De Algemeine heeft Martin Janssen als bronquote:Op woensdag 26 september 2012 18:43 schreef mr_jack het volgende:
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Wat heeft martin jansen te maken met een rapport uit de Frankfurter Algemeine?
Ze hebben de kinderen ook geinterviewd. Nou en dat het soennieten zijn, zijn die minderwaardig ofzo?quote:Op woensdag 26 september 2012 18:13 schreef mr_jack het volgende:
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Dat artikel is alleen weer een ooggetuigen verslag van soennieten, uit rebellen gebied, hoezo propaganda?
lees het rapport dan. Savethechildren is hier echt niet nieuw in, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty, War Child en de VN bevestigde deze verhalen allemaal, ook met foto's, maanden geleden al en het vind blijkbaar nog steeds plaats. Jij denkt dus dat al die kinderen liegen?quote:Er zitten een tiental foto's in dat artikel van kinderen, en de ergste mishandeling die ik kan ontdekken is de volgende :
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/29/naamloosvlp.jpg (copy/paste deze link)
https://www.google.nl/sea(...)VjUPTXH6O80QW-44HIDQquote:En jij gelooft dat dat plekje het resultaat is van opgehangen worden met handboeien en dan verrot geslagen worden? Waar zijn de foto's van de wonden van de sigaretten die uitgedrukt werden op kinderlichamen?
Dit is nog slechter dan ik van je had verwachtquote:Bron 1 :
http://www.nationalreview(...)sacre-john-rosenthal
Bron 2 :
http://www.globalresearch(...)-the-houla-massacre/
En zo zijn er nog tientallen.
De opstandelingen laten journalisten gewoon hun werk doen hoor.quote:Op woensdag 26 september 2012 18:54 schreef Die_Hofstadtgruppe het volgende:
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Assad heeft over een flink deel van het land niets te zeggen. Blijkbaar willen die opstandelingen ook niet dat journalisten hun werk doen.
Vraag maar eens waarom ze dat besluit hebben genomen. Volgens mij ging dat niet echt om het lekkere weer zoals de reden nummer 1 voor Nederlanders die naar Spanje verhuizen.quote:Op woensdag 26 september 2012 18:16 schreef Kelb het volgende:
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Gaat op dit moment niet over onze leven, maar over mensen die daar nog wel wonen.
Mijn ouders hebben dit besluit genomen, net zoals mensen van Nederland naar Spanje verhuizen.
Wat zou Nederland doen als hun gemeente wordt aangevallen door een groep bewapende mannen?
Juist, hun aanvallen. Dit is wat er nu ook gebeurd in Syrië, maar jullie komen er pas achter als het afgelopen is, zoals in Libië, Egypte etc
Prachtige president.quote:More than 305 people were killed across Syria on Wednesday, making it the bloodiest single day of the 18-month revolt, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
"This is the highest toll in a single day since March 2011. And this is only counting those whose names have been documented. If we count the unidentified bodies, the figure will be much higher," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP by telephone.
A total of 199 of Wednesday's dead were civilians, the Britain-based watchdog said.
In the eastern city of Deir Ezzor, 23 people, including a child and a woman were killed by army gunfire when troops stormed the Jura district.
In Damascus, 17 people, including eight women and three children, were shot dead in the northern Barzeh neighbourhood, the watchdog said.
Another 14 people were killed when two bombs struck the Syrian army headquarters in the heart of Damascus, according to the Observatory.
Outside the capital, 40 bodies, including those of women and children, were found in the village of Diabeya.
The previous highest death toll of the uprising was on July 19, when 302 people were killed, according to the Observatory.
More than 30,000 people have been killed in violence since the outbreak of the revolt against the rule of President Bashar al-Assad in March last year.
artikel gaat verderquote:Brahimi issues stark warning on Syria to United Nations
Syria topped the agenda at the United Nations on Monday as Lakhdar Brahimi, the joint UN-Arab League envoy to Syria, warned the Security Council that the Syrian conflict was worsening and threatened to contaminate the whole region.
Syria's civil war is worsening and there is no prospect of a quick end to the violence, international envoy Lakhdar Brahimi said Monday in a gloomy assessment to the UN Security Council.
