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Syria cleric Moaz al-Khatib to lead opposition

Moaz al-Khatib Moaz al-Khatib left Damascus for Cairo in July after periods of detention by the Syrian authorities

A leading Damascus cleric who fled Syria has been chosen at a meeting in Qatar to head a new coalition to oppose President Bashar al-Assad’s government.

Cleric Moaz al-Khatib, former Sunni Muslim imam of the Umayyad mosque in Damascus, is seen as a moderate.

Earlier, Syrian opposition groups agreed a deal to bring together their disparate factions.

The fractious opposition has been under pressure from the US and other backers in the region to clinch a deal.

Sheikh Moaz al-Khatib, who is 52, left Damascus for Cairo in July after several periods of detention by the Syrian authorities.

As he signed the draft agreement that formed the opposition coalition with Syrian National Council head George Sabra, Mr al-Khatib called on the international community to “fulfil its pledges”, the AFP news agency reported.

Last month he called for a political solution to save Syria from further destruction, arguing that negotiation would not “rescue the regime” but enable its departure with the least harm possible.

He had earlier attempted to bring the conflict to an end and in an interview with Reuters news agency in July said: “I want the Syrian people to remain as one hand.”

More than 36,000 people have been killed in the long-running uprising against President Bashar al-Assad’s government.

Continue reading the main story

Moaz al-Khatib

  • Born 1960
  • Son of long-standing imam of Damascus’s Grand Umayyad mosque
  • Studied applied geophysics
  • Imam of Grand Umayyad mosque
  • Detained by Syrian military intelligence
  • Fled Syria for Cairo in July 2012

Many thousands more have fled the country since the unrest began last year.

Earlier on Saturday the Israeli military said it had fired warning shots into Syria, after a mortar round from Syria hit an Israeli outpost in the occupied Golan Heights.

It was the first time the two sides have exchanged fire since the 1973 Middle East war.

‘Carefully balanced’

Ali Sadreddine al-Bayanouni, a Muslim Brotherhood delegate at the Qatar talks, said the new body would be called the National Coalition for Opposition Forces and the Syrian Revolution.

The group, formed after a week of talks in Doha, will have two vice-presidents – prominent dissident Riad Seif and leading secular activist Suhair al-Atassi.

BBC Beirut correspondent Jim Muir described the coalition’s leadership as a carefully balanced team that was set to become the face and voice of the Syrian opposition in the coming phase.

The Syrian National Council (SNC), which was formerly recognised as the main opposition, had been concerned it might be sidelined by the new opposition body.

One source at the meeting told Reuters that the SNC had agreed only under pressure and that it had been given a deadline of 10:00 (07:00 GMT) to sign up or risk being left out.

The new body had been proposed by Mr Seif with the backing of the US, which had signalled its frustration with the SNC.

“We signed an agreement to create [a] coalition of 60 members of the Syrian opposition,” he said.

Delegates said the body would carry representation for ethnic Kurds, Christians, Alawites and women. Of the 60 places, 22 will be reserved for the SNC.

Free Syrian Army fighters at Khan al-Assal, 10 Nov The Free Syrian Army was set to have a stronger role in the new opposition body

Bassem Said Ishak, of the SNC, said the Kurds required 48 hours to get the approval of their leadership.

The new body will also have a military council that will include the Free Syrian Army.

The BBC’s Jim Muir, who was in Doha as the talks began last week, says the backers of the new body hope it will boost the mainstream of the Syrian opposition and sideline any extremist elements.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who was in Doha for the culmination of the talks, said there was “no excuse now” for the international community not to recognise the Syrian opposition.

Helicopter attack

Violence continued inside Syria on Sunday.

Opposition activists said government forces had attacked an area along the border with Turkey, after rebels had captured a crossing point.

The activists said helicopters and artillery units had bombarded the Ras al-Ain border area.

Clashes were also reported in Damascus, Albu Kamal near the Iraqi border, Irbin and in Deir Ezzor in the east.

Meanwhile, the Israeli military said the shell from Syria that hit a military post in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights was stray fire from fighting between Syrian government forces and rebels.

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu warned Israel was “ready for any development” on the border with Syria.

