Syria Watch

Syrian Revolution Digest – Thursday 19 July 2012

THE COMMENTARY IN THIS PIECE DOES NOT NECESSARILY REFLECT THE VIEWS OF IMPUNITY WATCH.  

*WARNING VIDEOS MAY CONTAIN GRAPHIC IMAGES*

The End?

Something is definitely looming in Syria, but it’s not end-game. It’s more like the end of Round One. 

Thursday July 19, 2012

Today’s Death toll:  217. The Breakdown: 70 in Deir Ezzor (Albou Kamal, Jbeileh, Deir Ezor City), 40 in Damascus Suburbs (Sit Zeinab, Eltal, Harasta, Arbeen, Zabadani, Madaya, Diyabiyeh), 15 in Damascus City, 33 in Idlib (most in Saraqib), 21 in Homs, 16 in Hama, 14 in Daraa, 7 in Aleppo and 1 in Hassakeh.

Local activists report that “intense clashes” between the Jordanian and Syrian armies have taken place at the border checkpoint of Nasseeb. No independent confirmation can be provided at this stage.

Several Damascene suburbs and neighborhoods have reportedly come under the complete control of FSA units and local political resistance.

Kurdish activists from across the country are reporting that all Kurdish-majority towns have been liberated or are in the process of liberation. The move was not as violent, as regime’s presence has been kept at a minimal level over the last few months in order to avoid antagonizing the local population opening another front in its showdown with the people.

News

Syrian tyrant’s Brit-born wife Asma al-Assad ‘flees to Russia’ According toRia Novosti “Russia’s Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the rumors when contacted by RIA Novosti.”

Op-Eds & Special Reports

Is Syria Facing a Yugoslavia-Style Breakup? Even if the regime loses its grip on growing swaths of territory, the civil war’s sectarian dimension could see it opt to retreat into enclaves controlled by its base of Alawite, Christian and non-Sunni support

Fouad Ajami: Syria’s War Hits the House Of Assad Bashar al-Assad has been sly: He made sure that the Alawites, as a community, were implicated in the recent massacres that have poisoned the well between these two communities. Alawite villagers were unleashed on their neighbors. They killed at close range. The survivors knew the killers, they had gone to school with them. The fiction that this was regime violence was shredded in the recent horrific massacres. There was method in the cruelty, and this will make itself felt in the phase to come: The Alawite-based regime was rounding out the borders of an Alawite homeland.

On the Chemical Front

Fears grow Syria will use chemical weapons stockpile “Bashar al-Assad is highly likely to deploy chemical weapons as he faces an unprecedented threat to his rule, security sources warned on Thursday night.”

At this stage, and considering the recent leaks from the State Department that Assad has indeed moved some of his WMDs stockpiles from Damascus to central Syria, and considering the situation in central Syria and the emerging pattern of ethnic cleansing there orchestrated by Assad and his militias, we need to change the nature of the conversation in policymaking circles in Washington from what can or should be done in case Assad used WMDs, to what can and should be done to preempt this very possibility. Use of chemical weapons by Assad will not come as a surprise. This will not be another Halabja in this sense. We can already see the chain of events paving the way to this eventuality. For this, doing nothing is tantamount to becoming a culprit.

The Assassinations

This video claims to show the building where the National Security Office is headquartered after the explosion that claimed the lives of Shawkat, Turkmani and Rajhah took place. We only see white smoke coming out from the building, and we hear the voice of a spokesman reading a prepared statement explaining that the attack took place in revenge for the massacres perpetrated by the regime, encouraging more defections and telling members of the international community that they are unreliable and that the revolutionaries no longer expect anything from them. http://youtu.be/qZhTPQB2cmM

The Ominous Message

By way of preemption, and considering that pro-Assad militias will now be unleashed on the public, Syrian TV issued this dire warning:

(Reuters) – Syrian state television warned citizens on Thursday that gunmen were planning to attack people in the capital using military uniforms as disguises.

Several neighborhoods in Damascus have been rocked over the past five days by fierce clashes between security forces and rebels fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad.

Syria TV said uniformed men in those districts may not actually be from the armed forces.

“Armed men in Tadamon, Midan, Qaa and Nahr Aisha (neighborhoods) are wearing military uniforms with the insignia of the Republican Guard. This confirms they are planning to commit crimes and attack people, exploiting the trust of citizens in our courageous armed forces,” Syria’s official channel said in a message flashed across the screen.

The Hidden Message: massacres will be committed in Damascus and all are fair targets.

Moving Towards An Alawistan?

University of Oklahoma Syria specialist Joshua Landis finds the Alawite-state scenario unconvincing. “Once the regime loses Damascus, it’s finished,” he says. “The Alawite mountains are not a sufficient basis for a nation-state. It has no separate economy of its own, and the regime hasn’t planned for this. Such an entity wouldn’t have an external backer — Iran wouldn’t be in any position to provide the necessary support. Once the Sunnis own the capital and the income from the oil fields, they’d make short work of any remaining Alawite resistance.” (The Time)

There are three major problems with this analysis: first, it fails to provide an adequate explanation of existing patterns of ethnic cleansing; second, it fails to see a potential role for Russia in this matter, even though Russia has prepped up such enclaves before and has made it clear so far that they don’t have any plans for giving up on Assad.

But, more importantly, the above analysis insists on examining things from the rational perspective of what is or is not viable. Assad and his clique never looked at things from this perspective, a perspective  that is bound to remain alien to them until they are 6 feet under. Simple spite and a nihilistic sense of machismo are often the sole motivations involved.

Joshua Landis, and other former advocates of engagement with Assad seem, to date, incapable of reconsidering their analytical methodology when it comes to the behavior of Assad & Co., where motivations are consistently more personal and guttural than rational.

