Tag: Aleppo

  • 350 Orang Berjaya Dipindahkan Dari Aleppo; Sedang PBB Bersiap Sedia Hantar Pasukan Pemerhati

    350 Orang Berjaya Dipindahkan Dari Aleppo; Sedang PBB Bersiap Sedia Hantar Pasukan Pemerhati

    Sekitar 350 orang masih berjaya meninggalkan bandar Aleppo pada Ahad (18 Dis), kata seorang pegawai perubatan.

    Ini meskipun pemindahan para penduduk dan pemberontak di bandar itu ditangguhkan secara rasmi.

    Berpuluh-puluh bas sudah memasuki Aleppo semalam bagi menyambung semula pemindahan, tetapi rancangan berkenaan dibatalkan pada saat-saat akhir selepas kenderaan-kenderaan yang digunakan bagi dua buah kampung lain diserang.

    Perkembangan ini dilaporkan sedang Majlis Keselamatan Pertubuhan Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu (PBB) bersiap sedia untuk mengundi bagi menghantar para pemerhati ke Aleppo.

    “Lima bas membawa para penduduk yang dipindahkan dari bahagian timur Aleppo,” kata Ahmad al-Dbis, yang menerajui pasukan doktor dan relawan yang menyelaras pemindahan ke Khan al-Assal. Dari situ, mereka yang dipindahkan boleh ke bahagian-bahagian lain Aleppo dan wilayah Idlib.

    Badan pemerhati, Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, menyatakan 350 orang itu dapat dipindahkan selepas Rusia dan Turki menggesa rejim Syria supaya membenarkan konvoi bas itu untuk meneruskan perjalanannya.

    Pemindahan digantung pada Jumaat (16 Dis), sehari selepas konvoi-konvoi itu mula meninggalkan Aleppo di bawah satu perjanjian yang membenarkan rejim Syria mendapat kuasa penuh ke atas Aleppo.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Protesters Condemn International Inaction In Aleppo

    Protesters Condemn International Inaction In Aleppo

    BERLIN (AFP) – Protesters rallied in Berlin on Saturday (Dec 17) against the war in Syria denouncing the international community for failing to help civilians, especially children, in the besieged city of Aleppo.

    Holding banners saying “The children of Aleppo are calling you!”, or “Aleppo is bleeding and the world is watching”, around 900 people braved plunging temperatures to gather in front to the Reichstag, the German parliament building, according to police estimates.

    At the same time, another 1,800 people joined a second demonstration elsewhere in the German capital, police said.

    “What is happening there amounts to what is the worst in the world,” said Mahmoud Almizeh, a 19-year-old Syrian refugee who comes from Raqa, now the bastion of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria militant group.

    Germany has opened its doors to some 600,000 Syrian refugees since the conflict began in 2011.

    Having arrived in Germany a year ago, Almizeh lamented that European leaders were “unfortunately doing nothing”.

    In Aleppo on Saturday, trapped Syrian civilians and rebels waited desperately for evacuations to resume from an opposition-held enclave of the city which has fallen to the brutal onslaught by Syrian government forces.

    Aleppo has been ravaged by some of the worst violence of the nearly six-year war that has killed more than 310,000 people.

    “We feel so powerless” about the tragedy facing the Syrians, said Anna Bone, a Berlin resident at the demonstration where another banner declared: “Stop murdering! Peace talks NOW.”

    “This powerlessness… this grief, it’s what brought me here today,” she added.

    Hundreds of protestors also joined demonstrations in France on Saturday in the cities of Paris, Lille, Strasbourg and Marseille.

    “It’s crazy that the world powers cannot intervene,” commented two protesters of Turkish origin, Hilal, 25, and Gulsan, 26, in Paris.

    Thousands of trapped civilians and the last remaining opposition fighters in Aleppo were waiting for evacuations to resume on Saturday, a day after the operation was suspended by the Syrian government.

    Meanwhile, in New York, the UN Security Council could vote as early as this weekend on a French-drafted proposal to allow international observers into Aleppo and ensure urgent aid deliveries.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Walid J. Abdullah: Do Not Forget About The Concept Of ‘Justice’ In Islam

    Walid J. Abdullah: Do Not Forget About The Concept Of ‘Justice’ In Islam

    Lately, people have been emphasising the importance of the concept of mercy in Islam. Personally, i feel this is a great thing. I do wish at times that some Muslims would follow the example of our Christian brethren in underscoring love and mercy in their faith. Gentleness would undoubtedly be a better ambassador than harshness in most cases.

