Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

The barbarity continueshttp://m.aljazeera.com/story/20131215131325730660

At least 78 people, including 28 children, have been killed by Syrian army air raids on rebel districts of the northern city of Aleppo, activist groups said.

Footage uploaded by local activists on social media on Monday showed a fire in a narrow street covered in debris and dust after one air raid in the Karam el-Beik district.

Other videos showed people carrying the injured in blankets and bulldozers removing debris in a destroyed neighbourhood.

Activists reported on Sunday that government forces had bombarded rebel-held civilian areas, by dropping barrels filled with explosives from helicopters.

Over the next few days, we will be sending to Qamishli… 400 tonnes of food.

Abeer Etefa, Senior Middle East spokeswoman for the UN World Food Programme

“More than 10 different areas in Aleppo came under heavy bombardment,” one member of the team told Al Jazeera.

“They were shelled by both explosive barrels and missiles.”

In an interview with Al Jazeera’s Darren Jordon, Andrew Tabler, a Syria analyst at the Washington Insititute for Near East Policy, said the latest attack shows the determination of the Assad regime to retake Aleppo.

“The Assad regime has the troops to retake the area,” Tabler said. “The question is if they have enough troops to hold it.”

Near the capital, the Observatory said that death toll has risen to 28 people in the town of Adra, northeast of Damascus, after a rebel faction launched an assault there on Wednesday.

Observatory director Rami Abdurrahman said the dead were primarily members of President Bashar Assad’s minority Alawite sect, as well as a few Druze and Shia Muslims. All three sects largely support Assad in the fight against the mainly Sunni rebels.

Meanwhile, the United Nations sent its first delivery of humanitarian aid by air to Syria from Iraq on Sunday and said it plans to deliver more food and winter supplies to the mainly Kurdish northeast in the next 12 days.

UN aid

The first cargo plane carrying food took off from Arbil in Iraq’s northern Kurdistan region heading to Hassakeh in Syria.

The food supplies over the next 12 days should be able to feed more than 6,000 Syrian families for the rest of December, the UN’s World Food Programme said. This is the third winter since the Syrian conflict began in March 2011.

“We witnessed today the first flight that took place from Arbil International Airport to Qamishli city, which is populated by Kurdish inhabitants in Syria. This is the first flight to be conducted in this manner,” Dindar Zibari, deputy head of Kurdistan’s Foreign Relations Department, told journalists at the airport.

The 12-day airlift, involving various UN agencies, will include 400 tonnes of food and 196 kg of medical kits, he said.

“We hope also by the beginning of January this air shipment and air cargo will continue to Syria. This is something the KRG (Kurdistan Regional Government) fully supports because it will possibly reach the most needy vulnerable families inside Syria,” he added.

Both governments gave permission for the aid flights which will also include supplies of non-food items such as blankets, clothes and medicine in the coming days.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

This is very sad, people are continuing to be killed. I wonder how many civilians were killed when the rebels first took Aleppo and other areas and whether Al Jazeera highlighted those figures in the same zeal as they do when civilians are killed by Assads supporters.
The same can be said for Irani television and any media outlets controlled by Hezbullah.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Civilians killed need to be condemned without ifs and buts.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Absolutely!

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Another victim.

British doctor dies in Syrian prison cell | World news | theguardian.com

**A British surgeon who was imprisoned in Syria for over a year has died in jail, his brother said.

Dr Abbas Khan, 32, from Streatham, south London, was detained after travelling to Aleppo to work in a field hospital in November last year.
**

An account run by his brother Afroze, tweeted on Tuesday: "Dear All, I sorrowfully inform you of the news that Dr Abbas Khan was killed yesterday. An innocents [sic] life was taken meaninglessly. He was the best brother I could have ever asked for and I know no one with a purer heart than him.

“His release was due to be this week. I thank you all for your love and support. We still need your help. Abbas is not home. Help us bring him home for the burial he deserves.”