Israel and Syria are still technically at war, and a UN force patrols the buffer zone.

source

New Syrian opposition debates key issues in Doha

[youtube http://youtu.be/7MAPMez4RKo?]

          Publiée le 10 nov. 2012 par

The Syrian National Council has agreed to join forces with other opposition groups at a meeting in Qatar.

But the international community’s refusal to provide weapons has been brought into question.

“We need weapons to defend ourselves. Why the regime can get weapons from Russia, from Iran, to kill people, and the victims can’t save their lives, can’t protect themselves,” new head of the SNC, George Sabra said.

Al Jazeera’s Hashem Ahelbarra reports from Doha.

Bachar Mar-Khalife “Marea Negra” (directed by Wael Noureddine)

InFine Music

Music “Marea Negra” by Bachar Mar-Khalifé (bacharkhalife.com)
Video by Wael Noureddine / Original Text by Ibrahim Qashoush

Mr President, you lie, fuck your speech, freedom is knocking at the door, get lost!
Mr General, don’t show off, you’re facing imminent sentencing, go to hell with your army, get lost traitor!
Petty tyrant, agent of capitalism, don’t look down on the good people, get lost traitor!
Hey Mr minister, you’re going round in circles, you’ll pay with your blood, go to hell with your big-shot party, get lost traitor!
Prince, you can go to hell with those who salute you, no, I won’t kiss you anywhere, get lost traitor!
You can go to hell with those who salute you, my eyes will ignore you, get lost traitor!
Insignificant little Prince, agent of capitalism, don’t look down on the good people, get lost traitor!
Oh King, you can go to hell with those who salute you, I won’t kiss you anywhere, get lost traitor!

Syria, Michel Kilo : what is a bird, what is a tree ?

[youtube http://youtu.be/nE0E16nGpyY?]
From Syria that has been being slaughtered for 20 months!!!
A real story – Michel Kilo – one of the old opposition of Assad and has spent long time in the prison. He lives now in Paris. He told this story on one interview last weekWhen I was in the prison in a single cell in the time of Hafez Al-Assad, one jailer was nicer with me (nicer means an apple every week, or hair brush).

One time this jailer took me to other cell in the same floor (underground) and asked me to tell a story to a kid!! I was then inside one cell, a scary woman was there, terrified of any shade… and a boy around 4 years old… yes a child was born there and still there
I tried to relax the mother but now way, then I began talking to the kid and telling a story.
I said: there was a bird
The kid asked: what is bird?
I stopped my tears and continued: and there was a tree!
The kid asked again: what is tree?
Oh, people would how you tell a kid a story and he saw in his 4 years only his mother, the jailor, and the darkness of the prison?….
I knew later that the woman was a hostage because her father escaped Syria and she should stay until he is back…
From Syria that has been being slaughtered for 20 months!!!<br />
A real story – Michel Kilo – one of the old opposition of Assad and has spent long time in the prison. He lives now in Paris. He told this story on one interview last week</p>
<p>When I was in the prison in a single cell in the time of Hafez Al-Assad, one jailer was nicer with me (nicer means an apple every week, or hair brush).<br />
One time this jailer took me to other cell in the same floor (underground) and asked me to tell a story to a kid!! I was then inside one cell, a scary woman was there, terrified of any shade… and a boy around 4 years old… yes a child was born there and still there<br />
I tried to relax the mother but now way, then I began talking to the kid and telling a story.<br />
I said: there was a bird<br />
The kid asked: what is bird?<br />
I stopped my tears and continued: and there was a tree!<br />
The kid asked again: what is tree?<br />
Oh, people would how you tell a kid a story and he saw in his 4 years only his mother, the jailor, and the darkness of the prison?....<br />
I knew later that the woman was a hostage because her father escaped Syria and she should stay until he is back…

Exclusive: Bashar Assad wants war not peace reveals Syria’s former prime minister Riyad Hijab

Exclusive Telegraph article
The most senior politician to defect from the Bashar al-Assad’s regime has revealed that the President repeatedly rejected calls by his own government for a political compromise, in favour of all-out war.