Moreover, and as the GlobalPost reported recently: “Rumors had begun circulating among Allawites of oil and gas wealth along the coastline.” In other words, in addition to the ongoing military campaign, there is an parallel propaganda campaign taking place as well meant to make the prospect of an Alwite State more alluring to member of the Alawite community and other minority communities in Syria.

However, Joshua is right in noting that:

Once the regime departs the capital, it essentially vacates the structure of power it had established, Landis argues. And that raises the danger of even more vicious fighting ahead, spearheaded by the Shabiha units of pro-regime thugs often led by men no older than 21.

Indeed, where so many focus in their discussion solely on possible retributions against the Alawites once regime falls, it’s the behavior of the pro-Assad militias that might prove more problematic, not only in Damascus, but also in coastal towns where Sunnis still make up 40% of the population and living currently under siege in various villages and neighborhoods besieged by Alawites checkpoints. If Assad truly wants to create his majority Alawite enclave, the ethnic cleansing of the coast should begin soon.

What the US should do?

I second this advice by Andrew Tabler, but, after today’s double veto, it should be clear to all that the U.S. has to move outside the purview of the UN to get anything done in regard to Syria, that is, if the U.S. wants to do anything at this stage.

The time to act is now, before disaster strikes. By leading an effort at the U.N. Security Council to warn the Syrian regime about the dire consequences of using its chemical weapons stockpile, and raising the possibility of a military response in the event that effort fails, Washington will be communicating to Assad that he would be sealing his fate if he crosses this last remaining red line.

Video Highlights

Rallies continue to take place across the country despite the inherent dangers, while towns and suburbs across the country continue to be pounded and shelled by tanks, heavy artillery and helicopter gunships. Below are just a few highlights of what has become a very complex and chaotic scene.

A unit of the FSA takes control of Bab Al-Hawa, one of the official checkpoints on the Turkish-Syrian border http://youtu.be/B-KaCX9VGGE Fighters remove posters of Assad http://youtu.be/9EFjmUmGZ6o The rejoicinghttp://youtu.be/RFE8-QBElCY , http://youtu.be/0ScgRhRPrwU ,http://youtu.be/2HLmvPUJLMU Removing Assad’s postershttp://youtu.be/YXIA2p9LDFE , http://youtu.be/AKtDKpFFtKI ,http://youtu.be/JiMwxtT6Ic8

These families are leaving Damascus City to Idlib http://youtu.be/awFhBrx9u6E

Damascus City

Yarmouk: FSA fighters take control of the local police stationhttp://youtu.be/ULO_nKJ31qw , http://youtu.be/TgiRb82aub4 ,http://youtu.be/ZS1IFyIozDg Victim of a sniper attackhttp://youtu.be/0FX4lNsL5cM Clashes take place at nighthttp://youtu.be/kIuWIVy-yYw Impact of impounding http://youtu.be/TXdyU0lreZc

A hasta burial for some of yesterday’s victims in Sit Zainabhttp://youtu.be/sndbua4CnUw

Thick black smoke rises over Qaboun http://youtu.be/_p5CqkLREgo As pounding by helicopter gunships continues http://youtu.be/ESnb8bqEq_I More smoke rises over Tadamon and Kafar Sousseh http://youtu.be/hTQhvhD4VNQ

Shop-owners in the Old Hamidiyeh market observe a strikehttp://youtu.be/82wym59EZFo

Tanks patrol the neighborhood of Al-Qadam http://youtu.be/oLHFsID2raA

Huge fire on top of mount Qasayoun which activists say is the result of destroying a missile base there by local resistance http://youtu.be/viIJ_CeknBA ,http://youtu.be/xLE7r7cWfoY

Clashes take place in Mazzeh http://youtu.be/5bxZ3dzujE8 In nearby Kafar Sousseh, Assad’s snipers take up positions http://youtu.be/W7BkilbODxI

Damascus Suburbs

Activists document the use of cluster bombs in the pounding of the towns ofMadaya and Zabadani in Damascus Suburbs http://youtu.be/A28Air3nhMI

The pounding of Zabadani was quite intense todayhttp://youtu.be/cI1HMHfRYQQ , http://youtu.be/jtaN6VEfid4 ,http://youtu.be/QBWGHp6owPw , http://youtu.be/16Rpo0HZG6I ,http://youtu.be/ffRYcBU_4ME But nearer to the town, local resistance destroy a checkpoint manned by pro-Assad militias http://youtu.be/_eZOY4qhi-U

Local resistance in the suburb of Eltal mange to take control of the local political security branch hoisting the independence flagon tophttp://youtu.be/8helc5YMS0o Locals celebrate the developmenthttp://youtu.be/qo89kX1OdaI Elsewhere in town, the resistance destroys a tankhttp://youtu.be/-TQSHG99S7Y But the suburb soon came under shelling from helicopter gunships http://youtu.be/ADW8HyFsL4g , http://youtu.be/fVK27iuUlFI ,http://youtu.be/FErUkzO2Cno

The various towns making up Eastern Ghoutah came under heavy pounding from helicopter gunships: Arbeen http://youtu.be/5x7xaSKFq6I Some of the martyrs http://youtu.be/iW15l2p8qUM Smoke rises over Madeerahttp://youtu.be/dY-iCvWrLzY and over Zamalka http://youtu.be/PAs3HDCC7Zw ,http://youtu.be/IfRNnXqjKIU and over Hamouriyeh http://youtu.be/3q5NVTd-k9YAfter pounding from this helicopter http://youtu.be/5Z1rVYDBI1Y and this onehttp://youtu.be/7evJZUDVqpQ

Clashes in Kafar Batna http://youtu.be/M5F8VBYUjug

The massacre of Madeera http://youtu.be/ts3JgoZhoOo ,http://youtu.be/42jO2rUSAWE The massacre of Sbeinehhttp://youtu.be/aTbiU9GnMck

To the south, the suburb of Kisweh comes under heavy automatic gunfirehttp://youtu.be/DLPEuZIojMM

Idlib

In Kafar Takhreem, a pro-Assad soldier comes under firehttp://youtu.be/H1ZoYl47uao

Homs

Aleppo

The pounding of Kafar Nourahttp://youtu.be/Ni2Cb1cRu2U the pounding ofAtareb http://youtu.be/y37YnsBRveM

Inhabitants of the Kurdish-Majority town of Kobani take control of a local security station and burn Assad’s posters http://youtu.be/iQuUGbKjG28 Soon afterwards, all of Kobani’s official buildings fell to the local activists. Other Kurdish-majority towns throughout Syria soon followed suit.