He told the BBC his brother, who worked at the Royal National Orthopaedic hospital in London, knew he was to be freed and was happy and looking forward to being released. He expressed anger at the Foreign Office for “dragging their feet for 13 months”.

Father-of-two Khan was arrested by government forces within 48 hours of arriving in Aleppo, Syria’s biggest city, to work as an emergency surgeon. His family lost contact with him for months but his mother, Fatima, travelled to Damascus earlier this year to try to find out what had happened to him.

When she tracked him down, she found his weight had dropped below 5 stone (32kg) and he was barely able to walk. He told her he had been held for eight months in darkness in an underground cell and tortured. She was told she could visit her son on Monday but when she arrived she was told he was dead, Afroze Khan told the BBC.

The Bradford West MP, George Galloway, said he had been negotiating for months with the Syrian government over the release of Khan and was due to fly out on Friday to bring him home, after receiving a call from the Syrian foreign minister informing him that President Bashar al-Assad had ordered Khan’s release.

“This is heartbreaking and devastating news for his family who have been working so hard for so long to secure his release,” he said. “Particularly because his freedom had been agreed and he was due to return with me in the next few days. My sincere condolences go out to his family whose pain is unbearable.”

Galloway added that the family were kept fully informed of Khan’s proposed release before Christmas. Last week, Afroze Khan had warned that his brother was depressed and might want to harm himself.

A spokeswoman for the RNOH said: “The Royal National Orthopaedic hospital is very saddened to hear of the death of Dr Abbas Khan. On behalf of the RNOH, we would like to extend our deepest sympathies to Dr Khan’s family at this very difficult time.”

The Foreign Office said it was "extremely concerned by reports that a British national has died in detention in Syria.

We are urgently seeking clarification of this from the Syrian authorities."

More than 1,000 detainees are believed to have died in custody in Syria since the uprising against Assad began in March 2011, according to Amnesty International, which says most were from the effects of torture or other ill-treatment.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Atrocities committed by Assad are by no means lesser than what is attributed to the rebels.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/syria-war-crimes-evidence-implicates-bashar-alassad-un/story-e6frg6so-1226773946154

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Affirms my views. Assad is particularly audacious in his barbarity.

Conspicuous is the absence of the usual suspects who assert that that he’s the best of the options for Syria…of course, this must be a Saudi sponsored conspiracy. :halo:

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

^^^ There are no saints in Syrian conflict. You just think Assad is bad b/c you don't agree with his religious views. If he was a Sunni dictator and he was killing his Shia subjects like what is happening in Bahrain you'd be totally ok.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

picicio, no one has ever called Assad a saint. But if he is not the better option as compared to Qaeda then there is no point arguing.
And while he has committed atrocities, he has also been maligned severely by his enemies. Just quoting number of people killed in an attack from opposition does not count as the ultimate truth. There were also claims of chemical weapons usage which were never proven to be done by him. Rather fingers were pointing towards Saudi inspired opposition for committing that crime.

As compared to Qaeda, Assad is a better option. Even many Syria. n opposition members are realizing it. But it is difficult to convince some Pakistanis who are blindfolded.

Dec. 09, 2013

Hundreds of activists have watched in desperation as the revolution they launched to overthrow the repressive regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad threatens to deliver their country into the hands of equally oppressive Islamist radicals determined to turn Syria into an Islamic caliphate. “A lot of former activists are now saying to me, ‘When the choice is between Daish and Assad, I am going for Assad,’” says Randa Slim, a Syria expert at the Washington-based Middle East Institute, using the Syrian Arabic word for ISIS. To be sure, not all the rebel groups share the same ideology, but the most effective fighting groups, with their ranks filled by foreign jihadists, funded by private donors in the Gulf and backed by al-Qaeda, are gaining ground. As they grow, they are squeezing out the activists who dreamed of a Syria founded on democratic representation, freedom of religion and freedom of speech.
In March 2011, Nawfal joined the Syrian revolutionaries protesting the repressive regime of President Assad. When Raqqa fell to the rebels in April 2013, she was one of the first to cheer. But then she got a closer look at the rebels. Raqqa had been taken over by al-Qaeda sympathizers who immediately started implementing their harsh interpretation of Islamic law. Music, photography and cigarettes were forbidden. Women were instructed to cover their heads and dress “modestly” — even though Nawfal wears the tightly wrapped headscarf of a conservative Muslim, the rebels objected to her wearing trousers. Anyone who objected to their ideology was tried, and punished, as an apostate. Dissidents disappeared. Nawfal started wondering what, exactly, she had been liberated from. So she started protesting and made a series of anti-ISIS videos.