The new envoy leavened his message, however, by saying he was crafting a new plan that he hoped could break the impasse, but refused to give details or say when it would be ready.
Despite President Bashar al-Assad's refusal to end his family's 40-year-long grip on power, some tentative hope of a solution remained, Brahimi said, in his first briefing to the council since he took over from Kofi Annan on Sept. 1 as the joint UN-Arab League special envoy to Syria.
"I think there is no disagreement anywhere that the situation in Syria is extremely bad and getting worse, that it is a threat to the region and a threat to peace and security in the world," Brahimi told reporters after the closed-door talks.
Brahimi returned from Syria and refugee camps in Jordan and Turkey on Monday with a gloomy report on a looming food crisis, battle-damaged schools and shuttered factories that contradicted his insistence that he saw grounds for optimism, including "some signs'' that the divided Syrian opposition may be moving toward unity -- a prerequisite for any future political negotiations Brahimi would oversee.
Brahimi also addressed the lack of unity at the Security Council, stating that without the council's total and united support he was nothing, effectively lowering the bar on expectations -- at least in the short term -- according to FRANCE 24's correspondent in New York, Nathan King. King also noted the stronger tone from Brahimi, who went on to condemn the destruction of the country.
Brahimi said about 2,000 schools had been damaged and others used as shelter by those who had lost their homes. Many factories and pharmaceutical laboratories were also destroyed or falling into disrepair, and he said that food shortages were likely in the near future because of a poor harvest.
Activists estimate that nearly 30,000 people have died in the uprising that began in March 2011, including in fresh attacks Monday by Syrian warplanes in the northern city of Aleppo.
Brahimi told the council that he believed Assad's goal was to return the country to being "the old Syria'' that he and his father had ruled as dictators for four decades.
He said Assad's intention was to portray the uprising as fuelled by outside nations in a bid to discredit his internal opponents.
Nevertheless, Brahimi indicated that he believes reason will prevail.
"I refuse to believe that reasonable people do not see that you cannot go backward, that you cannot go back to the Syria of the past. I told everybody in Damascus and everywhere that reform is not enough anymore, what is needed is change,'' said Brahimi, who has met with Assad and other regime officials in Damascus.
“Paradoxically, now that I have found out a little more about what is happening in the country and the region, I think that we will find an opening in the not-too-distant future,” he said.
Despite a call from Germany's Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle to maintain backing for Annan's six-point peace plan, which starts with a ceasefire and ends with a political transition, Brahimi said only that Annan's ideas would remain "elements in my toolbox".
Brahimi said it wasn't yet clear how his new proposals might incorporate Annan's plan and a June declaration by world leaders in Geneva backing the peace process. The six-point plan never took hold and its calls for a ceasefire were largely ignored by the government and the rebels before it ultimately collapsed.
The new special envoy said he wants to hold further discussions before disclosing precisely what action he plans to propose. “I do not have a full plan for the moment, but I do have a few ideas,” he said.
According to a diplomat inside the council's private briefing, who demanded anonymity because he was not authorised to reveal details to the public, Brahimi was also reluctant to discuss the proposals with the Security Council. "He kept his cards very close to his chest,'' he said.
Behind closed doors, Brahimi urged Security Council members to overcome the diplomatic deadlock that has paralysed its ability to help end the crisis.
The Security Council is the only UN body that can impose global sanctions and authorise military action. Russia, Syria's key protector, and China have vetoed three Western-backed resolutions aimed at pressuring Assad to halt the violence and open talks with his opponents on a transition of power.
Toen Jacquier en Colvin gestorven waren, was dat het eerste item in het nieuws, waarom wordt dit veel minder belicht?quote:
ok man!quote:Op donderdag 27 september 2012 14:14 schreef HSG het volgende:
Dagelijkse reactie van een kaaskop: blablabla schuld van Israël, blablabla achterlijke bankiers, blablabla kutamerikanen, blablabla het westen is slecht, blablabla vreselijk systeem dat kapitalisme, blablabla complot van de EU, blablabla kk navo
Ik zie het niet anders gebeuren. Ik kan mijn mening wel terug vinden in deze video.quote:Op donderdag 27 september 2012 14:11 schreef Kelb het volgende:
Een filmpje dat laat zien hoe de problemen in Syrië zijn begonnen, vanaf Hafez al-Assad tot de problemen met de huidige President Bashar al-Assad.