Local resistance “liberate” the town Eizaz http://youtu.be/USw6VC3baVQ ,http://youtu.be/RgIBwB55jZQ , http://youtu.be/1BNDpoqVuKo Forcing Assad forces to retreat http://youtu.be/dAYjtN6RBsg

Daraa

Tafas: local resistance take out a tank http://youtu.be/TIN1a0as8jo

The pounding of Daraa City continues http://youtu.be/9s11hAayvVA

The pounding of Maarba http://youtu.be/s-TCbQ0CS6Y

Lattakia

More fires in Jabal Al-Akrad http://youtu.be/A-JI-QMnkXI

When Murderers Attempt to Hide the Truth: A Detailed Report on the At-Treimseh Massacre

At-Treimh is a very small village whose population is less than eleven thousand people.  It is 11km to the west of Mhardeh city, in the Hama governorate.

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

Victims of the At-Treimseh massacre.

Statements provided by At-Treimseh residents state that at dawn, on Thursday 12 July 2012 around 4:00 am, At-Treimseh village was fully besieged by military forces that came from the neighboring city of Mhardeh.  These forces were followed by huge reinforcements that came from Hama’s military airport.  Residents estimated this force to be roughly 200 military vehicles.  It included tanks, armored vehicles, Shilka tanks, Zil cars, transport buses, 4x4s, and pick-ups.  They were accompanied by army infantry troops transported in roughly 25 Zil cars.  Additionally, militants traveling in white buses and pick-ups were present.  They were armed with assault rifles and wearing civilian clothes.

This military force fully besieged the village.  Eyewitnesses stated that shelling from all directions started between 4 and 5 a.m.; shelling from the tanks and aerial bombardment by 3 helicopters continuously occurred for roughly 4 hours.  Eyewitnesses affirmed that they saw a fourth warplane that did not shell the village; they say that most likely it was a drone conducting monitoring and scouting.

Local residents stated that at the start of the shelling, locals tried to flee the village and sought refuge in the neighboring villages.  However, shelling and sieges on the neighboring villages hindered attempts to flee.  Residents also stated that some locals were killed by army troops when they fled the shelling.  Abou Assa’ad, an eyewitness, stated that Yusuf Al-Ubaid, a roughly 68 year old man, fled the shelling but was killed by gunfire at the northern outskirts of the village in Al-Smaira.

The same source stated that two citizens from Kafr Houd village: 40 year-old Waheed Adul Salam Qattash, Imam and Sheikh of a mosque in At-Treimseh, and his 17 years old son, Taha Qattash, were killed as they tried to flee At-Treimseh and find safety in a village nearby.  Army troops deployed at the road to Kafr Houd, east of the village, stopped them and killed them with gunfire.  The checkpoint troops then tied the father’s body to a military vehicle and dragged it in the road before throwing it in Abou Musaab Al-Hasnou’s home and burning the structure down.

Eyewitnesses say residents sought refuge at schools and mosques of the village even though it was well known that the most likely scenario was that no safe zone existed in the entire village.  Instead, they gathered in these buildings seeking the stronger protection that they offered from the shelling.  Army troops targeted those schools and mosques, killing and wounding large numbers of people.

Residents remember that shelling was concentrated on schools and mosques and their surrounding areas for more than an hour. Then it moved to the outskirts of the village.

Assad’s forces shelled the village, and its outskirts, for 3 to 4 hours.  Then armed vehicles and tanks stormed into the village.  They battled with members of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), made up of army defectors in the village, some who were officers.  Some civilians also battled with Assad’s forces in defense of their village, life, women, and children.  Many did so with the knowledge that the regime’s army in previous massacres had eliminated all opposition, both FSA and civilian.

Assad’s regime army forced men and children out of homes, using them as human shileds as they searched for opposition.  Abou Assa’ad stated that army troops forced the young men of the village to walk in front of the regime’s army, and that a soldier killed two of them with an assault rifle; the two victims were Mukhlis Al-Faris, he was only 26 years old, and Mousaab Boulad.

Abou Assa’ad said that the deaths occurred because two soldiers argued, one was angry over the use of unarmed civilians as human shields, the other then killed the two.  Next orders to stop arguing, from an older soldier, came from behind and they abided by the orders.

Ibrahim Al-Hamdwi said that two civilian who defended the village with weapons were killed when they surrendered as they ran out of ammunition.  Army troops arrested, beat, tortured, and ultimately killed them with gunfire.  The two victims were Salih Hussein Al-Saba’awi, 36 years old, and Yahya Sail Al-Hwayan, 25 years old.

Military operation on the village went on till about 7:00 in the evening.  Once the regime army left residents went to check the village.  They were shocked by the mass destruction inflicted on the homes and buildings as well as the number of the casualties and wounded they found.  Abou Ahmad stated that he found a lot of bodies and that he knows at least 70 bodies were buried.  This included 40 women who were placed in a mass grave.  He said that this was only during the day, that night even more bodies were found and buried.  By Friday, fifteen other bodies were found in Orontes River and different irrigation canals throughout the area.  Abou Ahmad adds that many bodies were buried in the first two days without any identifications made because they were so far burned it was impossible to identify them.

Abou Assa’ad affirmed the statement made by Abou Ahmad and added that four other bodies were found in farms and orchards surrounding the village on Saturday, 14 July 2012.

