Sunday 14 February 2016

Syria opposition forces repel YPG attack in Aleppo

Syria opposition forces repel YPG attack in Aleppo
Syria opposition forces repel YPG attack in Aleppo

Since last week, Kurdish terror group has been trying -- with Russian air cover -- to capture opposition-held areas of Aleppo countryside

Syrian opposition forces on Sunday repelled an attack by the YPG -- the armed wing of the Kurdish Democratic Union Party, the terrorist PKK group’s Syrian affiliate -- in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city.
YPG units attacked parts of western Aleppo at dawn following fierce Russian aerial bombardments, local opposition sources told Anadolu Agency.
According to the same sources, YPG fighters had managed to capture several positions in the city of Tel Rifaat (located in Aleppo province), but were later forced to retreat following a counter-attack by opposition forces.
At least 10 YPG fighters were killed and scores injured in the fighting, according to the sources.
Sporadic clashes, meanwhile, are being reported on the city’s outskirts between YPG fighters and opposition forces.
Last week, the YPG, with Russian air cover, began a massive offensive aimed at capturing opposition-held areas of the Aleppo countryside, seizing control of several villages -- and a military airport -- in the area.
Syria has remained locked in a vicious civil war since early 2011, when the regime of President Bashar al-Assad cracked down on pro-democracy protests with unexpected ferocity.
Since then, more than 250,000 people have been killed and more than 10 million displaced, according to UN figures.

Ex-Syria official tells of collusion between Assad, Russia, ISIL

Ex-Syria official tells of collusion between Assad, Russia, ISIL
Ex-Syria official tells of collusion between Assad, Russia, ISIL

In an exclusive interview with Anadolu Agency, former attorney-general of Syria's city of Tadmur says Assad regime and Russia -- in collusion with Daesh -- are working to destroy the ancient city

Mohamed Qassim, who formerly served as attorney-general in Syria’s central city of Tadmur, spoke to Anadolu Agency on Saturday about collusion -- which he says he witnessed first-hand -- between the Assad regime and its ally Russia and the ISIL militant group.
Qassim, who now supports the Syrian opposition forces battling the Assad regime, said the latter had paved the way for ISIL’s capture of the ancient city in mid-2015. 
"I was a witness to the relationship between the Syrian regime and ISIL," Qassim, who was appointed attorney-general of Tadmur in 2013, said.
In his capacity as attorney-general, Qassim said he had been in contact with Syrian officers and officials in the city.
"This gave me insight into the mutual cooperation and trade between ISIL and the regime," he said.
The former attorney-general said he was once told by the city’s intelligence chief, Mazen Abdel-Latif, that regime agents had managed to infiltrate ISIL.
"These agents are in contact with [the regime]; they are conveying information to us about the militant group," Qassim quoted Abdel-Latif as having said at one point.
Citing the local intelligence chief, Qassim said that regime agents had also sought to carry out terrorist attacks inside Turkey.
"[Abdel-Latif said] Turkey would pay a price for its intervention in Syria and would be hurt by terrorism and that Europe and France…would also pay dearly," Qassim said.
Syria has remained locked in a vicious civil war since early 2011, when the Assad regime cracked down on pro-democracy protests with unexpected ferocity.
Since then, more than 250,000 people have been killed and more than 10 million displaced, according to figures released by the UN.
- Demonization - 
Qassim recalled the fall of Tadmur to ISIL militants in May of last year.
"A month before the city fell to ISIL, we had received information that ISIL was planning to attack Tadmur and the adjacent city of Sukhna. We conveyed the information to Assad himself," he said.
"But instead of laying out a plan to defend the city, Assad ordered military forces to vacate Tadmur in hopes of tempting ISIL to fill the vacuum," he said.
Qassim went on to say that Assad’s aim was to encourage ISIL to advance on Syria’s western Qalamoun region where it would confront the opposition Jaysh al-Islam ("Army of Islam") group.
"He wanted to see the two groups destroy each other," the former official contended.
According to Qassim, Assad had wanted to give the impression that ISIL had captured Tadmur, from which the group hoped to advance on the central city of Homs to kill Alawites and Christians.
"[Assad was confident] that the destruction of ancient monuments in the city would anger world public opinion and thus demonize the revolution," he said.
- Torture, atrocities - 
When he was serving as the city’s attorney-general, Qassim said, he had discovered scores of bodies of political detainees in regime-run prisons.
"These people’s crime was to oppose the criminal Assad regime," he said.
Qassim added that political detainees had been subject to horrific forms of torture.
"Many were beaten, burnt, tortured or crucified to death," he said.
"[Upon the death of a detainee] I was summoned, along with the medical examiner, to examine the body and we were forced to write reports that he died of natural causes," said Qassim.
The former attorney-general also accused the Assad regime -- and its ally, Russia -- of committing atrocities in Tadmur.
"There were atrocities and crimes committed by Russia and the Assad regime that the world never knew about," he said.
He asserted that most of the city’s monuments, for example, had been destroyed by Russian airstrikes or barrel bombs dropped by regime aircraft.
"Russian bombardments and regime [attacks] don’t target ISIL; rather, they are killing civilians, rendering thousands of the city’s residents homeless," he said.
Qassim went on to note that Russia -- which began striking opposition forces in Syria last September -- never attempted to retake Tadmur from ISIL.
"It’s destroying the city and killing its people and is ultimately working to obliterate Tadmur," he said.
- Complicity - 
Qassim said dozens of Russian military experts had arrived in Tadmur when he was still serving as the city’s attorney-general.
"These experts visited oil and gas fields to carry out maintenance and repair operations under the protection of ISIL militants," he said.
"This proves Russia was helping ISIL maintain the flow of oil and gas from areas under its control to regime-controlled areas," he said.
Qassim added that the Assad regime -- through middlemen -- was conducting trade operations with ISIL.
"The regime was working through mediators to purchase oil and conduct trade operations with ISIL in Tadmur and its surroundings," he said.
Qassim went on to disclose that regime forces were selling weapons to ISIL militants, asserting that a Syrian officer -- named Mohamed Gaber -- had been responsible for selling weapons to the militant group.
"He [Gaber] smuggled weapons at night to ISIL militants and was paid by middlemen," he said.
Providing a glimpse as to how the weapons were procured by ISIL, Qassim said Gaber used to order extra weapons at one of the army checkpoints under his control.
"[Shortly afterward] ISIL militants would attack the checkpoint, from which Gaber would order his troops to withdraw -- leaving the weapons to the militants," he said.
"After the militants withdrew from the checkpoint, Gaber and his forces would return to find it emptied of weapons," Qassim said.
- Antiquities smuggling - 
Asked about the illicit trafficking of ancient artifacts in Syria, Qassim said the practice had been widespread even before the outbreak of the revolution.
"This has been happening for more than ten years," he said, going on to name Sabra al-Khazen, head of military intelligence in Tadmur, as one of the country’s best-known antiquities smugglers.
"He [al-Khazen] amassed thousands of ancient artifacts and sold them to buyers abroad. He shared his profits with Assad and other members of the intelligence apparatus," Qassim said.
He added that numerous military officers and security personnel had engaged in smuggling and the selling of artifacts amid the chaos that followed the revolution.
"Some traffickers were arrested," Qassim said, noting that he himself had been approached by certain security chiefs who had attempted to undermine investigations and destroy evidence of illegal antiquities smuggling.
Asked about reports that the regime had released prisoners and allowed them to join ISIL, Qassim confirmed that many prison inmates had been freed.
"I heard these inmates had gone to Al-Raqqah [in northeastern Syria] and to other ISIL-held areas without being referred to the judiciary," he said.
"I gradually realized the intelligence agencies were recruiting them -- especially criminals -- with a view to using them to infiltrate ISIL," Qassim said.
- ‘One big prison’ -
Qassim fled Syria in late 2015 to neighboring Turkey.
"I was a witness to the peacefulness of the Syrian revolution; I saw how peaceful protesters were killed by [regime forces] in Homs," he said.
The former attorney-general went on to assert that Syria had since become "one big prison".
"There is panic and fear everywhere," he said.
According to Qassim, the Assad regime had been on the verge of collapse before Russia had intervened in the conflict.
"The Russian aggression provided the regime with moral support," he said. "This support, however, remains very fragile."
Qassim stressed that all Syrians -- Sunnis and Alawites alike -- despised Assad and his regime.
"All are confident that he will either escape or be killed," he said. "Everyone knows Assad is doomed to defeat."
Source: Anadolu Agency

