences to their families, Al-Manar described the men as “martyrs of freedom.”

Minutes later, the station announced that Mantash had died of wounds sustained during the attack.

The Hezbollah-affiliated TV channel reported earlier in the day that its four-member crew had come under fire.

“The Al-Manar team was shot at by armed groups when [they] were covering the Syrian army’s takeover of the Maaloula town in Qalamoun,” the report said.

The shooting came hours after Hezbollah-backed Syrian forces recaptured at least three border towns, including Maaloula, in Qalamoun, a mountainous region bordering Lebanon.

Al-Manar television has provided extensive coverage of the battles in the area in recent months, even accompanying and interviewing Syrian soldiers as the country’s army launched an offensive to root out rebel groups.

Source: The Daily Star

Assad says war has reached turning point in favor of regime

BEIRUT: President Bashar Assad said Sunday that Syria’s three-year conflict was at a “turning point” due to his forces’ military gains against rebels, state media said.

Addressing graduate students and staff of the political science department in Damascus University, Assad spoke of a “turning point in the crisis in Syria in terms of the continuous military achievements … by the army and armed forces in the war against terror and in … terms of national reconciliation,” state news agency SANA reported.

In recent months, government forces, backed by fighters from Lebanon’s Hezbollah, recaptured several rebel-held areas and border towns, closing off rebel supply routes from Lebanon and securing the main highway leading north from Damascus toward central Syria, Homs and the Mediterranean. Several localized truces have been concluded in areas around the capital, a process that the regime refers to as “national reconciliation.”

Assad is preparing to run for a third term in an election expected in July which international powers that back the rebels have described as a “parody of democracy.”

Assad’s comments came as fighting between regime forces and rebels raged in half a dozen provinces throughout the country, with Saturday’s nationwide death toll standing at 275 people, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

On Sunday, opposition activists said at least 20 people were killed when warplanes attacked the Damascus suburb of Douma. A day earlier, rebels and the government blamed each other for an alleged poison gas attack on the village of Kafr Zeita in the province of Hama that they said wounded scores of people.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power told ABC’s “This Week” that the attack was so far “unsubstantiated.”

Syrian warplanes launched an offensive against a string of opposition bastions on the edges of the capital, including the besieged Eastern Ghouta area, the anti-regime Observatory said.

Three children and four men were killed when warplanes carried out two airstrikes against the Damascus suburb of Douma and hit a crowded marketplace, according to the Syrian Revolution General Commission, a network of activists on the ground.

Activists posted video footage of the grisly aftermath.

Also in Douma, two children died of malnutrition and a lack of medical supplies in the besieged town, the Observatory said.

It reported airstrikes against Hammourieh, east of Damascus, and highly destructive barrel bomb attacks on Daraya, an opposition bastion southwest of the capital.

The air raids came as fighting raged on the edges of Daraya between rebels and the army, which for more than a year has battled to secure the capital.

Other airstrikes targeted Mliha, also in eastern Ghouta, while clashes on the town’s edges pitted rebels and their Nusra Front allies against the army and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah, the Observatory said.

Mliha has suffered heavy bombing for 10 consecutive days, as the army and Hezbollah attempt to break through rebel lines.

The Observatory said regime forces Sunday took control of areas on Mliha’s edges after clashes that killed a Hezbollah fighter. North of the capital, the army overran a string of hills overlooking Rankous, a former opposition stronghold in the strategic Qalamoun mountains that fell to the regime last Wednesday, state television reported.

SANA, meanwhile, reported “the death of a young man and the wounding of 22 others” in a mortar attack launched by “terrorists” in Damascus.

State media uses the regime’s term “terrorists” to refer to the rebels.

The attack hit Beirut Street, located near the army command headquarters, and killed two people, the Observatory said.

Mortar bombs struck the regime-held neighborhoods of Bab Touma, Tabbaleh and Barzeh, and the suburb of Jaramana, killing one person each in Tabbaleh and Jaramana, the Observatory added. It also reported, citing activists, the assassination of a senior regime officer in the capital by unknown gunmen. Pro-opposition media outlets identified the man as Lt. Gen. Samir Sheikh, responsible for a reconnaissance department in the armed forces.

In Aleppo, fighting raged around the Air Force intelligence headquarters, which rebels have been trying to seize from regime hands, the Observatory said. It said helicopters pressed the regime’s months-old aerial barrel bomb offensive on Aleppo’s rebel districts, killing two children and a man.

