Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case Monday, May 24, 2010
ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
They
AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites Wednesday, December 16, 2009
ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
Edition:
U.S.
Africa
Arabic
Argentina
Brazil
Canada
China
France
Germany
India
Italy
Japan
Latin America
Mexico
Russia
Spain
United Kingdom
Home
Business
Business Home
Economy
Technology
Media
Small Business
Legal
Deals
Earnings
Social Pulse
Business Video
The Freeland File
Markets
Markets Home
U.S. Markets
European Markets
Asian Markets
Global Market Data
Indices
M&A
Stocks
Bonds
Currencies
Commodities
Futures
Funds
peHUB
World
World Home
U.S.
Brazil
China
Euro Zone
Japan
Mexico
Russia
India Insight
World Video
Reuters Investigates
Decoder
Politics
Politics Home
Election 2012
Issues 2012
Candidates 2012
Tales from the Trail
Political Punchlines
Supreme Court
Politics Video
Tech
Technology Home
MediaFile
Science
Tech Video
Tech Tonic
Social Pulse
Opinion
Opinion Home
Chrystia Freeland
John Lloyd
Felix Salmon
Jack Shafer
David Rohde
Bernd Debusmann
Nader Mousavizadeh
Lucy P. Marcus
David Cay Johnston
Bethany McLean
Edward Hadas
Hugo Dixon
Ian Bremmer
Lawrence Summers
Susan Glasser
The Great Debate
Steven Brill
Jack & Suzy Welch
Breakingviews
Equities
Credit
Private Equity
M&A
Macro & Markets
Politics
Breakingviews Video
Money
Money Home
Tax Break
Lipper Awards 2012
Global Investing
MuniLand
Unstructured Finance
Linda Stern
Mark Miller
John Wasik
James Saft
Analyst Research
Alerts
Watchlist
Portfolio
Stock Screener
Fund Screener
Personal Finance Video
Money Clip
Investing 201
Life
Health
Sports
Arts
Faithworld
Business Traveler
Entertainment
Oddly Enough
Lifestyle Video
Pictures
Pictures Home
Reuters Photographers
Full Focus
Video
Reuters TV
Reuters News
Article
Comments (0)
Full Focus
Editor's choice
Our best photos from the last 24 hours. Full Article
Images of March
Follow Reuters
Facebook
Twitter
RSS
YouTube
Read
White House in damage control over Obama Supreme Court remarks
04 Apr 2012
Americans brace for next foreclosure wave
04 Apr 2012
Google takes wraps off Web-based digital glasses
6:08am EDT
With new momentum, Romney accuses Obama of hiding
04 Apr 2012
Food inflation seen back on the table as prices rise
04 Apr 2012
Discussed
798
Obama confident Supreme Court will uphold healthcare law
255
Government plans to sue Arizona sheriff for targeting Latinos
183
As Paul’s White House campaign fades, supporters face choices
Watched
World's biggest car delivery centre
Wed, Apr 4 2012
Rare Indochina tigers thrive in Berlin
Tue, Apr 3 2012
Massive tornado churns across Texas
Tue, Apr 3 2012
Syria revolt hampered by disunity, supply failures
Tweet
Share this
Email
Print
Related News
Violence continues as Syria ceasefire nears
Tue, Apr 3 2012
Annan says Syria agrees to April 10 peace deadline
Mon, Apr 2 2012
WRAPUP 5-Syria's "friends" try to twist screw on Assad
Sun, Apr 1 2012
Syria says revolt over, but army still shooting
Sat, Mar 31 2012
Syrian army must pull back first under Annan plan
Fri, Mar 30 2012
Analysis & Opinion
Muslim Brotherhood candidate says introducing sharia in Egypt is his main goal
Why Syria’s Assad is still in power
Related Topics
World »
United Nations »
Turkey »
Syria »
Demonstrators hold up a sign during a protest against Syria's President Bashar Al-Assad in Kafranbel, near Idlib April 3, 2012. Picture taken April 3.
Credit: Reuters/Raad Al Fares/Shaam News Network/Handout
By Khaled Yacoub Oweis
ANTAKYA, Turkey |
Thu Apr 5, 2012 11:11am EDT
ANTAKYA, Turkey (Reuters) - Syrian activist Mahmoud Ali walked for two days across rugged hills to Turkey to collect a satellite phone and video equipment promised by dissidents in exile, only to draw a blank. The soft-spoken teacher, wanted by the Syrian authorities for membership of the grassroots Local Coordination Committees (LCC), had dodged landmines, helicopters, army shelling and roadblocks in his home province of Idlib to reach the border. "It has been all in vain," he said. "Communications in most of Idlib have been cut for three months and we cannot get a Thuraya (satellite) phone because of the incompetence, or corruption, of the opposition on the outside."
Ali's story encapsulates the logistical shortcomings of a year-long popular uprising that has morphedn in places, into an insurgency against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who derides his divided opponents as foreign-backed Islamist "terrorists".
The 27-year-old says he wants to show the world peaceful anti-Assad protests as well as tank and artillery bombardment of dozens of towns and villages in Idlib province which are still under fire despite plans for a U.N.-backed ceasefire next week.
Assad has agreed to U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan's plan for Syrian troops to pull back from restive towns and cities by April 10 before a truce with rebels and a political dialogue, but the Syrian leader's critics mistrust his intentions.
Militarily, the outgunned insurgents are in disarray, but a year of bloodshed which the United Nations says has cost more than 9,000 lives has failed to quell the anti-Assad rising.
It is the haphazard effort to aid the struggle in Syria that angers Ali and others exposed to Assad's wrath - 40 out of 45 of his LCC comrades in central Idlib have been arrested or killed.