The most senior politician to defect from the Bashar al-Assad's regime has revealed that the President repeatedly rejected calls by his own government for a political compromise, in favour of all-out war.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (left) and former Prime Minister Riyad Hijab Photo: AFP/Getty Images
By , Amman,04 Nov 2012

In his first full interview with a Western newspaper since he fled to Jordan in August, Riyad Hijab, the former prime minister, told The Daily Telegraph that he and other senior regime figures pleaded with Mr Assad to negotiate with the Syrian opposition.

One week before his defection, Mr Hijab, the vice-president, the parliamentary speaker and the deputy head of the Baath party together held a private meeting with Mr Assad.

“We told Bashar he needed to find a political solution to the crisis,” he said. “We said, ‘These are our people that we are killing.’

“We suggested that we work with Friends of Syria group, but he categorically refused to stop the operations or to negotiate.”

Mr Hijab referred to the war waged against the Muslim Brotherhood by Mr Assad’s father, Hafez, which led to the deaths of up to 10,000 people in an assault on the city of Hama.

“Bashar really thinks that he can settle this militarily,” he said.

“He is trying to replicate his father’s fight in the 1980s.” Mr Hijab was speaking as key anti-regime figures gathered in the Qatari capital Doha to replace the fractured opposition Syrian National Council with a new government-in-exile. Once formed, the new Council would seek to gain formal international recognition, and, crucially, better weapons.

Mr Hijab said he rejected an offer to be part of the US-backed proposal, promising to be a “soldier in this revolution without taking a political position”.

He said the lack of serious action by the West had consolidated President Assad’s confidence.

“Bashar used to be scared of the international community – he was really worried that they would impose a no-fly zone over Syria,” he said. “But then he tested the waters, and pushed and pushed and nothing happened. Now he can run air strikes and drop cluster bombs on his own population.”

Mr Assad’s acceptance of ceasefire proposals by the United Nations envoys Kofi Annan and Lakhdar Brahimi during the 19-month crisis was “just a manoeuvre to buy time for more destruction and killings”, he said.

Indeed in a speech to his cabinet Mr Assad extolled only the dictums of warfare, Mr Hijab said.

It was as he watched his leader speak – coldly, confidently and gripped by the blind conviction that only military force would crush his enemies, he said – that Mr Hijab knew he had no choice but to break away.

“My brief was to lead a national reconciliation government,” Mr Hijab said. “But in our first meeting Bashar made it clear that this was a cover. He called us his ‘War Cabinet’.” The explosion at the Damascus national security building that killed the country’s defence minister and the president’s brother-in-law marked a turning point, Mr Hijab said. After that, no holds were barred.

“The new minister of defence sent out a communiqué telling all heads in the military that they should do ‘whatever is necessary’ to win,” he said. “He gave them a carte blanche for the use of force.” In recent months the formal government had become redundant, Mr Hijab said. Real power was concentrated in the hands of a clique comprising Mr Assad, his security chiefs, relatives and friends.

Certain that he had lost all influence, and watching the tendrils of smoke rising from his home town of Deir al-Zour near the Iraqi-Syrian border after another wave of air strikes, Mr Hijab plotted his escape: “A brother spoke with one of the Free Syrian Army brigades in Damascus,” he said. “We had expected to be at the border in three hours, but it took us three days.”

Since then, the violence has worsened and new fronts have opened across the country. On Sunday a bomb exploded in the centre of Damascus, wounding 11 civilians, state television and activists reported. The blast was detonated close to the Dama Rose hotel, which hosted Mr Brahimi during his recent visit to Damascus.

Rebels also claimed to have seized an oilfield near Deir Al-Zour, while fighting continued around army and airbases west of Aleppo, which the regime have used to strike rebel-held areas in recent weeks.

Mr Hijab said the violence would continue and the regime would stay in power for as long as Russia and Iran continued to provide support. But even if they cut their allegiance, he said Mr Assad would most probably still refuse to quit.

“I am shocked to see Bashar do what he has doing,” he said. “He used to seem like a good human being, but he is worse than his father.

Hafez is a criminal for what he did in Hama, but Bashar is a criminal for what he is doing everywhere.”

SYRIA : WORDS OF GOLD!!!

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5A-_7QVnWNM&feature=colike?]
WORDS OF GOLD!!! WORDS OF ABSOLUTE GOLD!!!!!!!!! BY ALLAH SWT THIS MAN SPEAKS HAQQ!!!