Abou Assa’ad said that 15 bodies were found in Ghazi Al-Shammouti’s house on the first day; those bodies have not been identified as most are completely burned out.  He stated that he has saw a body belonging to a woman, hugging two other bodies of completely burned children.  Residents were not able to identify the bodies due the fact that many separate families all gathered together in one home as the attack began.

However, Abou Assa’ad was able to identify one body, among many that were completely burned.  The body was that of his relative, who was transporting the wounded to a home being used as a makeshift hospital.  The home was besieged by regime army troops who opened fire at all the people inside.  They then burned the bodies.

The burial of some of the bodies.

Residents and witnesses assert that more than 100 unidentified bodies, including 40 completely burned corpses, have been buried so far.  Residents reported that they have not been able to identify the exact number of victims because army forces abducted some of the bodies.  Abu Ahmad, an eyewitness, confirmed seeing ambulances and civilian cars collecting the bodies and taking them away.  This same story was told by Abu Assa’ad, who added that he saw two small white Toyota trucks assisting with this.  In the rear trunk of one of the trucks, he saw around 35 bodies and in the other roughly 40.  Abu Assa’ad saw the trucks leave with the army when it pulled out.

Eyewitnesses also confirmed that a large number of people have gone missing and they do not know whether they have been killed or arrested.  The residents estimated the number of those missing at more than 200 people.  The huge exodus from the village after the assault, combined with the communications cut-off in the following days, made it hard to accurately identify the number of missing.  Residents estimated the number of those injured due to the shelling between 300 and 400 people.

Residents and eyewitnesses were surprised to see Dr. Mohammad Satouf on Syrian TV on 15 July 2012 as he disappeared during the army raid on the village. When he appeared on Syrian TV, he acknowledged cooperation with terrorist gangs in the village.  Abu Ahmad, Abu Assa’ad, and Ibrahim al-Hamwi all said that there were no such gangs in the village.  The only armed people, according to them, were the defectors from the army and some of the village’s young men who joined the ranks of the Free Syrian Army as volunteers.  The eye witnesses confirmed that Dr. Satouf enjoyed a good reputation and was known for his good manners.  His contribution to the popular uprising in Syria, in which his village At-Tremseh took part, was early on and he was restricted to providing medical care for those wounded in the protests.

Witnesses say that the number of armed people killed during the army raid and who could be identified was no more than ten.  The fate of the rest of the group remains unknown, it is unclear whether they were killed and their bodies abducted, or arrested, or were able to flee the village.

It is noted that security and army forces prevented international observers from entering the village on Thursday to investigate the facts on the ground.  The investigators were only able to gain access to the village 13 hours after the army fully pulled out of the town.

Walking through the town, documenting the aftermath of the destruction.

Media reports and stories related to the massacre stated more than 250 victims were killed, however, SNHR & DCHRS have not been able to document and verify the names and identities of all the victims for the following reasons:

1.) About one hundred and twenty victims have been buried, residents were not able to identify forty of these because they were completely burned.

2.) Security forces and army troops abducted a large number of the bodies.  They have not returned the bodies to victims’ families.

3.) Large numbers of citizens have gone missing and the Syrian regime authorities have not confirmed the death or detention of them to their families.

4.) The Syrian regime’s refusal to conduct a credible, objective and transparent investigation into the crimes perpetrated on Thursday in Ar-Treimseh, the regime’s refusal to allow access for any other party to conduct an investigation, and the denial of access to the village to independent media outlets means that no objective reality has emerged.

 

All information and videos in this report provide by:

Syrian Network for Human Rights

Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies in Syria

Syrian Network for Human Rights and Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies: Homs Governorate Massacre Report

During Mr. Annan’s plan on April 10th to July 10th 2012, more than 1,170 citizens, including 108 children, have been killed in Homs either in the increasing indiscriminate shelling or in the massacres that increased during Mr. Annan’s plan, which defies the purpose of the plan.

Violence escalated significantly in both rural Homs and the city of Homs including Al-Houlah, Rastan, Al-Quseir, Deir Balaba, Al-Qaryatein, Qalaat Al-Hisn, Al-Khaldya, Jouret al-Shyah, Ash-Shammas, Joubar and Al-Sultanya.

All these neighborhoods,towns, and cities witnessed raids, rockets shelling, warplanes bombardment, extra judicial and summary executions, and horrible inhumane massacres in the presence of the UN monitors.

The following is a summary that shows the systematic suppression and violence used by Assad’s regime against Syrian citizens.

Rastan massacre: 11 April 2012
Eleven civilians from two families were killed when their homes were targeted with phosphorus and chemical shells burning the bodies completely making it impossible to identify them.

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

Al-Bayada neighborhood massacre: 12 April 2012
9 victims, including 2 little girls, were killed due to indiscriminate shelling and barrages of gunfire on the neighborhood.

Ash-Shammas neighborhood massacre: 15 May 2012 and 6 June 2012
The killing of fourteen citizens was documented and verified after the raid of the neighborhood by Assad’s regime security forces, army troops and pro-regime shabeeha militias who perpetrated systematic terrorism.  They arrested scores of young men, gathered them in a public neighborhood, humiliated and tortured them, and then extra judicially executed some, including Marea Zaqreet, the Imam of the neighborhood’s mosque. This neighborhood hosted displaced people from the neighborhoods of Baba Amr and Joubar.

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

Al-Houla massacre: Night of 26 May 2012
The most horrible and most bloody massacre in the history of the Syrian revolution in Homs; 109 victims most of whom are children and women were killed in a systematic attack by pro-regime shabeeha militias who came from pro-regime villages neighboring Al-Houla.  Assad’s regime army supported and covered those barbaric militias in their perpetration of this massacre.

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

Al-Bwaida massacre/fertilizer factory workers massacre: 31 May 2012
Twelve civilians, fertilizer factory workers, were abducted and lead to a nearby farm.  Then they had were humiliated, tortured, extra judicially executed with gunfire, and disfigured by Assad’s forces.