Afghanistan summons Pakistan envoy over governor's kidnapping

Afghanistan summons Pakistan envoy over governor's kidnapping
Afghanistan summons Pakistan envoy over governor's kidnapping

Afghan foreign ministry expressed concern to ambassador Sayed Ibrar Hussain and urged Islamabad to throw all its resources into finding Sayed Fazlullah Wahidi, a former governor of Herat province

Afghanistan on Sunday summoned Pakistan's ambassador to the foreign ministry in Kabul to express "serious concerns" over the kidnapping of a former Afghan governor in Islamabad, the ministry said in a statement.
Sayed Fazlullah Wahidi, a former governor of Herat province, was snatched by unidentified men in an upscale district of the Pakistani capital on Friday, police have confirmed.
Afghanistan has fraught relations with Pakistan, which it blames for sponsoring Taliban militants fighting an ongoing bloody insurgency.
On Sunday the foreign ministry expressed concern to ambassador Sayed Ibrar Hussain and urged Islamabad to throw all its resources into finding Wahidi, described as one of the "big personalities" of the war-torn country.  
"The Afghan government calls upon the Pakistani government to use all tools and possibilities in identifying the group behind the kidnapping and immediately secure the release of Mr Wahidi," the statement said.
Pakistan is in the grip of a homegrown Taliban insurgency but the tightly-guarded capital has a very low crime rate in general, and the F-7/2 sector where Wahidi was seized is a high security area that houses politicians, bureaucrats and expats. 
A Pakistani police official told AFP Sunday that investigators were treating the abduction as a "high-profile case", but that no arrests have yet been made. 

Turkey continues to shell PYD positions in Syria

Turkey continues to shell PYD positions in Syria
Turkey continues to shell PYD positions in Syria

Turkish military sources say several positions of PYD's military wing have been destroyed, while terrorists have also suffered casualties

Turkish troops are continuing to shell positions of the PYD in Syria’s Azaz district located in the northern countryside of Aleppo, Turkish security sources confirmed to Anadolu Agency on Sunday.
The PYD is the Syrian branch of the terrorist PKK organization which has targeted security forces as well as civilians in Turkey since 1984
The shelling was first reported Saturday night when Turkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said that the army returned artillery fire after coming under attack from PYD forces based around Azaz in northern Syria. Davutoglu had said that the response was within Turkey’s rules of engagement.
According to Turkish military, the Akcabaglar base in Turkey’s border province of Kilis was shelled Saturday by “PYD/PKK” forces.
On Sunday morning, Turkish army continued to shell PYD positions, military sources said. Artillery fire could also be heard in Kilis.
Turkish military sources added that several positions of YPG -- PYD's armed wing -- had been destroyed and terrorists also reportedly suffered casualties.
Azaz in Aleppo province has been the scene of recent heavy fighting and the YPG have advanced to Azaz -- just six kilometers (four miles) from the Turkish border.

