Author Topic: Horrific picture emerges of besieged Syrian town as Obama, EU stay silent  (Read 1131 times)

Fury

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Horrific picture emerges of besieged Syrian town

WADI KHALED, Lebanon – Using horses and mules to carry their possessions, Syrians crossed a shallow river Monday to reach safety in Lebanon with tales of a "catastrophic" scene back home: sectarian killings, gunmen carrying out execution-style slayings and the stench of decomposing bodies in the streets.

The accounts are bound together by a sense of growing desperation as President Bashar Assad's regime expands its crackdown on an uprising that has entered a third month with no sign of letting up.
At least 16 people — eight of them members of the same family — have been killed in recent days in Talkalakh, a town of about 70,000 residents that has been under siege since Thursday, witnesses and activists say.

The deaths boost an already staggering toll, with more than 850 people killed nationwide since mid-March, according to the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria.

"The situation in the city is catastrophic," said a 55-year-old Syrian who asked to be identified only by his first name, Ahmad. He crossed the border into Lebanon before dawn Monday.

"If you walk in the streets of Talkalakh you can smell the dead bodies," he said.

Residents interviewed by The Associated Press on Monday as they crossed into Lebanon said their town, which has held weekly anti-government rallies, came under attack by the army, security forces and shadowy,
pro-regime gunmen known as "shabiha."

Residents recognized the shabiha by their black clothes and red arm bands — apparently worn so they can recognize each other in the confusion of an attack.

Four residents independently told the AP that shabiha gunmen killed a man named Adnan al-Kurdi along with his wife, five daughters and a son in their home — a harrowing story that could not be independently verified. None of those interviewed knew why the family was killed. But they said the killings motivated them to leave.

"We did not want to have our throats slit," said Umm Rashid, who fled to Lebanon with her seven daughters by hopping on a truck that carried dozens on a short trip across the frontier.

The trip was less than three miles (five kilometers), but it was perilous. Gunmen fired on the truck as it sped out of town under cover of darkness, wounding a woman and an 8-year-old girl, witnesses said.

"Bullets buzzed over our heads in a crazy way," said a 50-year-old resident who gave only his first name, Qassim.

Besides the al-Kurdi family, another eight people were reported killed in Talkalakh — all of them on Sunday, said Syrian human rights activist Mustafa Osso.

Tension in the town had spiked on Thursday, when authorities cut electricity and telephone service and cut off the water supply. Later, three mosques were struck by rocket-propelled grenades, witnesses said.

The siege apparently was meant to head off protests the next day, when Syrians across the country have been massing after Friday prayers since the middle of March. At first, the protesters called for reforms, but
now, enraged over the mounting death toll, many are demanding the downfall of the regime.

Talkalakh residents have been coming out every week, calling for Assad to leave, residents said.

"By Friday night, life turned to hell," Qassim said. Intensive shelling by tanks and heavy machine gun fire pounded the town, he said.

Authorities justified the siege by saying the city was full of Islamic extremists who wanted to form an Islamic state, residents told The Associated Press.

"This is all not true," said Ahmad, who did not want to be further identified for fear of reprisals.

Assad has blamed the unrest on armed thugs and foreign agitators. He also has played on fears of sectarian strife to persuade people not to demonstrate, saying chaos will result.

One resident said the conflict in Talkalakh has taken on dangerous sectarian tones.

Hamid, 45, who asked to be identified only by his first name, said the shabiha gunmen are targeting Sunnis in the city.

Syria has multiple sectarian divisions, largely kept in check under Assad's heavy hand and his regime's secular ideology. Most significantly, the majority of the population is Sunni Muslim, but Assad and the ruling elite
belong to the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The shabiha, too, are believed to be mainly Alawites.

Talkalakh is a Sunni city, surrounded by 12 Alawite villages.

"The city of Talkalakh is empty of people. Most of them have fled to Lebanon," Hamid said.