Is een erg interessante video.
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=25e_1348735965
Graag jullie meningen.
quote:Unprecedented fighting in Syria's Aleppo: residents, activists
ALEPPO: Fighting on an "unprecedented" scale on Friday shook Syria's second city Aleppo, where rebels have declared a decisive battle, residents and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported.
"The fighting is unprecedented and has not stopped since Thursday. The clashes used to be limited to one or two blocks of a district, but now the fighting is on several fronts," said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.
Residents in the central districts of Sulimaniyeh and Sayyid Ali, previously spared the worst of fighting, also told AFP that the violence and mortar fire from rebels was "unprecedented".
"The sound from the fighting and the gunfire has been non-stop. Everyone is terrified. I have never heard anything like this before," said a 30-year-old resident of Sulimaniyeh who only identified himself as Ziad.
The rebels, who have been vastly outgunned by forces loyal to President Bashar Assad throughout the more than 18-month conflict, declared an all-out assault for the northern city on Thursday.
And an AFP correspondent at the scene counted about 16 mortar shots from 5:00 pm (1400 GMT) to 7:30 pm, with a shot about every 15 minutes in three army-controlled areas, including Sulimaniyeh and Sayyid Ali.
"This is the first time I have seen something like this in Sayyid Ali. Normally there are two or three mortars. But last night the intensity was unprecedented," another resident told AFP on condition of anonymity.
"One of the mortars hit a residential building and killed four people from the same family, including an old man and a young child. We tried to carry them away to bring them to the hospital but they were already dead. So we left to help the others," added the resident.
"It was a horrible scene in the street. A whole crowd was trying to help. People brought cars to take the wounded to the hospital. There were children and whole families because it's a civilian area."
According to the correspondent, clashes were also ongoing in Sakhur in the east, where army shelling attacks would be followed by five minutes of machinegun fire and a brief stop, then the shelling would begin again.
The correspondent said that the sky in Aleppo has been clouded with dust and smoke since Thursday night until the morning because of the intense bombing and shelling.
Another 14 people were killed when two bombs struck the Syrian army headquarters in the heart of Damascus, according to the Observatoryquote:Op donderdag 27 september 2012 10:46 schreef rakotto het volgende:
Over 300 die Wednesday in bloodiest day of Syria revolt: NGO
In bloodiest single day since outbreak of Syria uprising in March 2011, at least 305 people are killed by regime forces
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Prachtige president.Die houd heel veel van zijn volk en slacht ze allemaal een voor een af!
Dat valt niet goed te praten, maar het is mij nog steeds niet duidelijk wie die 14 personen precies zijn. Dat kunnen Soldaten geweest zijn die het gebouw bewaakten oid. Als normaal persoon hoor je te weten dat dat locatie juist geen veilige plek is om dichtbij in de buurt bij te gaan lopen. Want het is een militaire doelwit en in een oorlog hoor je daar rekening mee te houden. Dat is iets wat Assad en Co. geen rekening mee houden wanneer zij hele dorpen en wijken bombarderen.quote:Op vrijdag 28 september 2012 11:09 schreef JaJammerJan het volgende:
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Another 14 people were killed when two bombs struck the Syrian army headquarters in the heart of Damascus, according to the Observatory
Dat zijn dus de rebellen, en niet het leger en dan zullen vast en zeker niet de enige burgerdoden zijn die door de rebellen zijn vermoord en niet het leger.
Ik weet niet of ik hier serieus antwoord op moet geven of niet.quote:Verder verschuilen die terroristen zich achter de bevolking en gebruiken ze de bevolking als menselijk schild, dan gaan er zoiezo burgerljike slachtoffers vallen.
Oh en dit...quote:In Iraq zijn sinds de invasie meer dan 500.000 onschuldige Irakezen vermoord.
Prachtige westendie hechten zeker veel waarde aan menselijke levens. Oh dat doen ze alleen nu voor de schijn, stelletje hypocrieten.
Hopelijk wordt Aleppo ingenomen door de vrijheidstrijders deze week.quote:Fighting on an "unprecedented" scale on Friday shook Syria's second city Aleppo, where rebels have declared a decisive battle, residents and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported.