أقسم بالله كلامك ذهب يا بطل

TRANSLATION# THIS SYRIAN MAN FROM DEIR EZOUR ON THE BORDERS WITH IRAQ SENDS OUT A MESSAGE TO SAUDI ARABIA AND ALL THE MUSLIMS OF THE WORLD THE AHLUL SUNNAH , FROM THE HEART OF THE BATTLEFIELD YOU CAN EVEN HEAR THE SOUNDS OF THE GUNFIRE IN THE BACKGROUND..

HE SAYS ITS NOT JUST ASSAD SLAUGHTERING US AHLUL SUNNAH IN SYRIA ITS IRAN, HIZBULSHAYTAN, MALAKI OF IRAQ, THEY SEND ASSAD EVERYTHING IN ARMS AND TROOPS, AND WE HAVE NOTHING BUT ALLAH SWT AND OUR SELVES, WE ARE YOU NOT HELPING US, AREN’T WE YOUR BROTHERS AND SISTERS IN ISLAM??? ALL YOUR CHEAP PROMISES MEAN NOTHING TO US, WE ARE FIGHTING FOR ALLAH SWT CAUSE TO BE THE NUMBER ONE IN THIS LAND AND FOR THE ALL OF SUNNAH EVERYWHERE!! THE SHIAS ARE RAPING OUR WOMEN SLAUGHTERING OUR CHILDREN! FEAR ALLAH MUSLIMS!!! WHY DO YOU HAVE ALL THESE TANKS AND WARPLANES ???!! IS IT ONLY FOR PARADES??!! ..BASHAR HAS DONE FAR WORSE THAN HALACO OF THE MONGOLS AND HITLER!!! FEAR ALLAH FEAR ALLAH YA AHLUL SUNNAH WE ARE SUFFERING!!! DONT YOU FEAR ALLAH SWT??!! ARE WE NOT MUSLIMS??!! IVE SOLD EVERYTHING I HAVE EVEN MY WIFES GOLD AND MY DAUGHTERS GOLD JUST TO BUY ARMS AND DEFEND THEM AND THE SISTERS OF SYRIA!!!

The Revolution Becomes More Islamist

Robin Yassin-Kassab

with 11 comments

photo by reuters/ zain karam

Like ‘armed gangs’, armed Islamists are one of the Syrian regime’s self-fulfilling prophecies. Most grassroots organisers and fighters are secularists or moderate Islamists, but the numbers, organisational power and ideological fervor of more extreme and sectarian Islamists are steadily rising. So why is the revolution taking on an increasingly Islamist hue? Here are some points in order of importance.

First, the brute fact of extreme violence. As the saying goes, “there are no atheists in foxholes.” Not only is faith intensified by death and the threat of death, and by the pain and humiliation of torture, but tribal and sectarian identities are reinforced. We want to feel like we when in death’s presence, not like I, because I is small and easily erased. So in Syria at the moment many Sunnis are identifying more strongly as Sunnis, Alawis as Alawis, Kurds as Kurds, and so on. This is very sad and it immeasurably complicates the future task of building a civil state for all, but it is inevitable in the circumstances. The violence was started by the regime, and the regime is still by far the greatest perpetrator of violence, including aerial bombardment of villages and cities, and now the liberal use of child-killing cluster bombs.

Second, beyond patriotic feelings for Palestine and Iraq and an unarticulated sense that their government was corrupt, two years ago most men in the armed resistance were apolitical. Finding themselves having to fight, and suddenly entered onto the political stage, they search for an ideology within which to frame their exciting and terrifying new experience. At present, the most immediately available and simplest ideology on offer is Salafism. As well as for their stark message, Salafists are winning recruits because of their organisational and warfaring skills honed in Iraq and elsewhere, and because of their access to private funds from the Gulf. If this were the sixties, the revolutionaries growing beards would have had Che Guevara in mind (and if much of the ‘left’ in the world were not writing off the revolution as a NATO/Saudi/Zionist conspiracy, the left might have more traction). At present, Salafism is in the air. It’s unfortunate, but it’s the historical moment. And why were all these young men apolitical before the revolution? Why hadn’t they learned more of debate and compromise? Simply put: because politics was banned in Asad’s Syria.