Severe earthquake hits New Zealand

Severe earthquake hits New Zealand
Severe earthquake hits New Zealand

Tremor -- which caused no injuries -- occurred almost five years after quake killed 185 people and levelled half buildings in city's center

A severe 5.7 magnitude earthquake rocked New Zealand's second largest city early Sunday, prompting buildings in Christchurch's center to be evacuated.
At 6.44 p.m. (0544GMT), a cliff was reported to have collapsed but there were no reports of major injuries or serious structural damage.
No tsunami warning was issued.
According to local newspaper The Press, the tremor -- which struck 13 kilometers (8 miles) east of the city on New Zealand's south island around 1.13 p.m -- was originally listed as a magnitude 5.9, however it has since been downgraded to a 5.7.
In 2011, a magnitude 6.3 temblor in the area killed 185 people and left half the buildings in the city's central business district collapsed or unsafe to enter.
Aftershocks continued to hit the city late into the evening Sunday, with a magnitude 4.0 quake occurring at 6.27 p.m. just 15 kilometers east of the city.
A magnitude 3.5 quake then shook the area four minutes later, occurring just 10 kilometers north-east of the city.

New Zealand sits on the Ring of Fire, an area in the Pacific Ocean where a large number of earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur.

Malaysia checking Syrian refugees for ISIL links

Malaysia checking Syrian refugees for ISIL links
Malaysia checking Syrian refugees for ISIL links

Deputy PM says so far checks not detected any links to terror group; wants to give to refugees freedom to carry on with their lives

Malaysia says it is conducting background checks on all incoming Syrian refugees to ensure they are not involved with any ISIL-linked groups, while also guaranteeing them a peaceful stay.

Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi told reporters in capital Kuala Lumpur on Sunday that so far the checks had not detected any links to the terror group.

"The screening would be carried out through the Advance Passenger Screening System with the cooperation of Interpol and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees [UNHCR]," he said.
To date, the country has accepted five Syrian refugees families. Prime Minister Najib Razak told the United Nations in October that Malaysia would open its doors to 3,000 Syrian migrants over the next three years to help with the ongoing refugee crisis.
"The families were brought here temporarily to live in Malaysia for a certain period of time before returning to their homeland, once Syria is peaceful," Hamidi said.
He underlined that although the aim of the security checks is to guarantee Malaysia's safety and security, it was also to allow refugees to temporarily carry on with their lives.

"We prioritize families of students who are already studying here, those who are working here and also Syrian professionals like doctors and engineers working here in Malaysia," he added.

He requested that Malaysians be kind-hearted to their Syrian guests, offering them the same assistance rendered to those fleeing conflict in Bosnia Herzegovina in the 1990s.
Last month, Malaysia's police force said it had arrested 82 people with links to ISIL -- 73 of them Malaysians -- in 2015 alone.
More than 10 Malaysians, including at least 14 women, have been identified as fleeing Malaysia to join ISIL movements in Iraq and Syria using neighboring countries as transit points.

As of December last year, seven had returned home to arrest.

Deadly Saudi-led strike on Yemen workshop

Deadly Saudi-led strike on Yemen workshop
Deadly Saudi-led strike on Yemen workshop

'Two employees, including a 14-year-old boy, were killed and 15 others wounded in the overnight air raid,' a factory owner says

A Saudi-led coalition air strike on a sewing workshop killed at least two people and wounded 15 on Sunday in the rebel-held Yemeni capital, the factory owner told AFP.
"Two employees, including a 14-year-old boy, were killed and 15 others wounded in the overnight air raid," Faisal al-Musaabi said.
A search was underway for another employee still buried under the rubble of the building in the east of Sanaa, he added.
The coalition has been carrying out air strikes against Iran-backed rebels across Yemen since March. 
The rebels, who have controlled Sanaa since September 2014, reported a higher death toll of 11 employees killed and four others wounded in the strike on the workshop, according to their sabanews.net website. 
The United Nations says more than 6,100 people have been killed in Yemen's conflict since the coalition began its raids, about half of them civilians.
The coalition last month announced that an independent inquiry would examine charges of possible abuses against civilians in the conflict.
A panel of UN experts says the coalition has carried out 119 sorties that violated humanitarian law, and called for an international probe.

Greece arrests three armed Britons at Turkish border

Greece arrests three armed Britons at Turkish border
Greece arrests three armed Britons at Turkish border

Counter-terrorism services are now investigating the trio

Greece arrested three heavily armed Britons near the Turkish border, police said Sunday, without indicating if the trio were seeking to cross into Turkey.
One of the three, said to be of Kurdish Iraqi origin, was found to have four firearms and 200,000 rounds in his possession when he was picked up at the Kipi border post on the Evros River which borders the two nations.
Police arrested the other two men were in the port of Alexandropolis, the main town in the Evros region and a key commercial centre in northeastern Greece. They were found in possession of 18 firearms and 20,000 bullets stowed in a trailer.
Counter-terrorism services are now investigating the trio.  
On January 31, two men with Swedish passports were arrested in the same region after they were found carrying "combat material" having flown to Greece from Sweden before heading towards Turkey by bus.
One, Mirsad Bektasevic, a suspected extremist of Bosnian origin, was charged with "terrorist" activities along with an accomplice believed to hail from Yemen.