At the Wadi Khaled crossing point, Syrians crossed a narrow river separating the countries by hopping along rocks in the narrow water.

Bursts of gunfire could be heard from the Syrian side Monday in Wadi Khaled, as Syrians continued to arrive, some using horses and mules to carry their belongings into Lebanon.

Hundreds of Syrian and Lebanese men were standing just steps away from the border as bullets from the Syrian side buzzed overhead, sending them running for cover.

Two ambulances were parked nearby to tend to any wounded Syrians.

One paramedic said one man who crossed the border shortly after midnight had a gunshot wound to his back.

The Lebanese army was fortifying its positions in Wadi Khaled with a bulldozer, setting up sand dunes and putting up barbed wire to protect themselves from stray bullets.

More than 5,000 Syrians have fled to Lebanon in recent weeks. Traveling between the two countries is not difficult; citizens need only their identification papers to pass through.

In Damascus, a resident said several thousand people turned out for a protester's funeral in the suburb of Saqba. He asked that his name not be used for fear of reprisals.

Also Monday, the National Organization for Human Rights said in a statement Monday that at least 34 people were killed in the past five days in the villages of Inkhil and Jassem near the southern city of Daraa. Ammar
Qurabi, the head of the human rights organization, said five bodies were discovered in Daraa on Monday, raising the overall death toll to 850.

There were also unconfirmed reports that up to 20 bodies were found in a grave there. Calls to Daraa were not going through Monday to verify the reports.

Like Talkalakh, Daraa was sealed off in recent weeks as the military unleashed a deadly siege, sending in troops backed by tanks and snipers to crush the heart of the rebellion. Daraa is the city where the uprising began, touched off by the arrest of teenagers who scrawled anti-regime graffiti on a wall.

A resident of Inkhil told the AP on Monday there were more than 70 tanks in the village and that two hospitals in the area were taken over by security forces.

A similar tactic was used in another brutal crackdown on protesters in the region, in Bahrain. International rights groups have said Bahrain targeted medical professionals who treated injured demonstrators.

"The gunfire never stops," the Inkhil resident said on condition of anonymity.

Munira Ahmad, who fled Talkalakh with her four daughters, said she had no choice but to run.

"We fled from death," she said, holding back tears. She worries nonstop about the family she left behind, including her husband and three sons.

"I don't know what happened to them. My husband has heart problems," she said.

But she cannot call to check on them — the telephone lines are still cut.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110516/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_syria


The world could effectively cut off the Iranian link to the Arab world by throwing their weight behind the protesters and yet they stay silent. Even when Assad has killed scores more than Gadhafi has. Guess war only suits the EU/Obama agenda when there's oil at stake.

It's even more surprising given that Obama has done nothing but suck Muslim Brotherhood dick since Egypt and here he is passing up the opportunity to hand them another country. Guy can't keep anything straight.

Soul Crusher

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The CT in me says that obama is being silent because this aides iran and obama is about to support the palis at the un conference coming up.

Fury

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The CT in me says that obama is being silent because this aides iran and obama is about to support the palis at the un conference coming up.

I'd say it has more to do with Obama being a complete pussy who has done nothing but get bitch-slapped by Ahmadingdong and co. since taking office.

Remember, he's stayed silent twice now when the Iranians were massacring their people in the streets.

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Something is afoot w iran and obama knows it.  I also believe obama hates israel w a passion and is allowing iran to be his proxy in harming israel. 

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Horrific picture emerges of besieged Syrian town

WADI KHALED, Lebanon – Using horses and mules to carry their possessions, Syrians crossed a shallow river Monday to reach safety in Lebanon with tales of a "catastrophic" scene back home: sectarian killings, gunmen carrying out execution-style slayings and the stench of decomposing bodies in the streets.

The accounts are bound together by a sense of growing desperation as President Bashar Assad's regime expands its crackdown on an uprising that has entered a third month with no sign of letting up.
At least 16 people — eight of them members of the same family — have been killed in recent days in Talkalakh, a town of about 70,000 residents that has been under siege since Thursday, witnesses and activists say.