Third, the perception that Alawis (and to varying extents other minorities too) are siding with the regime as it destroys the country and slaughters the masses has produced a Sunni backlash. To a large extent the perception is correct. The regime’s crucial officers, its most loyal troops, and most of the shabeeha in Homs, Hama and Latakkia are Alawis. It’s true that some prominent Alawis have joined the revolution, that Alawis were targetted by Asad’s sectarian propaganda from the start, and that Alawis have good historical reasons to fear the rule of the majority, but all this is academic to some of the men in the firing line. The situation has been made much worse by the lining up of supposedly ‘Shia’ forces in defence of the criminal regime. Iran, Iraq and Hizbullah each have their own (horribly mistaken) strategic reasons for opposing the revolution, but a fighter with no time for geostrategic analysis sees only a Shia alliance opposing his life and freedom. By their words and actions, Iran and its clients have confirmed the discourse of anti-Shia propagandists. Many Syrians who now chant threats against Hassan Nasrallah previously loved the man, and scorned those who muttered about his heresy or Iranian loyalties. Like racism, sectarian hatred is not something inherent in a society or in an individual’s heart. It is generated by propaganda and political reality. (Please someone tell this to Joshua Landis). So we have to worry about the Sunni backlash, but we also have to blame the propaganda and bad politics which catalysed the backlash.

Next, in the ears of many Syrians the phrase ‘Islamic government’ doesn’t signify ‘amputations’ or ‘women in burkas.’ Many Syrians hear the phrase as ‘just government’ or ‘clean government.’ Leftist and rightist Islamophobes made a fuss of the news that certain liberated areas of Syria have set up sharia courts, but this development isn’t necessarily as scary as it sounds. Family law was already run according to sharia in Asad’s Syria. In places where the state has collapsed, where corrupt officials have fled or been arrested, it is logical that local fighters and organisers would recruit respected clerics to practise a law which everyone understands. In rural Syria in particular sharia is more trusted than civil law, because the experience of civil law in Asad’s Syria has been an experience of grotesque corruption.

Then the regime went out of its way to kill or detain secularist or anti-sectarian activists. Secularist activists are in some ways the greatest threat to the regime, because their existence contradicts the regime’s sectarian propaganda. There are tens of thousands of disappeared, and amongst them many civil society organisers. We don’t know how many are still alive, but if and when these people leave prison their ideas will be reinjected into the revolutionary debate.

Finally, some units of the resistance that have recently grown beards and thrown a more Islamic twist on their videos are really only pretending. They are wearing Islamic clothing in the hope of attracting weapons and money from the Gulf. They are doing so out of necessity. This is what the regime’s violence has reduced the country to.

Is the increase in radical Islamism a problem? Of course it is. There is no reason to think that post-Asad Syria, once united and fed (for these will be the first tasks), will accept an undemocratic Islamism, but in the perhaps very long gap between here and there, radical Islamism poses a great threat. It makes it much more difficult to start building a civil state for all. It scares minority communities. It scares the West (which, anyway, is doing almost nothing to help). It means that at some point there will have to be a showdown between the majority of fighters who want a Syrian democracy and the small minority who want an emirate on the path to a global ‘caliphate’.

Should we refuse to support the resistance for fear of its Islamism? Absolutely not. The factors generating scary forms of Islamism are factors introduced by the criminal regime. The situation will continue to deteriorate until the regime is made inoperative.

 source Qunfuz here

Syrians choose war over Jordan Zaatari refugee camp

By Sakhr Al-Makhadhi BBC News, Mafraq, Jordan

A bus prepares to leave the Zaatari Refugee Camp
Families say goodbye to loved ones who are leaving the Zaatari refugee camp to return to Syria

The Zaatari camp in northern Jordan was meant to be a place of refuge for 30,000 Syrians. But every day, dozens are choosing to leave the safety of Jordan and make the perilous journey back into the war zone.

The sun is setting on Zaatari as a mother pleads with a soldier to be allowed on to a bus. Around her, dozens of Syrians say their farewells as the engine starts up. While an estimated 360,000 Syrians have fled their homeland, this busload is making the opposite journey.

“We face a slow death here, or a fast death over there,” says Hussain Ayish, pointing towards the border at the other end of the scrubland. As we talk, a low-flying Jordanian military jet and a fleet of helicopters circle overhead.