Pope urges Mexico’s political, church elite to transparency

Pope urges Mexico’s political, church elite to transparency
Pope urges Mexico’s political, church elite to transparency

Seeking privileges to benefit few to detriment of many creates environment for corruption, Pope Francis says

Pope Francis admonished Mexico’s political and clerical leaders Saturday, urging them to provide "true justice" and security to a society hurt by drug violence and rampant corruption.
A huge crowd gathered at the Zocalo to cheer the head of the Catholic Church as he drove though Mexico’s City’s main square.
Earlier in the day he met with President Enrique Pena Nieto at the National Palace.
Francis then addressed the country’s clerical elite at the city’s Metropolitan Cathedral where he reprimanded state and church leaders, saying they have failed to help the poorest and most marginalized citizens.
He asked them to be ''more transparent'' in their dealings with the public.
"Each time that we seek for the path of privileges for the benefits for a few to the detriment of the good of all, sooner or later the life of society becomes a fertile soil for corruption, drug trafficking, exclusion, violence, including human trafficking, kidnapping and death," he said.
"Be vigilant so that your vision will not be darkened by the mist of consumerism; do not allow yourselves to be corrupted by insignificant materialism or by the seductive illusion of sneaky agreements; do not place your faith in the 'chariots and horses' of today’s pharaohs", he said.
Francis also celebrated a mass at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the temple of the indigenous virgin of Guadalupe considered the patroness of Mexico and Latin America.
In his homily, Francis referred directly to 26,000 disappeared people in Mexico.
"God is close to the suffering" of the families, he said. But it is still unclear if the pontiff will meet with relatives of 43 students from a male teaching college who disappeared nearly 18 months ago after a clash with local police.
On Sunday, Francis will visit a Mexico City suburb railing in recent years from the murders of large numbers of women.
He will then travel Monday to the southern state of Chiapas, the poorest in the country that also has a majority population of indigenous peoples.
On Tuesday, he will visit the violent western state of Michoacan before ending his trip in Ciudad Juarez, a border city with the U.S. state of Texas.
Ciudad Juarez was rated as the world’s most violent city between 2010 and 2012.

C.Africans vote in presidential run-off, hope for peace

C.Africans vote in presidential run-off, hope for peace
C.Africans vote in presidential run-off, hope for peace

The nation, dogged by coups, violence and misrule since winning independence, could take a step towards rebirth if the polls go smoothly

Voters in the Central African Republic began casting ballots Sunday in delayed legislative elections and a presidential run-off which they hope will bring peace after the country's worst sectarian violence since independence in 1960.
The nation, dogged by coups, violence and misrule since winning independence from France, could take a step towards rebirth if the polls go smoothly.
"What we want first and foremost is security to give a new impetus to the country," said a soldier, who identified himself as Ndadder, as he patiently waited to vote in PK5, a Muslim-majority area in the capital Bangui which had been the scene of bloody religious violence.
The two candidates vying for the presidency are both former prime ministers who have campaigned on promises to restore security and boost the economy in the mineral-rich but dirt-poor country.
The first round on December 30 was won by ex-premier Anicet Georges Dologuele, a 58-year-old former central banker known as "Mr Clean" for his attempts to bring transparency to murky public finances when in office. He took 23.78 percent of the vote.
Dologuele will face off against Faustin Archange Touadera, also 58, a former maths professor standing as an independent who surprised everyone by coming second in the first round with 19.4 percent.
Touadera's popularity stems from a measure he introduced as prime minister -- paying government salaries directly into bank accounts, ending decades of pay arrears and unpaid wages.
As well as choosing a president, voters will on Sunday cast their ballots in a re-run of the last legislative election, also held on December 30, that was later annulled over numerous irregularities.
This election will see a staggering 1,800 candidates competing for a place in the 105-seat National Assembly.
- 'Crucial choice' -
The race for the presidency is expected to be close.
Dologuele has won the backing of the person who came third in the first round -- with 12 percent of the vote -- while Touadera has the support of 22 other candidates who ran in December.
"It's a crucial choice. The next president will rebuild our country, we expect a lot of him," Gaston, a resident in the capital Bangui, told AFP on the eve of the vote.
The Central African Republic's most recent episode of bloodletting was sparked by the March 2013 ousting of long-serving president Francois Bozize, a Christian, by the mainly Muslim Seleka rebel alliance.
The coup sparked a series of revenge attacks involving Muslim forces and Christian vigilante groups known as "anti-balaka" (anti-machete) militias.
Thousands were slaughtered in the spiral of atrocities that drove about one in 10 of the population of 4.8 million to flee their homes.
Both the current presidential candidates are Christians.
Even though the December polls passed off peacefully, security is expected to be tight with UN peacekeepers and French soldiers helping to patrol areas where tensions remain high.
December's elections, despite huge logistical problems and grinding poverty, attracted a big turnout. Some 1.3 million valid ballots were cast in a country with nearly two million registered voters.
Christians and Muslims alike came forward on a massive scale to ensure their names were on the electoral roll and collect their voting cards, many saying they never again wanted to hear gunfire on their streets.
The elections came after 93 percent of voters backed a constitutional referendum that cleared the way for the vote.
It also followed Pope Francis's groundbreaking trip in November -- his first to a war zone. His impassioned plea for peace and reconciliation has been taken up by candidates, political parties and religious leaders.