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dk6Unjzha5s&feature=youtu.be&has_verified=1&bpctr=1342647935&skipcontrinter=1&w=480&h=400

Talbiseh massacre: 10 June 2012
Assad’s forces carried out continual indiscriminate shelling for many days killing many citizens and wounding scores of others. On this day, ten people were killed in indiscriminate shelling and helicopter bombardment on the city.

Second Rastan massacre: 13 June 2012
More than fourteen citizens, including children, were killed in indiscriminate shelling, including helicopter bombardment, on Rastan.

The Rastan Second Massacre, children and women were killed by helicopter bombardment.

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

Deir Balaba neighborhood massacre: 21 June 2012
The fierce shelling targeted the neighborhood concentrating on the neighborhood’s school, where it was known by the regime forces that displaced people had sought refuge.  This school was targeted directly with 3 shells killing 17 citizens in a few minutes.  The attack wounded many others at a time when there was a severe shortage of medical necessities and inability to provide any form of primary medical care.  At the time, it was also made impossible to transport the wounded to dispensaries or hospitals.

Qalaat Al-Hisn massacre: 28 and 29 of June 2012
More than 22 victims were killed in 48 hours.  Most of the victims were killed due to fierce shelling targeting the city.  The victims included 6 members from a family, they were extra judicially executed by pro-regime shabeeha militias.  In addition, 10 victims were killed due to shelling that targeted a bus that was transporting displaced people from Qalaat Al-Hisn.

Jouret Al-Shyah massacre: 1 July 2012
Fierce and continual shelling on Jouret Al-Shyah for more than a month lead to the collapse of many buildings and the killing of scores of scores of citizens; on 01 July 02012, Assad’s regime army shelled a building causing its collapse over the heads of people inside.  Six people were killed, one of whom is still under the rubble.

 

All information and videos in the report provided by:

Syrian Network for Human Rights

Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies in Syria

Syrian Revolution Digest – Monday 18 July 2012

THE COMMENTARY IN THIS PIECE DOES NOT NECESSARILY REFLECT THE VIEWS OF IMPUNITY WATCH.  

*WARNING VIDEOS MAY CONTAIN GRAPHIC IMAGES*

While developments in Damascus City are certainly important, it’s the intensification of the shelling of Hama and Homs cities that tells the real story – the story of an ethnic cleansing campaign getting put on hyperdrive. Assad needs to establish full control over Homs Province and the Sahel Al-Ghab Region, and that requires destabilizing all surrounding areas. Assad is burning the country to the ground except for the little subservient enclave he’s building for himself. Now it’s Damascus’ turn to burn.

Monday July 16, 2012

Today’s Death toll: 97. The Breakdown: 30 in Hama, 21 in Homs,13 in Aleppo,15 in Damascus (11 in city, and 4 in Suburbs), 8 in Daraa, 7 in Deir Ezzor and 3 in Idlib.

Reports from the FSA clam that over 60 pro-Assad militias have been killed in the outgoing clashes in the Midan District. But District and surrounding neighborhoods of Naher Eisheh, Al-Zahirah, Daf Al-Shawk, Al-Tadamon and Al-Yarmouk have been cordoned and surrounded by tanks and armored vehicles.

61 mid- to high level officers have reportedly defected over the last 10 days, including the man in charge of Syria’s WMD program, Brigadier General Adnan Salow, the Syrian Ambassador in Belarus, Farouq Taha and the head of the political security branch in Damascus, Abdurrahman Al-Tahtouh. Todayreports emerged asserting that the infamous Rustom Al-Ghazaleh, head of the political security branch in Suburban Damascus and one of the main figures accused in the assassination of former Lebanese PM, Rafic Al-Hariri, has also defected to Amman. But what Syrian activists based in Amman can only confirmthe defection of Rustom’s brother-in-law, Yassin Al-Ghazaleh.

The International Airport of Damascus was reportedly closed to incoming and outgoing traffic today, due to the worsening security situation in Damascus. According to a late LCCs report, Al-Qaboun suburb was shelled by a helicopter gunship.

In the refugee camp of Kilis, Turkish authorities used tear gas and batons to break up a rally organized by Syrian refugees to protest their deteriorating living conditions. Dozens have reportedly suffered from various injuries and are in need of medical treatment.

News

Russian ship with helicopters bound for Syria turns back A Russian ship that tried to supply attack helicopters to Syria last month before being forced back was on Sunday sighted sailing back home after unexpectedly starting a new voyage.

Syria: Assad regime ‘ready to use chemical weapons’ The most senior Syrian politician to defect to the opposition has told the BBC the regime will not hesitate to use chemical weapons if it is cornered.

Op-Eds & Special Reports

Syria crisis: border tribes could finish off Assad regime The Red Cross’s declaration that Syria is in a state of civil war is an important milestone as government control starts to weaken

Syria rebels seek weapons, money on Turkish border Some fighters make their own weapons as prices have skyrocketed. The only well-stocked militias are those affiliated with Islamist factions.

Aside from a brief foray into town in late December, the army has yet to attempt to occupy Yabrud. “They came here for a few days, but then they simply left. There was no significant battle,” said Abu Mohammed, an anti-government activist who asked that his full name not be used. The result is an oasis of calm amid a conflict that the International Committee of the Red Cross formally declared a civil war on Sunday…

The Other Side of Syria’s Civil War Death comes for Bashar al-Assad’s soldiers, too.

Obama Lets the U.N. Tie His Hands on Syria So why didn’t the president feel obliged to seek Security Council authority for drone strikes against al Qaeda?

On Syria, who might give first – Russia or the West? The West says that any extension of the UN mandate for monitors in Syria must have teeth. But Russia is categorically rejecting any resolution that foresees enforcement of punitive measures.