Like Nawfal, 29-year-old Abu Samer from Tartous on the Mediterranean coast was an early supporter of the push to overthrow Assad. Now he thinks it was a mistake.Arming the rebels, he says, using a nickname to protect his safety, **was akin to arming the next generation of **sectarian dictators.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Wouldn’t the same happen if Bahrain was taken over by people supported by Iran? Does that make Saudis aka GCC right to help the Bahrainis against these “protestors” ? :hmmm:

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

More than 330 people killed in 9 day bombing campaign.](Aleppo bombing threaten Syria talks)www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/hundreds-killed-as-assad-pounds-aleppo-from-the-air-9021120.html

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

The Syrians are stuck between rock and a hard place. Assad is hardly their saviour as his hands are stained with their blood.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

the Assad regime has broken all records of barbarity and oppression and bestial torture.. of not just men women and children but also animals... just saw a Youtube video of "Syrian Army executing and massacring poor donkeys"... i couldn't imagine the torment Allah's poor creature must have gone through.. this is absolute cowardice... i couldnt think of anything else since 2 days...

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

WRONG. I think Assad is bad because of what he is doing, and the particular scale he is doing it on. Others here like Asssad because of his (lack of) religious views...and I think you probably fall into that category. Hey, the guy's all right as long as he's not AlQ right? Best of the worst?

If he was a Sunni dictator....like Saddam? I sided with the Shias throughout....Iran was in the right and fought the right fight. They were invaded. Saddam was a brute and a tyrant . I see him and Assad is being pretty much the same. I was fond of Al Sadr during the American invasion, and his attempts at bringing a united front up against occupation. I'm willing to enumerate Saddam's crimes and put him and his supporters squarely responsible for them. So, spare me this sectarian finger waving...you don't know me Mr. Khan. I'm very well capable of calling a spade a spade, in spite of sect.

So now...the real question is...how many civilians must a secular dictator massacre before YOU give up support for him. And no, calling him a brute or other names is not sufficient...you must at the very least acknowledge the scope and breadth of his crimes and at the very least show how the rebels are equivalent before I'm willing to consider that Assad is not some special kind of a-hole.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

I'm not asking for anyone to call him a saint. I'm merely asking them to look at his crimes. As we write, airstrikes and shelling continue...and the best you can do is cherry pick and repost this article? Surely there must be more horror stories? Anything you can pull out to trump, I dunno....a gas attack?

AlQ and Assad is a false dichotomy. In any case, I'll be baited...in terms of casualties and atrocities, I'm willing to wager Assad actually has the upper hand.

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Nobody will answer that…in fact, they will simply accuse you of supporting one nation “meddling” in another…and ignore the fact that Iran and it’s proxies are “meddling” in Syria. If you try to point out the similarity of Saudi supporting Bahrain (which is supposedly evil), and Iran supporting Syria…you’ll hear crickets. They either don’t get the argument or refuse to acknowledge Iran’s interference in Syria…I didn’t have the energy to follow through with the obvious.

Thought I’d spare you the effort :hoonh:

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

Dunya News: World:-Air strike on market, hospital in Syria’s Aleppo kill…

Re: Scores killed in regime attack on Aleppo

I am sure the regime is targeting terrorists through their attacks on hospitals and markets

Air strike on market, hospital in Syria s Aleppo kills 25 - Yahoo!7