The Observatory said regime troops “targeted” a vehicle in northern Latakia province, killing an unspecified number of jihadists it was carrying, without identifying the type of strike.

In Hama province, regime forces and paramilitary allies seized parts of the village of Morek, the Observatory said. Morek, which was seized last month by rebel groups, lies on the main highway between Hama and Aleppo.

In the east, where militants from the Al-Qaeda splinter group ISIS have been battling the Nusra Front and its local allies, the Observatory said ISIS seized Mwaleh, a village in rural Deir al-Zor province.

The group staged an attack on the town of Al-Bukamal on the Iraqi border last week but were quickly repulsed by local militias and the Nusra Front, and have largely been on the retreat since then.

Source: The Daily Star

Army moves to restore law and order in Bekaa Valley

HERMEL, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army has sent reinforcements to the Bekaa Valley on the eve of the implementation of a security plan designed to restore law and order in the turbulent region plagued by spillover from the Syrian conflict, a military official said Sunday.

“The Army’s logistical preparations are in their final phase. Reinforcements, including military vehicles, have been sent to the region in preparation for the implementation of a security plan to restore law and order in the northern Bekaa Valley,” the official told The Daily Star.

Asked as to when the security plan would be put into effect, he said: “It could be either Monday afternoon or the next day.”

The security plan for the northern Bekaa Valley comes a week after a similar government plan was successfully enforced by the Lebanese Army to end sectarian fighting in the northern city of Tripoli.

Tripoli has been plagued with fighting between supporters of Syrian President Bashar Assad in the predominantly Alawite Jabal Mohsen neighborhood and those of the opposition in the Sunni majority Bab al-Tabbaneh district. Over 100 people have been killed in the fighting since the uprising against Assad’s regime began in March 2011.

Ahead of the security plan’s implementation in the northern Bekaa Valley, Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said illegitimate checkpoints in the region had been removed.

“There are no longer unofficial checkpoints along the Arsal road, and unofficial armed forces are no longer present in the Baalbek-Hermel region,” Machnouk said in a statement, referring to Hezbollah checkpoints set up to curb the rise of car bombings targeting Shiite towns in the Bekaa Valley.

Hezbollah has taken measures in Hermel, Baalbek and other Bekaa Valley towns following a series of bombings targeting these predominantly Shiite areas. The attacks were mostly claimed by radical groups fighting in Syria, citing Hezbollah’s role in the war-torn country. Hezbollah’s measures have angered nearby Sunni towns, particularly residents in the northeastern town of Arsal, who largely support the Syrian opposition, which has fueled tensions in the border region.

In an interview to be published by As-Safir newspaper Monday, Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah said the danger posed by car bombs targeting Shiite areas had greatly decreased.

The Lebanese Army has taken full control of a vital highway linking Arsal to Baalbek and Hermel in preparation for the security plan, the National News Agency reported.

Lebanese soldiers arrested four armed Syrians in Wadi Hanin in Arsal who opened fire on an Army patrol, the NNA said.

Speaking after meeting Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai in Bkirki late Saturday, Machnouk hailed the plan’s success in Tripoli, saying Beirut would soon see similar measures.

“We confirm that the security plan is going as planned with the support of the president, the prime minister and the courage of the Army,” Machnouk said. “We are all fully responsible for the failure or success of the plan, which has so far proven to be a success.”

“Implementation of the plan in the northern Bekaa Valley will soon begin, and it will end in Beirut. We will end violations against the Lebanese, their security and their livelihood, particularly in light of repeated abductions.”

Residents in the Baalbek- Hermel region are anxiously waiting for the implementation of the security plan, hoping the security forces will crack down on gangs blamed for car thefts and drug trafficking in the area.

Meanwhile in Tripoli, some 130 men demonstrated in Bab al-Tabbaneh, demanding a general amnesty for all militia leaders wanted on arrest warrants for their alleged involvement in the fighting.

Also, about 150 men demonstrated in the Jabal Mohsen neighborhood in support of Rifaat Eid, the Arab Democratic Party’s politburo chief. The demonstration came a day after Military Prosecutor Saqr Saqr charged 12 people, including Eid, for belonging to an armed terror organization and carrying out terrorist acts in Tripoli.