Confessions of an Assad ‘Shabiha’ loyalist: how I raped and killed for £300 a month Ruth Sherlock hears a chilling confession from a member of the pro-Assad ‘Shabiha’ militia, likely soon to meet his death.

‘They kill . . . because if they don’t kill us they think we will kill them’ Though hundreds have defected from the Syrian Army, Milah thinks many continue out of fear. “Now, they kill the people because if they don’t kill us they think we will kill them.”

Deadly Uncertainty: The Reason Syria’s Chemical Weapons Are So Dangerous Best-case scenarios for Syria’s chemical weapons appear to be pipe dreams: Assad is highly unlikely to willingly leave power willingly and allow a negotiated transition; and his downfall isn’t likely to come from a clean overthrow by the rebels, either. Assad’s hold on power inadvertently prevents the need for a rapid response to contain the massive stockpile chemical weapons–but Washington must develop a long-term plan if its policy is truly for the strongman to leave power.

The Russian foreign minister claims the West is threatening not to renew a UN observer mission in Syria if Russia doesn’t vote for a resolution that could lead to military intervention… “There is a red line that Russia will not cross, and that is authorizing any forceful intervention in Syria from outside,” says Lukyanov. “No amount of turmoil, no terrible atrocities, nothing will convince Russia to vote for a Libya-style operation against Syria. It looks bad, but Russia is convinced that after the fall of Assad it will only be much worse.”

To Lukyanov and others, let me be clear in stating that the situation in Syria will most certainly grow worse after Assad’s departure, but maneuvering through the post-Assad mayhem is the price that we will gladly pay in order to get out from under his stinking mantle. My advice to Putin and his officials is to invent a time machine and use it to go back and serve under the Czar and his ministers, so that their beloved Anastasia won’t have to scream in vain. For some people are more interested in glory, power and stature than they are in freedom: usually they are the ones who don’t have to suffer the indignities of serfdom.

Recent defector confirms assertions that I have repeatedly made on this blog regarding the real party responsible for the car bombings in Syria: the Assads.Of course, recent events also indicate that local resistance groups have finally adopted this tactic but only in targeting loyalist checkpoints and not during in-city operations where civilian casualties can take place.

Exclusive interview: why I defected from Bashar al-Assad’s regime, by former diplomat Nawaf Fares Jihadi units that Mr. Fares himself had helped Damascus send to fight US troops in neighbouring Iraq were involved in the string of deadly suicide bomb attacks in Syria

The Situation in Damascus

The pounding of Tadamon neighborhood in Damascus City forced hundreds of residents to leave to go stay with family and friends in the nearby Yarmouk Camp http://youtu.be/LtlyrlEhKDQ , http://youtu.be/BgzYmbZTB9M as members of the local resistance provide them with protection http://youtu.be/2Xfa4sNn1qEUNRWA has reportedly opened schools to receive refugees. Many shops and homes were burned http://youtu.be/1yXFyOauR9U ,http://youtu.be/SEpNfRwk8lk , http://youtu.be/dvMistd7vmU A child among the dead http://youtu.be/LE5a7IBP7EY

The population of Tadamon is a mix of Palestinian refugees who originally hailed from Yarmouk Camp and old Damascene families who were forced by worsening socioeconomic conditions to relocate to the suburbs, from such districts as Midan and Kafar Sousseh.

The mourning started with clashes in the district of Kafar Sousehhttp://youtu.be/CrkFrlDDM_o , http://youtu.be/5OqSCXYDw8s Then Tadamonwas pounded again http://youtu.be/LL1lOfTPaFU before the action shifted to theMidan District http://youtu.be/fvQolHMjREQ

Daytime clashes in Midan District http://youtu.be/dlNmxe6s878 ,http://youtu.be/8F-TmozzW6U , http://youtu.be/La6g8dI1m2w ,http://youtu.be/IelK3DEgDHg leave many dead and injuredhttp://youtu.be/Cs3m_Y9_TVM But the local resistance group were able to inflict some casualties of their own. Some reports estimate that 60 pro-Assad militiamen were killed. A few died in this burnt out car http://youtu.be/9jAEuNi4dS0 A tanks heads towards Midan http://youtu.be/34yBA14hEgw Plumes of black smoke rise above the neighborhoods http://youtu.be/sDSsIQMWdYs Hoisting the Revolution’s flag on a local water tower http://youtu.be/J6ToZwIdTcw Few of the martyrs http://youtu.be/JudRsQn2E_0 , http://youtu.be/xWpcSehYYp0

Clashes took place in nearby Al-Qadam http://youtu.be/UjmfXfhNCos and Daf Al-Shawk http://youtu.be/nha0dUaucBg , http://youtu.be/7rDckbprbsc A car catches fire under pounding http://youtu.be/OtSycLijz_w And the clashes continue into the night http://youtu.be/Fwkp6MuW9w4 Al-Qaboun witnessed some daytime clashes as well http://youtu.be/Vvut3LJb1B0 then more intense nighttime battles http://youtu.be/aEOEgTIXvJY , http://youtu.be/e6-m7WzbDrY ,http://youtu.be/wAYlA1BwVjY

In Naher Eisheh, local activists interrupted the flow of traffic on the international highway connecting Damascus and Amman by burning tires and staging a sit-down http://youtu.be/Bob-KBvWtQ4 , http://youtu.be/hfnZYRrWv7k ,http://youtu.be/7feH8pOj8BY Soon after, the neighborhood comes under fire from pro-Assad militias http://youtu.be/HhWFod3YKGQ The independence flag is hoisted, but the neighborhood gets pounded http://youtu.be/ZHSbeqPBtHw ,http://youtu.be/jauOYb2UiAY The armored cars come inhttp://youtu.be/Bd1r4fVPCc0 One of the activist is killed after getting shot in the face http://youtu.be/QTblOcRn5rc Another martyr, originally from Haffeh District in Lattakia http://youtu.be/4QSESdzmR-Y More martyrs http://youtu.be/P-pxGoQBT0s , http://youtu.be/UCh4RUEMCB4