    Yet, one must be cognizant of certain realities. One who constantly talks about love and mercy, but chooses to remain silent when there is a need to speak of justice and condemn oppression, has very little credibility then when he/she champions the former qualities as essential aspects of Islam. It is only natural that people would question what his/her motives are when he reiterates love and mercy, but neglects justice or fairness.

    What, or perhaps whose, agenda is one serving when one engages in such cherrypicking?

    To paraphrase Professor Tariq Ramadan, when people with religious authority condemn acts of violence by the lay people, but are silent when dictators commit oppression, that is a sure way to drive more young people toward the path of extremism.

    It is indeed strange that some people harp on mercy, but ignore justice. Worse still are those who are quick to display harshness when Muslims are aggressors, but somehow suddenly find their merciful side when Muslims are victims, or when powerful people are doing the oppressing.

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

  • Aleppo Residents Celebrates Liberation From Militants

    Aleppo Residents Celebrates Liberation From Militants

    The residents of Aleppo have taken to the Syrian city’s streets to celebrate the imminent official announcement of the city’s full liberation from militants.

    According to Syrian army officials on Monday, 99 percent of the formerly occupied regions of the city have been recovered by government forces, adding that the army is in the “last moments before declaring victory.”   

    “The battle in eastern Aleppo should end quickly. They (militants) don’t have much time. They either have to surrender or die,” said Lieutenant General Zaid al-Saleh, the director of the government’s Aleppo security committee.

    Press TV’s correspondent in the city says that there are reports of the complete liberation of Aleppo.

    Earlier, the so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the battle to liberate the city had reached its end and that government forces were making their final advances into the militant-held parts of the city. “The battle of Aleppo has reached its end. It is just a matter of a small period of time, no more, no less…,” said the group’s director, Rami Abdulrahman.

    He noted that the militants have now withdrawn from the last six neighborhoods they were using as hideouts in the city.

    Less than a month ago, the Syrian army started a wholesale push to drive the militants out of their stronghold in the city’s eastern side, making great strides in the process.

    Aleppo’s complete liberation from the foreign-backed militants would mark a significant victory for Syria in its nearly six-year-long campaign against foreign-backed militants. The liberation of Aleppo would deny the militants their main supply routes across the Turkish border while it would hugely undermine the morale of the militant groups.

    Daesh Palmyra offensive Aleppo diversion’

    Also on Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that Daesh’s latest attack on Palmyra was “apparently” launched from Iraq’s Mosul from “territories patrolled by the aircraft of the US-led coalition.” He added this “makes one think that – and I really hope to be wrong here — that it was orchestrated and coordinated to give a respite to those thugs, who are entrenched in eastern Aleppo.”

    He noted that the US had been using a conflicting policy towards the terrorists in Syria since the beginning of the conflict some six years ago, by battling Daesh but openly avoiding conflict with other terrorists groups.

    “There is a significant number of reasons to believe that [Al-Nusra] is being spared as the most effective combat-capable force, which opposes the governmental [forces] of the ground in order to be used for overthrowing the legitimate Syrian government when the time comes,” he added.

    While admitting that talks between Moscow and Washington over Syria are difficult, Lavrov voiced hopes that the US would stop exonerating the militants and commit to a “fundamental agreement” based on the “uncompromising struggle against terrorism.”

    In recent days, Daesh, the most brutal of the terror groups operating in Syria since 2014, has resurfaced in the ancient city of Palmyra in the west-central province of Homs.

    The group was driven out of the city back in March after holding it for some 10 months.

    Recently, it mobilized more than 4,000 terrorists, according to the official Syrian Arab News Agency, re-entering the city of Palmyra amid fierce clashes with the army.

    Reports on Sunday morning indicated that Daesh’s attempts to re-enter Palmyra had been reversed, but various sources said later in the day that they had managed to force their way back into the city.

    Assad receives letter from Pope

    Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad has received a letter from Pope Francis in which the pontiff voiced his sympathies for the people of Syria over the difficulties they had endured during the country’s years of conflict.

    The Vatican’s top diplomat in Syria, Cardinal Mario Zenari, delivered the letter personally to Assad on Monday.

    In his letter, the Pope condemned all manners of extremism and terrorism across the globe and especially in Syria. He also called for uniting all efforts to end the conflict in the country and to restore peace.

    Since March 2011, Syria has been hit by militancy it blames on some Western states and their regional allies. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and UN have put the death toll from the Syria conflict at more than 300,000 and 400,000, respectively. This is while the UN has stopped its official casualty count in Syria, citing its inability to verify the figures it receives from various sources.

     

    Source: www.presstv.com

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