Security forces arrested a man identified only by his initials as B.B., one of the key suspects wanted in Bab al-Tabbaneh.

Source: The Daily Star

Kasab vs. #Kessab, and propaganda on Syria’s coast

BEIRUT: A social media campaign to prevent a “genocide of Armenians!” in the scenic Syrian mountain resort town of Kasab exploded recently, in the latest example of how 21st century communications technology can spread as much disinformation as it does information.

The Armenian diaspora community was shaken late last month when the town of Kasab and surrounding areas fell quickly out of the regime’s control, as part of the “Al-Anfal” coastal campaign launched by rebels and jihadists.

The cast of characters in the campaign is a long one – on one side are Syrian regular army troops and several paramilitary groups and militias, believed to include the National Defense Forces, Lebanon’s Hezbollah, and the Liberation of Iskanderon group, headed by a Turkish-born Alawite from the neighboring province across the border, called Hatay by Turkey.

On the other side is a loose coalition of groups: the Al-Qaeda affiliate the Nusra Front, several conservative Islamist militias, and in a supporting role, the mainstream Free Syrian Army.

For the Armenians of Kasab and Armenians elsewhere, all these distinctions are largely insignificant. The regime and its supporters, besides labeling every insurgent a “terrorist,” have emphasized that Turkey is actively aiding the rebels’ military efforts, in order to stir up old fears and endemic hostility to Syria’s neighbor, whose Ottoman Empire predecessor massacred 1.5 millions beginning in 1915.

American-Armenian organizations and activists raised the alarm about a new genocide being imminent in Kasab as the town quickly fell to the rebels.

Celebrities such as Kim Kardashian joined in, guaranteeing the #SaveKessab campaign instant global reach, thanks to the Armenian-American from southern California who commands 20 million Twitter followers.

The message of “Kasab being targeted” was also relayed by the U.S. government and Congress, people with Armenian-American constituents, although the mayor of Kasab, along with an MP from the Republic of Armenia who visited Syria, have both said that no Armenians were killed when the town fell.

Much of the wider social media campaign’s visual content – and particularly a selection of still photographs – highlight how tenuous Internet-driven claims can be.

Horrific to look at, the photos suffer from the fact that not a single one is connected to events in Kasab in late March 2014.

Ironically, most of the victims pictured in the gruesome beheadings, executions and atrocities are Muslims, being killed by ultraextremist Muslims, in Syria and elsewhere.

But the public, facing the wave of such photos and other accusations being circulated, might come away with various impressions – “Kasab residents butchered,” “destruction of churches,” and “ethnic cleansing.”

The #saveKessab and other propaganda campaigns generated a quick pushback, on various fronts.

A fighter from Ansar al-Sham, the most moderate of the Islamist militias in the coast offensive, released a video statement denying that any harm had come to the Armenians of Kasab.

He cited the behavior of the seventh century Caliph Omar, who did not harm the Christians of Jerusalem when he seized the city.

Multiple items of video footage from Kasab also emerged, produced both by media activists and pro-opposition television stations, at churches where the fighters had posted guards, to make sure nothing was looted.

Two of the four large groups leading the campaign are Ansar al-Sham and Ahrar al-Sham, both members in the Islamic Front, an alliance of seven large, conservative Islamist militias.

The Front put out its own statement on the coast offensive, criticizing the disinformation campaign swirling around the insurgents’ behavior toward civilians.

Much of this Arabic-language material, however, doesn’t reach the audience that is hearing about a “new genocide.”

But a string of counterclaims in English-language websites, thoroughly debunking the claims of atrocities, has also emerged.

An anti-regime media activist who covered some of the battles raging in northern Latakia, including Kasab, told The Daily Star he knew of only one “violation,” when an overzealous rebel fighter removed a cross from one of the churches in Kasab.

He described the fighter as part of a minority of non-Syrians from the Nusra Front who took advantage of the chaos in Kasab during the first few days of the takeover. Since then, the rebel groups have sought to enforce order, by organizing patrols and issuing directives that the town’s shops and other establishments should not be touched.

“The fighting groups have made it clear that the person who took down the cross should be punished for his act,” he said.

Meanwhile, a small number of mainly elderly Armenians remain in Kasab, the activist said.

“They are basically people who didn’t want to leave, or felt they had nowhere safe to go, so they stayed,” the activist said. “They were afraid at first, but the fighters told them that they would be safe. But they don’t want to be photographed, and are remaining out of the spotlight.”