In Khalid Bin Al-Walid Street, local activists interrupt traffic with burning tireshttp://youtu.be/xEncSlRh2f4 And in Al-Hajar Al-Aswadhttp://youtu.be/GslmfZ8KSpU

At night, helicopter gunships overfly the restive neighborhoods and shoot at the people below: Jobar http://youtu.be/Su2TeREPO-I And the many of many neighborhoods in the Midan District come under firehttp://youtu.be/DIOLfXuujDw At night, tanks and loyalist militias lay siege toMidan http://youtu.be/DqmnIgPLLpQ

To the northwest of Midan, in the majority-Kurd neighborhood of Ruknaddine, nighttime protesters come under fire http://youtu.be/QvZkpnq-f0U

Clashes also took place in Al-Qadam Neighborhoodhttp://youtu.be/yI7ei1rR6CA , http://youtu.be/-aZYo_T9e-E ,http://youtu.be/Ttfb_N4B5CA and Mazzeh http://youtu.be/7C0XVxx6s2k During the lull times, activists in Al-Qadam find a safe place to hold a defiant rallyhttp://youtu.be/iOTDLC4wI-Q

In Kisweh Suburb, clashes take place at night http://youtu.be/CZAQp5M3xoM ,http://youtu.be/iO-xceyxB0s Clashes also took place in Al-Hamehhttp://youtu.be/_37xmG1jB6k

Other Video Highlight

Daraa City comes under shelling at night http://youtu.be/Ti5oMvYILJc ,http://youtu.be/m9mRx4OYMNU , http://youtu.be/WeWdAM3oszo In nearbySheikh Miskeen, locals uncover a mass grave http://youtu.be/vSRWa9n6m0I ,http://youtu.be/n4DahCgo0cw , http://youtu.be/nFTQRwVCs4I ,http://youtu.be/7IK5h-maX7Q Burning the crops in Tal Shihabhttp://youtu.be/i9NMtNDaijk

In Hama CityHamidiyeh Neighborhood is shelledhttp://youtu.be/kYbT3iUwIFM , http://youtu.be/xtrBLo2VT4E ,http://youtu.be/GpZcOJgjtGk , http://youtu.be/nYrdPydHZQI ,http://youtu.be/bRh83oV3jRQ , http://youtu.be/G_pwTdEakaY ,http://youtu.be/0F2TxyeniaM Close-up of the loyalist troops taking part in the pounding http://youtu.be/7tsB18UPoLQ And there were woundedhttp://youtu.be/Hs49j5_6fyc And Aleppo Road came under intense pounding as well http://youtu.be/nL8fJhr4cYk , http://youtu.be/eECm8xKdeOo ,http://youtu.be/pqJ44QQfGxU As pro-Assad militias carry out their patrolshttp://youtu.be/ZWV_3Ss1qII Al-Jib Neighborhood was also poundedhttp://youtu.be/O1JSGyw_ekc Tanks take part in the pounding http://youtu.be/-okdPAvfNlg The pounding of Arba’een Neighborhoodhttp://youtu.be/SV4MoVekVrU , http://youtu.be/ef7bscvLlho ,http://youtu.be/wvDanldesok, On July 14 pro-Assad militias detonated a car bomb in Al-Karaeh Neighborhood http://youtu.be/6lS4F_qoVTE

In Aleppo, local resistance groups in Eizaz repel an attempted incursion by pro-Assad militias http://youtu.be/C3YiEFY8veA Clasheshttp://youtu.be/Y07SpYxgNqA the town gets poundedhttp://youtu.be/yDSl84HDb_M , http://youtu.be/r90xlgyOjv4 ,http://youtu.be/4KSZGmkR2J0 But the local resistance managed to inflict some casualties, destroying some tanks and transport vehicles at the outskirts of the town http://youtu.be/JJOJf812_6c A helicopter gunship takes part in the poundinghttp://youtu.be/OlLzUXKWIUc

Meanwhile, the town of Bayanoun was pounded http://youtu.be/fHA8YCYtaCgand the town of Al-Atareb (day) http://youtu.be/DCWnFqTU1XU (night)http://youtu.be/xJNvE9FXG-4 The pounding in Bshantrah leaves many injuredhttp://youtu.be/dyCH2Leugvw , http://youtu.be/I1BZ6L_1BOo

The pounding of Old Homs continues: Jouret Al-Shayahhttp://youtu.be/ab5kfip7r6I , http://youtu.be/mBlncas-CL4 ,http://youtu.be/S442pOwMOTA , http://youtu.be/DpILK2RQgjw ,http://youtu.be/pDvTQJdqvIQ , http://youtu.be/uXm3PPxWhF0 ,http://youtu.be/_CJAF_vzVOg , http://youtu.be/7xFoJDbP0FU ,http://youtu.be/EKrVzYkxHcI , http://youtu.be/e0rHVJC_vQY Old Homs is now in a state of utter desolation http://youtu.be/VBTzVGcjc9g ,http://youtu.be/3Rk6p41GmUY The pounding of Qarabishttp://youtu.be/UHHBxfaLNk8 , http://youtu.be/ZgDjLiOJ_ns ,http://youtu.be/7mF309BMiMs , http://youtu.be/c9tSDqv30o4 ,http://youtu.be/BxOUAsHRkhQ Khaldiyeh http://youtu.be/IffixwTQmjc The pounding of Jobar http://youtu.be/r0uzRaHF3Ek , http://youtu.be/d2VSLCbYgBYSome wounded and some dead in Jobar http://youtu.be/4gDhlf9b_x8 ,http://youtu.be/hRkpKrrFVcI

In Idlib Province, the pounding of the town of Salqeen continueshttp://youtu.be/agid9M69FXs , http://youtu.be/u3x1UlXfMQQ A local martyrhttp://youtu.be/EAhQ78B0K9o

