Thursday, June 13, 2013

At least 93,000 Syrians killed in conflict .... Children Used as Human Shields



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Almost 93,000 people were killed in Syria's conflict by the end of April this year, but the true number could be "potentially much higher", the UN has said.
The exact figure released on Thursday - 92,901 people - is much higher than the UN's last death toll back in January of 59,000 people.
"The constant flow of killings continues at shockingly high levels," said Navi Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights. "This is most likely a minimum casualty figure. The true number of those killed is potentially much higher."
An average of more than 5,000 people have been killed every month since last July, while rural Damascus and Aleppo have recorded the highest tolls since November, the report said in its latest study compiling documented deaths.

Among the victims were at least 6,561 children, including 1,729 children younger than 10.
Rupert Colville spokesman for Pillay, told Al Jazeera that it had under-reported the number of deaths because of constraints on estimations owing to the conflict.

'Children tortured'
"We're reliant, really, on some very brave activists who since the beginning of this conflict have done their best to keep track of how many people have been killed," Colville said.
The report said UN teams on the ground and activists had found evidence of children being tortured during the conflict.
"We've all seen videos and photos of children who have been tortured to death, children who have been summarily executed," Colville said.
"We've seen entire families that have been slaughtered, including babies even, and then you've got children who have been killed by indiscriminate shellfire, missiles, aerial bombardment and a general, no-holds-barred conflict."
Fighting continued across Syria on Thursday.  A mortar round struck an area near the runway at Damascus International Airport, briefly disrupting flights, officials said.
It was the first known attack to hit inside the airport, south of the capital, and came weeks after the government announced it had secured the airport road that had been targeted by rebels.

Hama battles
Mahmoud Ibrahim Said, Syria's Transport Minister, told state television the attack delayed the landing of two incoming flights, from Latakia and Kuwait, and the take-off of a Syrian flight to Baghdad. No passengers were harmed and no planes were damaged, he said.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said rebel fighters had targeted the airport with homemade rockets.
Rebels also battled regime forces for control of a key military base in the central Hama province after chasing soldiers out and setting fire to installations there, activists said.
Following dawn battles, rebels took control of the base on the northern edge of the town of Morek, which straddles the country's strategic north-south highway leading to Aleppo.
By midday, regime forces shelled the base and sent reinforcements in an apparent attempt to regain control of the area, said the Observatory said.

International talks
The Observatory, which has a vast network of Syrian activists on the ground, said the rebels killed six government fighters and seized ammunition and weapons. Two rebel fighters were killed.

State-run TV reported on Thursday that troops had secured four towns in the central province of Hama after killing 60 members of Jabhat al-Nusra. It said the towns included Masaadah, Abu Hanaya and Abu Jbeilat.
On the international front, the UN is in exploratory talks with Sweden about its participation in a beefed-up peacekeeping force between Syria and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, officials from the two countries said.
The UN has asked Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt whether Stockholm would consider sending troops to the UN Disengagement Observer Force after Austrian troops have begun withdrawing as a result of attacks and abductions of
peacekeepers.
The Obama administration is meeting this week on whether to arm the Syrian rebels, a topic that US Secretary of State John Kerry has discussed with his British counterpart William Hague in Washington.
The meetings come ahead of a G8 summit in Northern Ireland next week.
  • G8 leaders are expected to discuss a co-ordinated response to the Syrian conflict, and how to bring the rival sides together at a peace conference.
 http://www.aljazeera.com
13/6/13

7 comments :

  1. UN: Children Used as Human Shields in Syria Conflict....

    Children are being used as sniper targets and human shields in the Syria war, the United Nations said in its Wednesday report.
    UN leader Ban Ki-moon said in the report the 26-month-old war in Syria is taking an "unacceptable and unbearable" toll on children with thousands among the death toll.

    The office of UN special representative on children in conflict, Leila Zerrougui said it had received "verified reports that Syrian children are killed or injured in indiscriminate bombings, shot by snipers, used as human shields or victims of terror tactics."

    Zerrougui presented the report which said boys as young as 10 are used by armed groups to work as combatants and porters.
    It said there were a growing number of reports of the so-called ‘Free Syrian Army’, the main opposition armed group, recruiting children, mostly between 15 and 17.


    Thousands of children "have seen family members killed or injured," said the report.
    "Everyone involved in the conflict needs to take urgent measures to protect children," Zerrougui said.

    "Allowing access for lifesaving humanitarian assistance is essential. We cannot allow innocent children to continue to die because they can't see a doctor, or because they can't fulfill their basic needs."

    Earlier in the day, United Nations' human rights office said that Syria's spiraling violence has resulted in the confirmed killings of nearly 93,000 people, but the real number is likely to be far higher.
    Syria was hit by a violent unrest since mid-March 2011, where the Syrian government accuses foreign actors of orchestrating the conflict, by supporting the militant opposition groups with arms and money.
    www.almanar.com.lb
    13/6/13

    ReplyDelete
  2. EE UU anuncia ayuda militar para los rebeldes sirios.....