The deaths boost an already staggering toll, with more than 850 people killed nationwide since mid-March, according to the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria.

"The situation in the city is catastrophic," said a 55-year-old Syrian who asked to be identified only by his first name, Ahmad. He crossed the border into Lebanon before dawn Monday.

"If you walk in the streets of Talkalakh you can smell the dead bodies," he said.

Residents interviewed by The Associated Press on Monday as they crossed into Lebanon said their town, which has held weekly anti-government rallies, came under attack by the army, security forces and shadowy,
pro-regime gunmen known as "shabiha."

Residents recognized the shabiha by their black clothes and red arm bands — apparently worn so they can recognize each other in the confusion of an attack.

Four residents independently told the AP that shabiha gunmen killed a man named Adnan al-Kurdi along with his wife, five daughters and a son in their home — a harrowing story that could not be independently verified. None of those interviewed knew why the family was killed. But they said the killings motivated them to leave.

"We did not want to have our throats slit," said Umm Rashid, who fled to Lebanon with her seven daughters by hopping on a truck that carried dozens on a short trip across the frontier.

The trip was less than three miles (five kilometers), but it was perilous. Gunmen fired on the truck as it sped out of town under cover of darkness, wounding a woman and an 8-year-old girl, witnesses said.

"Bullets buzzed over our heads in a crazy way," said a 50-year-old resident who gave only his first name, Qassim.

Besides the al-Kurdi family, another eight people were reported killed in Talkalakh — all of them on Sunday, said Syrian human rights activist Mustafa Osso.

Tension in the town had spiked on Thursday, when authorities cut electricity and telephone service and cut off the water supply. Later, three mosques were struck by rocket-propelled grenades, witnesses said.

The siege apparently was meant to head off protests the next day, when Syrians across the country have been massing after Friday prayers since the middle of March. At first, the protesters called for reforms, but
now, enraged over the mounting death toll, many are demanding the downfall of the regime.

Talkalakh residents have been coming out every week, calling for Assad to leave, residents said.

"By Friday night, life turned to hell," Qassim said. Intensive shelling by tanks and heavy machine gun fire pounded the town, he said.

Authorities justified the siege by saying the city was full of Islamic extremists who wanted to form an Islamic state, residents told The Associated Press.

"This is all not true," said Ahmad, who did not want to be further identified for fear of reprisals.

Assad has blamed the unrest on armed thugs and foreign agitators. He also has played on fears of sectarian strife to persuade people not to demonstrate, saying chaos will result.

One resident said the conflict in Talkalakh has taken on dangerous sectarian tones.

Hamid, 45, who asked to be identified only by his first name, said the shabiha gunmen are targeting Sunnis in the city.

Syria has multiple sectarian divisions, largely kept in check under Assad's heavy hand and his regime's secular ideology. Most significantly, the majority of the population is Sunni Muslim, but Assad and the ruling elite
belong to the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The shabiha, too, are believed to be mainly Alawites.

Talkalakh is a Sunni city, surrounded by 12 Alawite villages.

"The city of Talkalakh is empty of people. Most of them have fled to Lebanon," Hamid said.

At the Wadi Khaled crossing point, Syrians crossed a narrow river separating the countries by hopping along rocks in the narrow water.

Bursts of gunfire could be heard from the Syrian side Monday in Wadi Khaled, as Syrians continued to arrive, some using horses and mules to carry their belongings into Lebanon.

Hundreds of Syrian and Lebanese men were standing just steps away from the border as bullets from the Syrian side buzzed overhead, sending them running for cover.

Two ambulances were parked nearby to tend to any wounded Syrians.

One paramedic said one man who crossed the border shortly after midnight had a gunshot wound to his back.

The Lebanese army was fortifying its positions in Wadi Khaled with a bulldozer, setting up sand dunes and putting up barbed wire to protect themselves from stray bullets.

