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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

Syria: In the Ruins of a Dream
Five Syrians reflect on the devastation wrought on their homes, some of which took a lifetime to build.

14 Mar 2018 09:29 GMT War & Conflict, Syria's Civil War, Humanitarian crises, Human Rights, Middle East

Bashar al-Assad. The protests were violently opposed by the Syrian army, leading to the seven-year war which, according to UNHCR figures, has seen nearly 500,000 people killed and over 11 million displaced.

The war in Syria has, among other things, destroyed the most precious aspects of people's lives - their families, their homes, their dreams and ambitions. Some areas and cities have suffered destruction on an enormous scale.

In the Ruins of a Dream features five Syrians who've been internally displaced or sought refuge in Europe. They reflect on the devastation wrought on their homes, some of which took years to build.

"Syrians go through a lot to build a house, especially because of the economic situation like the high cost of construction materials," says Shahoud al-Jadou, from the town of Kafr Zita. His father built the family home but was killed by the Syrian air force, so Shahoud and his family were forced to leave.

"When the revolution started, we took part in the protests," says Ahmed Dabbis, from the small town of Kafrnbodeh. "We thought it would succeed quickly, like in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. During this time, the regime was absent in our areas. So we started to build the house and homeland."

It's very difficult to see your own house burned... I told my daughter I'd just like to see our home in Syria one more time, to see our family. Unfortunately, there's no one left there. All my neighbours have died.

Um Hisham, displaced Syrian

But eventually, bombing reduced Ahmed's home in Kafrnbodeh to a pile of rubble littered with broken toys and furniture.

"It's where my wife and I felt safe and comfortable and where we started our family, had our kids and planned for the future," says Ahmed, as he looks at his destroyed home. "I wasn't enraged by the destruction because I was grateful for my family's and my own safety."

Muhammad al-Obaid is a singer who performed songs for the protesters during the 2011 revolution. He used to live and work in Beirut, doing manual jobs, to save enough money to build a family home over the course of 12 years in al-Lataminah.

One day he rushed home and found his house levelled after a helicopter had dropped two barrel bombs. "It had been completely demolished. Nothing was left, not a single brick. My heart was broken. It had taken me years to build it," says Muhammad.

Human rights activist Mohammed al-Abdo's Idlib home was commandeered by the army who then burned it down. "I became targeted by the regime because of our intensive activities". Sifting through the rubble and old stacks of papers, he says "I wasn't upset by the destruction of the house. I just felt sad for my books. It took me about 25 years to collect them all. I had some very rare books."

While those who actively took part in the 2011 anti-government protests were targeted, others like Um Hisham became victims simply because their homes were in the wrong place. "A large military patrol was always deployed in our neighbourhood. They stayed in the shop next to my house," says the 70-year-old widow from al-Kadam area of Damascus.

When the military action increased, she says, "I went to my daughter's house in al-Yarmouk refugee camp, and it was the same there. So we went back home." Um Hisham now lives with her daughter in a tiny apartment in Worms, Germany, after her Damascus home was burned and robbed.

The monumental loss of her family home is still very painful and has worsened her heart condition. "My house is always on my mind... It's very difficult to see your own house burned...All the trees in my house were burned. We went inside the house, and everything was burned. You could even see the iron girders in the ceiling. I hope no one ever sees what I saw," says Um Hisham.

"I told my daughter I'd just like to see our home in Syria one more time, to see our family. Unfortunately, there's no one left there. All my neighbours have died."

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More than 3 million homes have been destroyed since 2011 [Ibrahim Al-Shamali/Al Jazeera]
After seven years of war, the conflict shows no signs of abating. A World Bank reportissued in July 2017 estimated that the Syrian civil war has damaged or destroyed about a third of housing and half of medical and education facilities; and led to significant economic loss.

The destruction of physical infrastructure, though, does not capture the full human impact of the war. The World Bank report called the visible impacts only "the tip of the iceberg."

More than three million homes have been destroyed, and millions of lives have been disrupted. For all five Syrians in this film, the devastation of the towns where they grew up and lived peacefully is a symbol both of their shattered dreams and the way the comfort and stability of their former lives have been mercilessly overturned.