The pounding of Deir Ezzor City continues http://youtu.be/UDQb2Ym4J2o ,http://youtu.be/nfO7cmTMALU , http://youtu.be/ZB2gMKnzRF8 The pounding of the Old Airport Neighborhood http://youtu.be/xW0OJNP_khg

Pro-Assad militias keep starting fires in the forest surrounding restive villages in Lattakia Province http://youtu.be/XOvxMTY9VD8

Anonymous goes to War against Assad http://youtu.be/aU2OWAxbJoQ

The Kurdish Question

While most of Syria burns, Kurdish regions in Syria, especially in Al-Hassakeh Province, are dancing to their own unique tune. A recent agreement between the PYD and KNC ensures signed in Irbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, dubbed as the Hawler Accord, after the Kurdish name for Irbil, has finally agreed a mechanism for power sharing in Kurdish majority towns between the two major coalitions: the Kurdish National Council, made up of a number of Kurdish parties, and the People’s Council of Western Kurdistan (PCWK) affiliated with the Democratic Union Party (PYD), the Syrian offshoot of the Kurdish Labor Party (PKK). Other Kurdish parties and political movements that remain outside the scope of these two major coalitions, such as the Future Current, established by the late Mishaal Tammo, assassinated early in the Revolution, and a variety of youth movements are expected to play along.

In the meantime, a local military force is being establishedhttp://youtu.be/4ZgTXuxtD2g

As such, the Kurdish strategy at this stage is clear: to further consolidate their hold on their regions to strengthen their recently gained autonomy. While these changing priorities are not likely to impact the level of Kurdish youth participation in the revolutionary movements in Damascus and Aleppo cities, among other places (Homs, Lattakia), they do rule out the possibility of extending the revolutionary spirit to Kurdish-majority areas where rallies will increasingly focus on showing solidarity from a distance. Barring a major change in dynamic between Arab and Kurdish opposition groups, especially the Syrian National Council and the two main Kurdish groups, the Kurds will not be a factor in future confrontations with the Assad regime.

Still, there is a potential conflict brewing in Kurdish areas, albeit, its dynamics will be quite different from what’s taking place elsewhere in Syria. The new conflict could either pit Kurd against Kurd, should the power sharing arrangement fail, as many expect it to – after all, it is the second such arrangement to be reached in the last few weeks, the first one collapsed amidst a series of kidnapping, beatings, and assassinations, blamed mostly on PYD. Or Kurds cold find themselves in conflict with local Arab tribes who are not too enthusiastic about the prospects of becoming a minority in an autonomous Kurdish-majority enclave. This applies especially to those Arab clans known as Arab Al-Ghamar, or the Flood Arabs, who were introduced into the area by Baath officials since the late 1960s and early ‘70s as part of an Arabization campaign. Many Kurds would want to see these particular Arab clans leave their areas. The problem is that these Arabs have no place to go back to, their original lands having been submerged under the waters of the Euphrates when the Assad regime built the Tabqa Dam (1968-73).

The minority Assyrian, Chaldean, and Armenian communities find themselves caught in between, but are more likely try to work out an arrangement with the more secular leaning Kurds, than they are with Arab tribes.

Syrian Network for Human Rights and Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies: Violations Report 17 July 2012

Casualties and Wounded:
Homs | Al-Khaldiya
As the violent shelling by the Syrian army continues on the region of Homs, many victims have either died instantly or by inflicting wounds; just like the corpse in the following video whose corpse was charred after completely burning as a result of heavy bombardment:

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

Idlib | Al-Rami
The security checkpoints all across the towns and cities of Syria are carrying out daily arrests to civilians who are being subject to the harshest types of torture under the hands of Syrian security forces in prisons. Some of these civilians come out with torture marks across their bodies, others come out as a dead corpse just like Mousa and his son Tariq, whose corpses can be seen in the following video:

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

 

Assaults and Human Rights Violations:
Homs | Al-Rastan
As soon as the bombardment comes to a halt, the citizens of Al-Rastan begin to search for the wounded and the corpses of people from in between the rubble.  This is mainly because ambulances and specialists are not able to enter city due to the siege imposed by the Syrian army forces.  In the video below civilians search through a home shortly after it was shelled, finding the wounded and bodies:

**WARNING: VIDEO BELOW CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES**

Children along with their families are always suffering even in the shelters from the situation as outside from the lack of food, water and electricity; milk for infants is not available and the children are feeding on dry bread. In addition to all of this, the children have to go endure the pain each time they witness a friend has been killed.

Daraa | Daael
One of harshest sufferings which the civilians are going through in the towns and cities affected by bombardment and gunfire are in the field hospitals where the simple capabilities which they offer are sometimes not enough to cure a single wounded civilians:

 

Bombardment and Destruction:

Homs | Jourat Al-Shiyah
As we enter day 41 of the ongoing bombardment across the region of Homs by the Syrian army, who also imposed a complete blockade around Homs; the civilians are living the life of suffering through the sounds of bombardment, gunfire and living in-between the rubble of their homes made by bombardment.  Many neighborhoods like, the Jourat Al-Shiyah neighborhood, are completely empty of people due to bombardment.

Hama | Al-Araba’ein
Tanks belonging to the Syrian army are indiscriminately shelling the homes and buildings in the neighborhood of Al-Araba’ein.

Damascus | Nahr Aeisha
The Syrian forces bombarded a number of neighborhoods inside the heart of Damascus today, including Nahr Aeisha, causing the people to flee their homes and leading to heavy smoke throughout the city.

Aleppo | Mari
Syrian forces also shelled the town of Mari’ using missiles which caused the destruction of civilians’ homes and caused heavy smoke to rise in the area.

All information and videos published in this report provided by:

Syrian Network for Human Rights

Damascus Centre for Human Rights Studies in Syria