More than 5,000 Syrians have fled to Lebanon in recent weeks. Traveling between the two countries is not difficult; citizens need only their identification papers to pass through.

In Damascus, a resident said several thousand people turned out for a protester's funeral in the suburb of Saqba. He asked that his name not be used for fear of reprisals.

Also Monday, the National Organization for Human Rights said in a statement Monday that at least 34 people were killed in the past five days in the villages of Inkhil and Jassem near the southern city of Daraa. Ammar
Qurabi, the head of the human rights organization, said five bodies were discovered in Daraa on Monday, raising the overall death toll to 850.

There were also unconfirmed reports that up to 20 bodies were found in a grave there. Calls to Daraa were not going through Monday to verify the reports.

Like Talkalakh, Daraa was sealed off in recent weeks as the military unleashed a deadly siege, sending in troops backed by tanks and snipers to crush the heart of the rebellion. Daraa is the city where the uprising began, touched off by the arrest of teenagers who scrawled anti-regime graffiti on a wall.

A resident of Inkhil told the AP on Monday there were more than 70 tanks in the village and that two hospitals in the area were taken over by security forces.

A similar tactic was used in another brutal crackdown on protesters in the region, in Bahrain. International rights groups have said Bahrain targeted medical professionals who treated injured demonstrators.

"The gunfire never stops," the Inkhil resident said on condition of anonymity.

Munira Ahmad, who fled Talkalakh with her four daughters, said she had no choice but to run.

"We fled from death," she said, holding back tears. She worries nonstop about the family she left behind, including her husband and three sons.

"I don't know what happened to them. My husband has heart problems," she said.

But she cannot call to check on them — the telephone lines are still cut.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110516/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_syria


The world could effectively cut off the Iranian link to the Arab world by throwing their weight behind the protesters and yet they stay silent. Even when Assad has killed scores more than Gadhafi has. Guess war only suits the EU/Obama agenda when there's oil at stake.

It's even more surprising given that Obama has done nothing but suck Muslim Brotherhood dick since Egypt and here he is passing up the opportunity to hand them another country. Guy can't keep anything straight.

I am sure you are quite concerned about the plight of the Syrian people, by way of contrast.
I hate the State.

RUDE BUOY

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i think he is trying to shed light on the fact that if aint now oil aint no thang

Soul Crusher

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Obama's Inexusable Indecision on Syria
Townhall.com ^ | May 17, 2011 | Jeff Jacoby




John Kerry finally got a clue on Syria last week. Is it too much to hope that the Obama administration might follow suit?

For years, the senior senator from Massachusetts has been an advocate of appeasement with Syria. He has insisted that Washington and Damascus have "shared interests" that justify warmer ties, and has championed diplomatic and financial incentives to coax the regime of Bashar al-Assad away from its partnership with Iran and its support for terrorism. Kerry has repeatedly traveled to Damascus to woo Assad, and was confidently predicting not long ago that "Syria will move, Syria will change, as it embraces a legitimate relationship with the United States and the West."

But last week, with Syrian tanks shelling residential neighborhoods and the death toll in the government's savage crackdown on popular protests nearing a thousand, Kerry woke up to reality at last. He conceded that the Syrian dictator "is obviously not a reformer now" and that continued engagement with the bloody regime in Damascus is pointless. Given the carnage in Syria, it should never have taken Kerry so long to abandon his delusional belief that the House of Assad is anything but a tyrannical gang of thugs. But at least he abandoned it. That's more progress than the White House has made.


"The defining characteristic of the Obama administration's response to revolution in the Arab world has been its slowness," the Washington Post editorialized last month. Nowhere has this diffidence been more pronounced -- or less defensible -- than in connection with Syria.