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The destruction of physical infrastructure does not capture the full human impact of the war [Ibrahim Al-Shamali/Al Jazeera]
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UNHCR estimates that over 11 million people have been displaced [Ibrahim Al-Shamali/Al Jazeera]
Source: Al Jazeera
https://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/aljazeeraworld/2018/03/syria-ruins-dream-180311114314580.html
 
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Turkish air force eliminates 8 Hezbollah terrorists in Ziara:

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Turkish delegation explores town of Al Ziara in Western Hama

Writing Mais Noor Aldeen| Editing Hasan Borhan| Translation Samra Bulbol| Translation Editing Farah NassifPublication Date: March 13, 2018 7:28:47

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Hama-SMART

A Turkish reconnaissance delegation visited the town of Al Ziara, Central Syria, 72 kilometers northwest of Hama. The delegation explored the area to establish two checkpoints, under the de-escalation agreement.

Activists reported that the delegation included four vehicles that entered the town with the Turkistan Islamic Party to establish two checkpoints in the coming days. They will set one checkpoint in the Al Tanmiya or Qarqour, without mentioning the location of the other one.

On March 7, the local councils of Sahl Al Ghab, denied the Russian demands to establish a military base near the Al Madiq Castle and to raise the government flag, in exchange for its non-military action against the area.

Turkey has established checkpoints in the Jabal Samaan Castle, Aleppo and the village of Salwa, Idlib. Turkish military convoys have been entering Aleppo and Idlib since Turkey started spreading its forces and establishing checkpoints under the de-escalation agreement, which was decided in the Astana 6 talks.


Geolocation:SyriaHama GovernorateAl-Suqaylabiyah DistrictNahiyat az Ziyarah
 
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Syrian man jailed in Turkey for murdering Assad critic and her journalist daughter

ISTANBUL
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A Turkish court on March 13 handed down two life sentences to a Syrian man who murdered a Syrian opposition activist and her Syrian-American journalist daughter in Istanbul in 2017.

The bodies of Orouba Barakat and her daughter Halla were found in September in their apartment on Istanbul’s Asian side.

Barakat, a prominent political opponent of the Syrian leader, Bashar al-Assad, had been investigating reports of torture in prisons run by the Syrian government, Turkish media said at the time.

Her daughter, who was born in the U.S., was an editor at Orient Net, a pro-Syrian opposition website, and had also worked as a freelancer for the U.S. TV network ABC.

Days after the killings, Turkish police detained a distant relative of the women, Ahmet Barakat, in the city of Bursa. The motive for the murders remains unknown, the media have reported.

Police identified Ahmet Barakat by security footage and detained him after a three-day operation.

Orient Net described Halla Barakat as an editor and investigator, and her mother as a prominent opponent of Assad.

The U.S. state department said last year it was deeply saddened by their deaths and called Orouba’s work “courageous.”
 
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Turkish-led assault on Syria's Afrin displaced 10,000 in a day
Twelve killed and 60 wounded over the past 24 hours in Turkish shelling and air raids on Kurdish Afrin, monitor says.

12 hours ago

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People sit in a truck with their belongings in the northeast of Afrin on Thursday [Khalil Ashawi/Reuters]
MORE ON TURKEY-SYRIA BORDER
Turkey says it won't hand over Afrin in northern Syria to the government in Damascus after it removes the Kurdish YPG militia, as its military and allied rebel forces prepare to attack the surrounded city.

Thousands of people continued to flee Afrin on Thursday to Nubul and Zhara in the northern countryside of Aleppo, which is under control of the Syrian government, amid air raids, artillery shelling, and the threat of an imminent ground invasion, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor.

Twelve people were killed and 60 wounded over the past 24 hours in Afrin city and its outskirts, the UK-based group reported. Kurdish sources said the death toll is likely to increase as many wounded are in critical condition.

"Our staff are doing their best, but our rooms are filled with wailing wounded and people in pain, as we lack some medical supplies," Dr Joan Shitika, head of the Afrin city hospital, told dpa news agency.