Turkey PM confirms retaliation to shelling

Turkey PM confirms retaliation to shelling
Turkey PM confirms retaliation to shelling

Prime minister says military responded to artillery attack from Kurdish positions in Syria

Turkey’s prime minister on Saturday confirmed Turkish troops shelled Kurdish positions in Syria in retaliation.

Ahmet Davutoglu said the army returned artillery fire after coming under attack from Democratic Union Party (PYD) forces based around Azaz in northern Syria.
He stressed that the response was within Turkey’s rules of engagement.
Earlier, a military source told Anadolu Agency the Akcabaglar base in Kilis province was shelled by “PYD/PKK” forces -- referring to the Syrian Kurdish group and its affiliate PKK, which has waged war on Turkey since 1984. Ankara considers both as terrorist groups.
Azaz in Aleppo province has been the scene of recent heavy fighting and the PYD’s armed wing, the Peoples’ Protection Units (YPG), have advanced to Azaz -- just 6 kilometers (4 miles) from the Turkish border.
Davutoglu demanded the YPG withdraw from Azaz and the nearby Menagh military air base and warned the group against using either as a base to attack Turkey or Syrian opposition forces.
“The YPG has blood in their hands,” he said. “It is a terrorist organization. It is a group that cooperates with and compliments Russia on the ground.”
The premier said Ankara would respond to the YPG’s cross-border activities. “We will take every necessary step to ensure an environment that guarantees Turkey’s security, an environment without ISIL, the Syrian regime or the PYD,” he told a news conference in Erzincan, northeast Turkey.
Davutoglu said he had informed U.S. Vice President Joe Biden of Turkey’s concerns in a telephone call, adding the Biden had said he would pass his remarks on to the “relevant parties”. The U.S. supports the YPG in Syria.
He also said Aleppo, Syria’s second biggest city, had been under siege since last week, when the humanitarian aid corridor between Turkey and the city was cut off by a Russian-backed government offensive.
- 'Forces using PYD' -
In an apparent reference to Russia, the prime minister said “forces using the PYD” had sought to cause a “massive refugee influx” towards Turkey. He added that Ankara was ready to take further measures to defend its borders.
Referring to last Monday’s meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Davutoglu said they had “agreed that the latest attacks on Aleppo targeted Turkey, and through Turkey, Europe.”
Around 2.7 million Syrian refugees have crossed into Turkey since the civil war began and the latest offensive has seen tens of thousands more flock to the Turkish border.
“Meetings between Russia and the U.S. continue,” Davutoglu said.” And behold, after every meeting, the siege on Aleppo gets tighter and the number of refugees coming from Aleppo increases.”
He added: “Somebody needs to draw a line against Russia and raise their voice.”
In an admonition to the international community, Davutoglu accused it of complicity in Russia’s attacks on civilians.
“The international community that cannot say ‘stop’ to the ones who are air bombarding to displace hundreds of thousands of people have unfortunately become the partners of the crime in Syria today,” he said.
In Washington, U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby urged Turkey to halt its cross-border artillery fire and called on the YPG and its affiliated forces “not to take advantage of a confused situation by seizing new territory”.
He added: “‎Turkey and the YPG share a serious threat of ISIL poised just to the east of the Azaz corridor. We continue to encourage all parties to focus on this common threat, which has not subsided, and to work towards a cessation of hostilities.”

US urges Turkey to halt Syria strikes

US urges Turkey to halt Syria strikes
US urges Turkey to halt Syria strikes

'We have also seen reports of artillery fire from the Turkish side of the border and urged Turkey to cease such fires,' US State Department spokesman says

The United States pressed Turkey on Saturday to halt military strikes on Kurdish and Syrian regime targets Saturday in the northern province of Aleppo, as Ankara weighs a joint ground assault with Saudi troops.
"We are concerned about the situation north of Aleppo and are working to de-escalate tensions on all sides," State Department spokesman John Kirby said in a statement.
State-run news agency Anatolia, quoting a military source, said the armed forces shelled Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) targets around the town of Azaz, and also responded to regime fire on a Turkish military guard post in Turkey's southern Hatay region.
There were no further details on the nature of the Turkish strikes, but they likely would involve artillery fire from tanks.
"W‎e have urged Syrian Kurdish and other forces affiliated with the YPG not to take advantage of a confused situation by seizing new territory," Kirby said.
‎"We have also seen reports of artillery fire from the Turkish side of the border and urged Turkey to cease such fires.‎"
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Minnigh air base, recently taken by the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) militia from the opposition, was hit in the Turkish shelling.
Ankara considers the PYD and its YPG militia to be branches of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) which has waged a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.
"Turkey and the YPG share a serious threat of ISIL poised just to the east of the Azaz corridor," Kirby added, referring to the self-proclaimed group that has seized territory in Syria and Iraq.
"We continue to encourage all parties to focus on this common threat, which has not subsided, and to work toward a cessation of hostilities, as agreed in Munich."‎‎
The shelling came just a day after world powers announced announced an ambitious plan to stop fighting in Syria within a week.
But doubts have emerged over its viability, especially because it did not include ISIL or Al-Qaeda's local branch, which is fighting alongside other rebel groups in several areas.