Truck after truck, most carrying drinking water, files past the Jordanian army tank and along the muddy road at the heart of the camp. Kids chase each vehicle and scrabble to ride up on the back of it.


Zaatari Refugee Camp

Zaatari is essentially an internment camp – built to house Syrians who have crossed the border illegally”

“Hide your car well,” says Bilal, a police officer. “They have no respect, they will throw stones at you,” he warns. “And make sure you are back before dark.”

This place of refuge has become the setting for an increasingly ugly battle between Syrian refugees and their Jordanian hosts. Demonstrations inside the camp have, on at least one occasion, turned violent, prompting an exodus back into Syria.

Like many of Zaatari’s inhabitants, the Howshan family comes from Deraa, the birthplace of the Syrian revolution, just over the border from here.

I am sitting at the entrance to their tent. The canvas is a dirty yellow, and they have scribbled their name on the outside in marker pen.

They have built a breezeblock barrier around the entrance in a futile attempt to keep the sand out. But it is no use. It gets everywhere – on the grey mattresses that line the edges of the tent, in the blankets, in the water, in the food.

This is my second visit to their temporary home. The mood is a lot more grim than last time.

“Remember my son?” asks Saeed Howshan. “He’s in hospital now, the food, this dirty food,” he says, as his cousin Ali opens one of the brown ration boxes to show me a rotten egg that he claims was this morning’s breakfast.

Saed Howshan and his nephews
Saed Howshan says his nephews (pictured) are treated “worse than animals” at Zaatari

“No matter what we do, the problems continue,” says Saeed as his nephews sit around him. He is getting animated, performing to an audience. “Even camels do not live on this land. They are treating us worse than animals.”

At this point, a Jordanian charity worker hears the commotion and ducks down, peering into the tent.

“I hope you are not saying anything against the Kingdom, are you?” he asks. The conversation turns into an argument, with the Jordanian accusing the Howshans of lying.

The Jordanian government insists the refugees’ basic needs are met, and claims that supporters of the Syrian regime have infiltrated the camp to cause trouble.

One high-placed official tells me pro-regime shabiha, Syrian paramilitary thugs, militiamen have been planted among the refugees to feed information back to the regime in Damascus.

“If we found one,” Ali says, referring to Syrian agents, “we would kick them out”. But he adamantly denies that the violence was a set up. “We have just had enough,” he says.The authorities have laid fresh gravel on the main track through the camp. And as we walk along here, dodging the trucks, Ali and his brother Mohsen show me a burnt out portacabin.

“This happened last week,” Ali tells me. “They closed the main road, sent in 300 police and tear-gassed us.”

Ali says it started out as a peaceful demonstration after two days of what he claims was inedible food and a lack of clean water. The United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) insists it checks the water twice a day.

There is open hostility on both sides. Police and soldiers patrol the perimeter to make sure no-one gets in and no-one leaves. “We are living in a prison,” Saeed Howshan tells me. “It is like we are prisoners of the Jordanians, it is as if they are working with the Syrian regime.”

Zaatari is essentially an internment camp – built to house Syrians who have crossed the border illegally.

Many of them fled the war zone with the help of the Free Syrian Army and were picked up by the Jordanian forces who have been co-ordinating with the rebels.

Burnt out portacabin
A portacabin was burnt out during a protest over a lack of clean water and edible food in the camp

When the conflict first broke out, Syrians – who can enter Jordan without a visa – were housed in the cities and cared for by the government. But as the trickle turned into a flood, the Zaatari tent city was erected in the desert and opened in July.

The Jordanian government estimates the country is now home to 200,000 refugees, 15% of them here in the camp.

As night falls over Zaatari, my phone rings, the authorities are telling me that I should have already left the camp. I am at risk, they insist. A small crowd has gathered near the blue toilet block plastered with Unicef logos. They are chanting against Bashar, rather than their Jordanian hosts, tonight.

Ali links arms with me and walks me to the gate where the soldiers are waiting for me. “I am surviving on juice and biscuits,” he says. “Take me out with you.” A soldier orders him back inside.

Like most other refugees I talk to, escape from Zaatari is the only thing on Ali’s mind.

source

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