Ali was told that the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC) had sent $17,000 to an operative in the Turkish city of Antakya to buy him cameras, satellite phones and internet video broadcasting equipment, but when he contacted the operative he was given a run-around and returned empty-handed to Syria.
INTERNAL SQUABBLING
"The SNC are squabbling and drafting plans for a post-Assad Syria while not getting simple logistical requirements right," Ali fumed. "The regime cannot annihilate the revolt, but the revolt will not be able to topple it without outside support."
Prodded by Western and Arab powers alarmed by opposition disunity, the SNC said last week it would close ranks with its critics and help the revolt in Syria, where activists rage at woeful shortages of medical supplies and communications kit.
SNC head Burhan Ghalioun promised efforts to arm and finance the rebel Syrian Free Army, but said it was paramount to support those organizing peaceful protests at the heart of the revolt.
"The opposition's performance has been below expectations," Ghalioun, a secular Paris-based academic, said of the fractious council in which the Muslim Brotherhood has a strong presence.
Human rights lawyer Catherine al-Talli, who spent time in jail after leading a protest in a Damascus suburb, said the SNC must loosen the Brotherhood's grip on aid distribution, accusing the Islamists of channeling supplies only to their supporters.
"Activists like Ali with no political affiliation have no one to help them," said Talli, who quit the SNC two months ago.
"Outside the SNC, you have individuals giving aid to their own regions, instead of thinking of the homeland as a whole, which weakens the revolt and costs more lives," she complained.
Brotherhood sympathizers disagree with this portrayal of their role.
"A Brotherhood official heads the SNCs relief committee but they do not monopolies it, and money is equally distributed to activists' groups on the inside," said Islamist SNC member Abdelrahman al Haj. "We must not forget though that the Brotherhood has its own relief and aid organization."
None of this has eroded Ali's adhesion to a cause he joined early in the revolt against 42 years of Assad family rule.
"I shouted for freedom and it felt so good, although I was afraid," he said, acknowledging that once-daily protests were now limited to Fridays after prayers and funerals of "martyrs".
Ali recalled the humiliation he had felt as a conscript in 2007 when military intelligence had forced all those in his battalion to "pierce our fingers and write yes with our blood to Bashar on ballot papers" in a presidential referendum.
"CORRUPTION AND BLACKMAIL"
"Everything became riddled with corruption and blackmail. The lowest security official could throw me out of my job and control my destiny," he said of his $200 a month teaching post in Idlib before he went on the run seven months ago.
Ali, who used to supplement his income with bee-keeping, would bribe officials not to transfer him away from Idlib.
Idlib, along with the neighboring province of Hama, bore the brunt of repression when Assad's father, the late Hafez al-Assad crushed an armed Islamist uprising in the 1980s.
Syrians were quiescent for decades after those bloody events, in which the military destroyed Hama's Old City, but activists say they will no longer stay silent.
Abdelbasset Othman, 17, a high school student who helped guide Ali across territory riddled with Syrian tanks and snipers, said 15 tanks and armored vehicles had occupied his home village of Izmarin on the border with Turkey this week.
"The mayor went around neighborhoods reading a statement by their commander that they will paint over (anti-Assad) graffiti and will shell any building where it re-appears. We have nothing to resist with, but we will not be subdued," he said.
Nevertheless, hundreds of civilians are fleeing military assaults. Turkish officials say more than 1,600 have crossed the border in the past two days. More than 3,000 Syrian refugees now occupy the white tents of a new camp erected in farmland southwest of Antakya against a backdrop of snowcapped peaks.
Two veteran dissidents who fled Syria to escape a wave of killings of human rights campaigners and protest leaders said the revolution would triumph despite the lack of supplies.
"This is a popular revolution where three-quarters of the population is against the regime. The army is having to storm cities and towns several times over and every time the revolt picks up," said Fawaz Tello, a leader of the 2001 "Damascus Spring" movement who spent five years as a political prisoner.
MORTAL STRUGGLE
"The two sides are locked in a struggle to death and in the end one side will triumph. It will not be Bashar."
Tello said activists in Syria had to "hold on for a couple more months as the international position turns against Bashar and the supply problem, civilian and otherwise, is solved".
Fellow-dissident Mazen Adi said poorly-armed rebels were focusing on guerrilla tactics and broadening the popular support base, rather than mistaken attempts to hold urban strongholds which were then subjected to withering army bombardments.
"The rebels tried to fight open battles with the army and hold on to cities in the hope of encouraging more army defectors but the regime simply shelled these areas mercilessly and the civilian population suffered greatly," Adi said.
(Editing by Alistair Lyon)
World
United Nations
Turkey
Syria
Tweet this
Link this
Share this
Digg this
Email
Reprints
We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/
Comments (0)
Be the first to comment on reuters.com.
Add yours using the box above.
Edition:
U.S.
Africa
Arabic
Argentina
Brazil
Canada
China
France
Germany
India
Italy
Japan
Latin America
Mexico
Russia
Spain
United Kingdom
Back to top
Reuters.com
Business
Markets
World
Politics
Technology
Opinion
Money
Pictures
Videos
Site Index
Legal
Bankruptcy Law
California Legal
New York Legal
Securities Law
Support & Contact
Support
Corrections
Connect with Reuters
Twitter
Facebook
LinkedIn
RSS
Podcast
Newsletters
Mobile
About
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
AdChoices
Copyright
Our Flagship financial information platform incorporating Reuters Insider
An ultra-low latency infrastructure for electronic trading and data distribution
A connected approach to governance, risk and compliance
Our next generation legal research platform
Our global tax workstation
Thomsonreuters.com
About Thomson Reuters
Investor Relations
Careers
Contact Us
Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.
NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.