Lebanese army shells Nusra Front positions near Syria

Lebanese army shells Nusra Front positions near Syria
Lebanese army shells Nusra Front positions near Syria

Army targets Nusra Front positions near Lebanese town of Arsal near border with Syria, local security source tells Anadolu Agency

The Lebanese army on Saturday shelled several Nusra Front positions near the town of Arsal near the border with Syria, a Lebanese security source has told Anadolu Agency.
The source said the army had fired several rockets, destroying the targets and injuring a number of Nusra Front militants who were treated at a field hospital in the Al-Oweini district on the outskirts of Arsal.
Last December, the Al-Qaeda-linked Nusra Front handed over 16 Lebanese soldiers -- held since August of 2014 -- as part of a Qatar-brokered prisoner swap.
The Lebanese government, for its part, released several prisoners as part of the deal.
The Lebanese soldiers were originally captured during clashes between the Lebanese army and a handful of Syria-based militant groups, including both Nusra and ISIL.
In recent months, ISIL has beheaded two Lebanese soldiers in its custody while two others have been executed by Nusra.

Merkel offers support to Turkey on refugees

Merkel offers support to Turkey on refugees
Merkel offers support to Turkey on refugees

In telephone call, German chancellor offers humanitarian, technical aid

Turkey’s Ahmet Davutoglu and German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke Sunday about the situation in Syria, the prime minister’s office said.
The telephone conversation came in the wake of Turkish shelling of Kurdish group YPG’s positions in northern Syria, amid a fresh wave of civilians forced from their homes by a Russian-backed Syrian government and Kurdish offensive in Aleppo province.
Ankara considers both PYD and its armed wing YPG to be terrorist organizations.
In a statement, Davutoglu’s office said Merkel voiced her willingness to provide humanitarian and technical aid to help deal with tens of thousands of people who have fled their homes.
“The two PMs decided to continue their exchange of ideas on this issue on February 18 at like-minded EU countries’ meeting on migration in Brussels,” the statement said.

Qatar ready to send troops to Syria

Qatar ready to send troops to Syria
Qatar ready to send troops to Syria

Foreign minister indicates Gulf state willing to send land forces under anti-Daesh coalition

Qatar became the latest Gulf state to signal its willingness to intervene in Syria with ground troops.
Speaking at a security conference in Munich, Foreign Minister Sheik Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani said Qatar indicated last year it was willing to send soldiers to fight ISIL.
“In October 2015, our former foreign minister mentioned this clearly that if the coalition decided to do anything against ISIL, we are ready to do so,” he said at a news conference. “This is something which was planned earlier.”
Last week, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates announced their readiness to send troops to Syria under the umbrella of the U.S.-led anti-ISIL coalition.
Qatar joined the coalition in 2014 alongside nine other Arab nations. It has participated in airstrikes and supported the training and equipment of the moderate Syrian opposition.
Thani said the question of sending ground troops to Syria had gained urgency recently, although he did not specify the reasons.

Israeli minister backs Syria's sectarian partition

Israeli minister backs Syria's sectarian partition
Israeli minister backs Syria's sectarian partition

Israeli defence minister speaking at the Munich security conference Moshe Yaalon has said that the best solution for Syria is to divide the country along sectarian lines.

Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon at the Munich defence talks  has cast doubt on the longevity of a lasting ceasefire in Syria and has suggested that the country should be partitioned along sectarian divides.
During the  annual Munich Security Conference on Sunday,Yaalon said he is "very pessimistic" about the possibility of a lasting truce according to a report in Al Jazeera.
"Unfortunately we are going to face chronic instability for a very, very long period of time," a Reuters news agency report quoted Yaalon as saying.
"And part of any grand strategy is to avoid the past, saying we are going to unify Syria. We know how to make an omelette from an egg. I don't know how to make an egg from an omelette."
Yaalon also predicted that Syria will turn into "enclaves" under the de-facto control of religious and ethnic sects, including President Bashar al-Assad's Alawite sect, the Druze religious minority and the Kurdish ethnic group.
"They might cooperate or fight each other."

US urges release of Iranian opposition leaders

US urges release of Iranian opposition leaders
US urges release of Iranian opposition leaders

Call comes on fifth anniversary of Mir-Hossein Mousavi, Mehdi Karrubi, Zahra Rahnavard’s detention

World Bulletin / News Desk
The U.S. State Department on Sunday called on Iran to release three opposition leaders who have been held under house arrest since 2011.
Reformists Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karrubi were candidates in Iran’s 2009 presidential election. They have spent the past five years under house arrest along with Mousavi’s wife Zahra Rahnavard, a prominent women’s rights activist.
They have been held without formal charges.
“The United States will continue to urge the Iranian government to respect its international obligations, including minimum fair trial guarantees and not subjecting its citizens to arbitrary arrest or detention,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner said in a statement.
Mousavi and Karrubi led the Green Revolution, which criticized the vote that saw Mahmoud Ahmadinejad elected as rigged.
The trio was arrested following calls for large-scale protests on the back of popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt.
“We repeat our appeal for the immediate release of these individuals and of all prisoners who are being held for their religious or political beliefs,” Toner said.