"The fighting is unprecedented and has not stopped since Thursday. The clashes used to be limited to one or two blocks of a district, but now the fighting is on several fronts," said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.
Residents in the central districts of Sulimaniyeh and Sayyid Ali, previously spared the worst of fighting, also told AFP that the violence and mortar fire from rebels was "unprecedented".
"The sound from the fighting and the gunfire has been non-stop. Everyone is terrified. I have never heard anything like this before," said a 30-year-old resident of Sulimaniyeh who only identified himself as Ziad.
The rebels, who have been vastly outgunned by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad throughout the more than 18-month conflict, declared an all-out assault for the northern city on Thursday.
And an AFP correspondent at the scene counted about 16 mortar shots from 5:00 pm (1400 GMT) to 7:30 pm, with a shot about every 15 minutes in three army-controlled areas, including Sulimaniyeh and Sayyid Ali.
"This is the first time I have seen something like this in Sayyid Ali. Normally there are two or three mortars. But last night the intensity was unprecedented," another resident told AFP on condition of anonymity.
"One of the mortars hit a residential building and killed four people from the same family, including an old man and a young child. We tried to carry them away to bring them to the hospital but they were already dead. So we left to help the others," added the resident.
"It was a horrible scene in the street. A whole crowd was trying to help. People brought cars to take the wounded to the hospital. There were children and whole families because it's a civilian area."
According to the correspondent, clashes were also ongoing in Sakhur in the east, where army shelling attacks would be followed by five minutes of machinegun fire and a brief stop, then the shelling would begin again.
The correspondent said that the sky in Aleppo has been clouded with dust and smoke since Thursday night until the morning because of the intense bombing and shelling.
quote:
quote:Honderden winkels van de eeuwenoude overdekte markt in het oude centrum van de Syrische stad Aleppo staan in brand. Dat meldden activisten zaterdag. Het oude centrum van Aleppo, de grootste stad van Syrië en een van de oudste steden ter wereld, staat op de Werelderfgoedlijst van VN-cultuurorganisatie Unesco.
quote:Despite the violence, thousands of protesters took to the streets of Aleppo and other cities in support of the unification of the Free Syrian Army as factionalisation appears to undermine the anti-regime revolt.
The SOHR said demonstrations were held after the main weekly Muslim prayers in the Fardus and Sukari neighbourhoods of Aleppo, as well as in the central province of Homs, Hama further north and Idlib in the northwest.
Journalisten komen de laatste tijd steeds vaker om het leven in Syrië. Die Japanse journaliste die in Aleppo omkwam kreeg ook al weinig media-aandacht naar mijn mening. Bovendien is deze vent ook niet echt een journalist, maar onderdeel van het propaganda-apparaat van Assad. Daardoor vraag ik me ook af hoeveel er waar is van dit verhaal, een random sluipschutter midden in Damascus vind ik wel een vreemd verhaal.quote:Op donderdag 27 september 2012 21:41 schreef zuiderbuur het volgende:
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Toen Jacquier en Colvin gestorven waren, was dat het eerste item in het nieuws, waarom wordt dit veel minder belicht?
Maar nee hoor, het zijn allemaal vredelievende demonstranten die vrijheid willen.quote:Een Irakese man uit Almere vecht in Syrië mee met een extreem-islamitische beweging. Dat meldt VPRO-radioprogramma Bureau Buitenland.
De man werd al in 2011 gearresteerd omdat hij zich zou hebben willen aansluiten bij al-Qaida in Syrië. Na twee weken werd hij vrijgelaten wegens gebrek aan bewijs, weet het radioprogramma. Na zijn vrijlating reisde hij af naar Syrië en sloot zich aan bij de gewapende groepering Jubhat al-Nusra.
De man is niet meer welkom in Nederland, schrijft Bureau Buitenland. Gerd Leers trok onlangs zijn verblijfsvergunning in en legde hem een reisverbod op, op basis van zijn dreigingsgevaar voor de openbare orde en nationale veiligheid. Hij blijft wel verdachte in de zaak waarvoor hij eerder gearresteerd werd, aldus Bureau Buitenland.
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