Under the 40-year rule of the Assads, Syria has been distinguished only for its sociopathic foreign policy and its unremitting hostility to the United States. During the Cold War, it was a reliable supporter of the Soviet Union; today it is a close ally of the brutal theocracy in Iran. It undermines and destabilizes Lebanon, which it regards as a part of "Greater Syria." It is an implacable enemy of Israel. It actively supports Hamas and Hezbollah, the Middle East's deadliest terror organizations. It violates nuclear non-proliferation agreements, and with North Korea's help constructed a plutonium-producing nuclear reactor. And during the US war in Iraq, it dispatched thousands of jihadists to kill American troops.

If ever a government deserved America's contempt and condemnation, the Syrian government does. If ever a popular uprising deserved American encouragement, the Syrian uprising does. Yet the Obama administration, which (eventually) pressed Egypt's Hosni Mubarak to resign and (belatedly) condemned Moammar Qaddafi's onslaught against protesters in Libya, remains indecisive and incoherent on the ferocious Assad crackdown in Syria.


Instead of seizing a historic opportunity to stand with Syria's people, the White House makes excuses for Syria's rulers. Assad and his clique "have an opportunity still to bring about a reform agenda," Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told an Italian interviewer on May 6. "People do believe there is a possible path forward with Syria." Does Clinton expect anyone to believe that? Can she possibly believe it herself?

So far the United States has responded to the killings and mass arrests by freezing the assets of a few Syrian officials -- not including Bashar al-Assad. "This sharpens the choice for Syrian leaders who are involved in the decisions," an administration official told reporters. "Assad could be next."

But Assad knows he has little reason to worry. The Obama administration has not recalled its ambassador from Damascus, or expelled the Syrian ambassador from Washington. The president has yet to denounce the atrocities in Syria with anything like the forceful outrage of his statements on Libya. No wonder Assad's spokeswoman brushes aside the administration's views on Syria as "not too bad," and shrugs off the milquetoast sanctions as nothing to worry about.

For weeks, throngs of Syrian protesters have been chanting, "Al-sha'ab yoreed isqat al nizam" -- "The people want to overthrow the regime." They are publicly proclaiming the illegitimacy of their cruel government, and risking their lives each time they do so. They are not asking for outside military intervention. But surely they are entitled to the vigorous, vocal support of the president of the United States. He is called the leader of the free world for a reason. Does he understand what that that reason is? If so, this is the hour to show it.

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i think he is trying to shed light on the fact that if aint now oil aint no thang

yep.

we seem to only get involved with nations that have oil.  just a crazy coincidence.

Soul Crusher

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yep.

we seem to only get involved with nations that have oil.  just a crazy coincidence.


Or if its to assist a communist get back into power like Bama did with Hondorus, and thankfully they stopped that.   

Or if its to get the Muslim Brotherhood in power in Egypt.

   

240 is Back

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??? egypt is pretty significant in oil and natty gas

Soul Crusher

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??? egypt is pretty significant in oil and natty gas

Egypt is not a big oil producer. 

kcballer

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Haha oh the CT's.  It shows what has always happened.  Help for some, not for others.  It's a stain on the Obama admin and the UN yet again for inaction. 
Abandon every hope...

Kazan

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Haha oh the CT's.  It shows what has always happened.  Help for some, not for others.  It's a stain on the Obama admin and the UN yet again for inaction.  


Doesn't matter, unless US security or interests are in jeopardy, there should be no involvement. The only reason its a stain is because the POTUS and the UN cannot just tell the truth, we are in Libya for European oil interest ( which I don't agree with). Instead we get the usual preventing and humanitarian crisis........., well shit there is a humanitarian crisis in Syria, Sudan and just about anywhere on the African Continent. So intentional or not the UN/US makes it look like some people lives are worth saving and some aren't.
ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ

240 is Back

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Egypt is not a big oil producer. 

there is a pipeline that runs thru egypt.  and a shitload of oil moves thru the suez canal each day. 

you remove that, you lose 4 million barrels a day- that raises world oil prices by 20 to 30$ a barrel.


240 is Back

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Do you guys feel that FOUR MILLION barrels of oil each day isn't enough to get the USA involved for? 

LMAO!  Who's the CTer now?