Israeli minister backs Syria's sectarian partition

Israeli minister backs Syria's sectarian partition
Israeli minister backs Syria's sectarian partition

Israeli defence minister speaking at the Munich security conference Moshe Yaalon has said that the best solution for Syria is to divide the country along sectarian lines.

World Bulletin / News Desk
Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon at the Munich defence talks  has cast doubt on the longevity of a lasting ceasefire in Syria and has suggested that the country should be partitioned along sectarian divides.
During the  annual Munich Security Conference on Sunday,Yaalon said he is "very pessimistic" about the possibility of a lasting truce according to a report in Al Jazeera.
"Unfortunately we are going to face chronic instability for a very, very long period of time," a Reuters news agency report quoted Yaalon as saying.
"And part of any grand strategy is to avoid the past, saying we are going to unify Syria. We know how to make an omelette from an egg. I don't know how to make an egg from an omelette."
Yaalon also predicted that Syria will turn into "enclaves" under the de-facto control of religious and ethnic sects, including President Bashar al-Assad's Alawite sect, the Druze religious minority and the Kurdish ethnic group.
"They might cooperate or fight each other."


Switzerland to represent Saudi and Iran interests

Switzerland to represent Saudi and Iran interests
Switzerland to represent Saudi and Iran interests

Swiss foreign ministry announces that it is going to be a mediator between the two rivals

Switzerland said Sunday it will represent the interests of Iran and Saudi Arabia in both countries after the rupture of diplomatic relations between the Sunni Muslim and Shiite powers.
The announcement followed a weekend visit to Riyadh by Swiss Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter, his ministry said in a statement. 
The Gulf kingdom severed all ties with Iran last month after demonstrators stormed its embassy in Tehran and consulate in Mashhad, Iran's second city, following Riyadh's execution of a prominent Saudi Shiite cleric and activist.
The two countries are engaged in a contest for influence across much of the Middle East, including support for opposing sides in the wars of Syria and Yemen.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Friday he believes his country could work with Saudi Arabia on the Syrian conflict and common threats such as the ISIL group. 
But the war of words continued on Sunday, with a senior Iranian commander warning Saudi Arabia against sending troops to Syria after Riyadh deployed combat aircraft to Turkey.
Iran, Syria's regional ally, supports President Bashar al-Assad and has sent "military advisors" and volunteers to fight alongside the Syrian army.
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said at a Riyadh press conference that the Swiss representation would largely help Iranians  go to Saudi Arabia for pilgrimages including the hajj.

Saturday 13 February 2016

Palestinian girl shot dead by Israeli army

Palestinian girl shot dead by Israeli army


Palestinian girl shot dead by Israeli army

A Palestinian girl dwho attempted to stab a soldier was killed by Israeli soldiers

Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian woman as she tried to stab a soldier in the flashpoint West Bank city of Hebron on Saturday, the army said in a statement.
"An assailant drew a knife and attempted to stab a soldier," it said. "Responding to the attack, forces fired at the perpetrator, resulting in her death."
The Palestinian health ministry confirmed that a woman was killed but could not immediately give her age or name.
The incident took place as Washington's UN ambassador, Samantha Power, arrived for talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders.
"Arrived in Israel... to discuss US commitment to 2 states side by side in security & peace," she wrote on her official Twitter account earlier.
Since the current round of bloodshed erupted at the beginning of October, 167 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces. Most were carrying out attacks but others died during clashes and demonstrations.

Libya deports Tunisian ISIL suspects

Libya deports Tunisian ISIL suspects
Libya deports Tunisian ISIL suspects

ISIL suspects linked to Tunisia have been deported from Libya

The Special Deterrence Force of the Libyan Ministry of Interior deported on Wednesday 8 Tunisian nationals suspected of having links to ISIL.
The 8 suspects were detained and deported via Mitiga Airport in Tripoli. The SDF did not specify when and where the IS suspects were arrested.
Rada called on the Tunisian and Libyan authorities to cooperate more closely and directly on a continuous basis with regards to issues of security. They particularly called for a better effort at the borders in light of the circumstances that the two countries were going through and their efforts to impose security.

Chad's fairy tale rock designs boasts secret Sahara

Chad's fairy tale rock designs boasts secret Sahara
Chad's fairy tale rock designs boasts secret Sahara

With its stunning rock formations remnant of a wet period in the region dating back to its ending 4,000 years ago, the Ennedi plateau is seen as a contender for a heritage listing with UNESCO.

World Bulletin / News Desk
The path to Ennedi plateau in north east Chad is the last place that you would expect to see crocodiles, baboons or giant mazes made of rock in the middle of the Sahara desert. The little worn path is home to unique geological features and ancient lakes, remnants of the region’s wet period, which ended 4000 years ago.
Stefan Kröpelin at the University of Cologne in Germany travelled to the remote region last October with a small team to take samples at many sites for the first time. Kröpelin is also proposing the area should become a UNESCO World Heritage Site, a decision that will be made at the committee’s annual meeting in Istanbul next June. 
This rock structure is called a Yardang, and is formed by wind erosion and is very common in the region.
Guelte Archei is an oasis where camels, after travelling long distances come to drink. It is also home to baboons, owls, crows, and small fish.
This rock formation is not called a labryinth for nothing - more then 4km of narrow winding passages is one of the most outstanding features of the region.
These engravings in the north west that depict fishing nets suggest that lakes existed nearby, providing a fishing source for those in the area.
Guelta Maya is another remote oasis, is about 40 metres wide, and is thought to have come from underground reserves.
This is the top of the Guelta Maya - below is the sound of crows and baboons, and droppings also suggest it is home to jackals and hyenas.
A toadstool made of rock, the result of windblow sand. The top layer of the rock is more resistant hence the mushroom like appearance.
Source: Stefan Kropelin/New Scientist