    Obama certifica que el régimen de El Asad ha usado armas químicas y discutirá con sus aliados las represalias....

    La ONU documenta 93.000 fallecidos en la guerra civil siria......http://internacional.elpais.com/internacional/2013/06/13/actualidad/1371159434_190047.html
    14/6/13

    ReplyDelete
  3. EUA vão dar apoio militar aos rebeldes da Síria....

    Os Estados Unidos vão fornecer "apoio militar" aos rebeldes sírios, anunciou, esta quinta-feira, um responsável da Casa Branca, após os serviços de informações terem confirmado que o regime de Damasco utilizou armas químicas "em pequena escala" contra a oposição. .....http://www.jn.pt/PaginaInicial/Mundo/Interior.aspx?content_id=3267635
    14/6/13

    ReplyDelete
  4. Syrie: les Etats-Unis accordent une «aide militaire» aux rebelles....

    Après avoir reconnu l’utilisation des armes chimiques en Syrie, la Maison Blanche a décidé d’assister militairement les rebelles alors que les Etats-Unis refusaient jusqu’ici de suivre la France et le Royaume-Uni. « La ligne rouge est franchie », a déclaré le président Obama ......http://www.lesoir.be/262222/article/actualite/monde/2013-06-14/syrie-etats-unis-accordent-une-aide-militaire-aux-rebelles
    14/6/13

    ReplyDelete
  5. „Rote Linie“ überschritten ..... Amerika: Syrien hat Giftgas gegen Rebellen eingesetzt....

    14.06.2013 · Obamas „Rote Linie“ ist überschritten. Nach langem Zögern bestätigt die amerikanische Regierung den Einsatz von Sarin und anderen tödlichen Kampfstoffen durch das Regime in Syrien. Jetzt will Washington die Rebellen militärisch unterstützen........http://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/rote-linie-ueberschritten-amerika-syrien-hat-giftgas-gegen-rebellen-eingesetzt-12221344.html
    14/6/13

    ReplyDelete
  6. U.S., citing use of chemical weapons by Syria, to provide direct military support to rebels.....

    The United States has concluded that the Syrian government used chemical weapons in its fight against opposition forces, and President Obama has authorized direct U.S. military support to the rebels, the White House said Thursday.

    “The president has said that the use of chemical weapons would change his calculus, and it has,” said Benjamin J. Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national security adviser. Rhodes said U.S. intelligence had determined with “high certainty” that Syrian government forces have “used chemical weapons, including the nerve agent sarin, on a small scale against the opposition multiple times in the last year.”.....http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/us-concludes-syrian-forces-used-chemical-weapons/2013/06/13/59b03c66-d46d-11e2-a73e-826d299ff459_story.html?wprss=rss_homepage
    14/6/13

    ReplyDelete
  7. Bürgerkrieg: Uno warnt vor Hungersnot in Syrien ...

    Die Zahlen sind alarmierend: Jeder fünfte Syrer bekommt wegen der Kämpfe zwischen Regierung und Rebellen nicht genug zu essen. Die Uno warnt vor einer weiteren Verschärfung der humanitären Situation in dem Bürgerkriegsland.

    Rom - Die Vereinten Nationen befürchten eine Hungersnot in Syrien, sollte sich der Bürgerkrieg wie bisher fortsetzen. Schon jetzt bekommen vier Millionen Menschen - ein Fünftel der Bevölkerung - nicht ausreichend Nahrung, wie aus einem Uno-Bericht vom Freitag hervorgeht. Die Situation habe sich im vergangenen Jahr deutlich verschärft, könnte jedoch noch weitaus kritischer werden, warnt die Organisation.

    "Getreide und Viehbestand, die Verfügbarkeit von und der Zugang zu Nahrungsmitteln" würden immer stärker Opfer des Konflikts, erklärte die Uno und warnt: "Die Produktion der kommenden zwölf Monate ist ernsthaft gefährdet." Für ihren Bericht bereisten Uno-Mitarbeiter des Welternährungsprogramms zwischen Mai und Juni das Land.

    Der Report geht davon aus, dass Syrien innerhalb dieses Zeitraums bis zu 1,5 Millionen Tonnen Weizen importieren müsse. Die Ernteerträge seien zuletzt um rund 2,4 Millionen Tonnen gefallen. Dies seien rund 40 Prozent weniger als zu Friedenszeiten und 15 Prozent weniger als 2011/12. Die jährliche Weizenernte vor dem Ausbruch des Konflikts lag bei etwa vier Millionen Tonnen. Zudem sei in einigen Gebieten Weizenmehl nun doppelt so teuer als noch vor zwei Jahren.

    Auch die Viehzucht ist bedroht .....http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/buergerkrieg-in-syrien-uno-bericht-warnt-vor-hungersnot-a-909618.html
    5/7/13

    ReplyDelete

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