The activist said they and other civilians in the Kasab region ran the risk of injury or death by remaining in the area.

He said there were individual cases of local families, among them Alawites, asking the rebels to transport them to safe areas.

The activist said that while the overwhelming majority of Kasab residents took refuge in Latakia, a small number who delayed their exit were finally escorted by the rebels to Turkey, with their consent.

The biggest irony is perhaps that as the commotion over Kasab and Armenians has raged, another community – the Turkmen – are the ones actually experiencing violence because of their identity, amid palpable anti- Turkey and anti-Turkish hysteria.

Residents of a string of villages near Kasab have also experienced displacement, and many of their residents are Turkmens, and the community has already been experienced two gruesome murders. Shortly after Kasab fell to the rebels, the bodies of a teenager and a young man were found dumped in a public park in the Turkmen-majority neighborhood of Ali Jamal in Latakia.

And no global Internet campaign has arisen to cry out against ethnic violence against Turkmen in northwestern Syria.

Kasab is a victim of geography, not ethnicity – it’s the closest town to a border crossing, it’s the central town in an area with dozens of surrounding small villages, it’s near a militarily important observation post, and it’s close to the village of Samra, where the dramatic end to Syrian territory comes – a steep drop onto a cove, hemmed in to the south by a jutting cliff, while on the right to the north is Turkish territory. Before the war, if one walked or swam a few hundred meters in that direction, Turkish border guards would politely fire warning shots to encourage a retreat.

Kasab’s Armenians have recently been subjected to media interviews more than oppression, but the effect of the old-fashioned rumor mill is being multiplied by sensationalist Internet campaigns, stoking the tension. How many people also hear and believe the debunking efforts is another matter, and difficult to measure.

One of the worst photos in the “save Kasab” bunch was of the bloody corpse of a young woman stretched out on a bed, with a cross shoved down her throat.

It was also used last year in a misinformation blip about a Christian girl supposedly murdered in Aleppo, and quickly debunked back then, by people who gleefully pointed out it that it was actually a publicity still from a 2005 Canadian horror flick.

About the only certainty is that the Armenians of Kasab are now experiencing the war directly, just like their fellow community members in various cities – Aleppo, Damascus, Homs, Hassakeh, Qamishli and elsewhere – and like millions of other displaced Syrians.

Source: The Daily Star

29 rebels dead in Syria premature car bomb blast: NGO

DAMASCUS: At least 29 rebels died in a blast Sunday in the central Syrian city of Homs as they primed a car bomb for an attack, a monitoring group said.

In the capital, meanwhile, two people were killed when mortar fire struck the Damascus Opera House, state media reported.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said at least 29 people were killed, most or all of them believed to be rebels, in the besieged Old City of Homs when a car bomb exploded.

“The death toll is likely to rise because there are dozens of people missing and body parts in the area of the blast,” the Britain-based group said.

State news agency SANA also reported the blast, saying a car had exploded while being loaded with explosives.

One activist network, the Syrian Revolution General Commission, said the blast was the result of a rocket landing on an ammunition deport in the area. The claim could not be independently confirmed.

The blast took place on the outskirts of the Old City of Homs, which is under rebel control.

Some 1,400 civilians were able to leave the area this year under UN supervision, but an estimated 1,500 people remain until the army siege.

In the capital, SANA said two people were killed in mortar fire by rebel fighters.

“Two people were killed and five wounded by a mortar round that hit the Damascus Opera House” near key government and military buildings on Umayyad Square, it said.

The attack damaged the Opera House, which was inaugurated by President Bashar al-Assad in 2004.

Mortar fire also wounded 13 people in several neighbourhoods of the capital.

On Saturday, mortar rounds struck near the Russian embassy, said the Observatory.

The rebel fire on Damascus comes as government forces step up a campaign to crush insurgents in its eastern suburbs, it said.

On Sunday, the Observatory said five civilians, including three children, were killed in regime air strikes on the town of Douma northeast of Damascus.

And additional air raids as well as fierce fighting was reported in Mleiha, southwest of the capital in Damascus province.

In northern Aleppo province, the Observatory said two people, including a child, were killed in raids using explosive-packed barrels bombs, an army tactic that has caused dozens of deaths.

Source: AFP

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