What Afghan CEO Abullah Abdullah said in India

What Afghan CEO Abullah Abdullah said in India
What Afghan CEO Abullah Abdullah said in India

Abdullah Abdullah believes that Pakistan has an important role to play in Taliban affairs and can use its influence for the success of the recently resumed peace talks

Sheikh Manzoor Ahmed – India
Afghanistan's Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah in his recent visit to India said that Taliban's dream to recapture power after withdrawal of America led NATO troops has come to a naught. Talibans were waiting for the foreign troops to leave Afghanistan and were thinking to launch a major offensive against Ashraf Ghani’s administration to dislodge the regime without realizing that Afghan forces have gained qualified strength and power to take on the terror and other extremist groups. In a veiled comment directed towards Pakistan the Chief Executive also said that some foreign forces are still supporting the Talibans in their mission to grab power.
Mr. Abdullah Abdullah took part in a breakfast meeting with a group of Indian and foreign journalists, said that Pakistan has an important role to play in Taliban affairs and can use its influence for the success of the recently resumed peace talks.
The Chief Executive, who held wide ranging talks with the Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi, External Affairs Minister Ms. Sushma Swaraj and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, further said that the Afghan security forces have gained strength and are now capable of taking on Taliban and other extremist groups. These forces are now effectively confronting the Taliban militia in various provinces of the country. He also admitted that there has been spurt in Taliban attacks in the recent months, but stated that security forces have been able to foil scores of terror attacks in the country.
Abdullah Abdullah began his five-day India visit on January 31, his visit was primarily to attend a conference on counter-terrorism in Jaipur, organised by India Foundation in association with Sardar Patel University of Police Security and Criminal Justice.
In all the previous visits to India, Afghan leaders are generally quite outspoken about Pakistan and its support of the Afghan Taliban. But this time around, Afghanistan’s CEO Abdullah Abdullah was much more guarded in his interaction with the journalists in India.
He said that Talibans are facing factional fight and this has caused chaos and confusion in the ranks of the militant groups. Hundreds of fighters have been killed in group’s internal clashes and some of the factions have joined DAESH. Taliban are not united as they used to be under the leadership of Mullah Mohammad Omer, who reportedly died at Karachi hospital in 2013.
Factional fighting has weakened the group. A large section of Taliban members were surprised that Mullah Omer’s death was kept under wrap for almost two years. On the presence of DAESH on Afghan soil, he said its presence is not a big worry as some militants groups, which were already operating in the country, have declared their affiliation with this dreaded terror groups. Only name has changed their activities remain the same.
Referring to Quadrilateral Coordination Committee (QCC) talks to push peace in the trouble-torn nations, Mr. Abdullah Abdullah said that Pakistan can play an important role in these talks which are aimed at preserving unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Afghanistan.
On Pakistan’s allegation that the recent attack on Bacha Khan University was committed by terrorist operating from Afghan soil, The Chief Executive said that after Pakistan army launched massive operation in tribal belt, scores of fighters have shifted their bases into Afghanistan and are operating from areas which are under the control of Afghan Talibans.
He said that East Turkestan Movement terrorist have also taken shelter in various parts of Afghanistan along with the fighters from central Asian countries .When Tahreek Taliban Pakistan (TTP) attacked Peshawar Army School in December 2014,Pakistan army decided to launch massive military operation against the group. The operation resulted into killing of over 1500 militants, but also resulted into migration of over one million people to the relatively safe places. It also forced the militants to shift their bases either to bordering Afghanistan or Karachi and other cities of Pakistan.
He said that India is a valued friend of Afghanistan and it has played prominent part in the reconstruction of his country."We want Indian to play more prominent and active role.” Mr. Abdullah Abdullah said that India is already taking part in talks being held in Berlin regarding Afghanistan. He said that India constructed building of Afghan Parliament and several big developmental projects. Mr. Abdullah Abdullah said that once Chahbhar port becomes fully operational it will further enhance trade and economic ties with India.
The Chief Executive also held talks with the Indian businessmen and invited them to invest in various developmental projects in his country.
On attack on Indian Consulate General office in Mazar-e-Sharif in which Pakistan army was blamed to be allegedly involved, he said that we have shared information with our Indian friends. However, it is not appropriate to divulge it at this juncture when probe is still on.
CEO Abdullah Abdullah said that three Mi-35s supplied from India have boosted the morale of the ANA troops fighting the Taliban and the fourth would also join action very soon. Afghanistan military has recently acquired Russian built Mi 35 attack helicopters from India to fight Taliban insurgency in the country.
The fourth round of (QCC) talks involving the representatives from Pakistan, Afghanistan, China and the United States aimed at ending Afghanistan's 15-year war concluded on Feb 06 with a call for direct negotiations between the government and the Taliban by the end of February, but recent battlefield advances by the group could make it hard to persuade them to the negotiation table.
However, it is a matter of concerted debate that the optimism shown by the Afghan CEO really matches with the ground realities back in his country when Taliban’s unrelenting attacks on Afghan and remaining foreign forces have exponentially increased in the recent past.