10,000 displaced in a day
The Turkish offensive against the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) in Afrin started on January 20. Ankara considers the YPG to be a "terrorist organisation" linked to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-old armed rebellion inside Turkey.

WATCH: Turkey-backed FSA encircles YPG-held Afrin (1:57)


The Turkish bombardment of Afrin has forced about 10,000 people from their homes over the last 24 hours.

"The air raids and artillery shelling have not calmed down," said Birusk Hasaka, the YPG spokesman in Afrin. "A number of civilians have been displaced, and they are around 10,000 people."

Arab and Turkish television broadcast images on Thursday of residents leaving Afrin in cars and on foot. The Turkish DHA TV showed trucks loaded with personal belongings lining the road out of Afrin - the only remaining exit.

Those who stayed behind formed long queues outside shops to buy bread and other foodstuffs in preparation for a full-fledged siege by Turkish and allied forces.

'Changed their tune'
Turkey's presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said on Thursday that Ankara would assume control of Afrin after it seizes the area from Kurdish forces.

"We have no intention or thought of giving it to the [Syrian] regime," Kalin said in comments carried by state broadcaster TRT.

Kalin said Afrin city's centre would be "cleansed of terrorists in a very short time".

Al Jazeera's Alan Fisher, reporting from Gaziantep on the Turkish-Syrian border, noted the move by the Turks to govern Afrin after removing the YPG would likely breach international law. He said originally Turkey's military offensive was only to remove what Ankara calls the "terrorist threat" posed by the US-backed group along its border.

WATCH: Hundreds flee Syria's Afrin (1:47)


"[Before] they said that this was Syrian sovereign territory, but now they changed their tune on that, saying they will stay in Afrin for as long as they need to, and they won't necessarily give the territory back to Syria," said Fisher. "That's a big leap from where they were before."

'In one ear...'
The European Parliament, meanwhile, urged Turkey to pull its troops out of Syria amid "grave concern over the spiralling violence" in Afrin and other areas.

The parliament "calls on the Turkish government to withdraw its troops and play a constructive role in the Syrian conflict", according to a final draft of a resolution approved on Thursday by a majority of EU legislators.

Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan dismissed the call.

"Don't get too excited. We won't leave [Syria] until our job is done. You should know this. All of these words go in one ear and out the other," he said in response.

The European Parliament resolution shows "clear support for the terrorist group", Turkish EU Affairs Minister Omer Celik added. He also rejected claims of civilians being targeted in Afrin.

The YPG has been a key American ally in the fight against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) in Syria, and has received US weapons, supplies, and training.

INSIDE STORY

Will Turkish and Syrian armies fight in Afrin?


SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018...frin-displaced-10000-day-180315181847193.html
 
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How US Used Chemical Attacks to Justify Its Invasion of Syria Since 2013
© REUTERS/ Mohamed Abdullah
OPINION
08:00 15.03.2018(updated 08:35 15.03.2018)Get short URL
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The Jaish al-Islam group planned a chemical attack in 2013 which could have opened the door to the US intervention and ouster of the legitimate Syrian government, a Syrian specialist on extremist groups told Sputnik. According to the specialist in the next 10-15 days the world will know the truth about the false flag attacks and terrorist sponsors.

In 2013 Jaish al-Islam militants were to capture Damascus and overthrow the legitimate Syrian government in accordance with their Western sponsors' plan, Husam Taleb, a former follower of Zahran Alloush, the founder of the Jaish al-Islam group, revealed in an interview with Sputnik Arabic.

"A chemical attack was really planned and women and children were to fall victim to it," Taleb, a Syrian specialist on extremist groups, recalled. "In this way the countries that support and fund militants — the US, the UK, France, Saudi Arabia and Qatar — sought to exert pressure on the Syrian government. In 2013 [then US President] Barack Obama said that the Americans would use force against the Syrian government if it launched a chemical attack against its people. No one [in Syria] had ever talked about these kind of weapons before. Since that time, a 'series' with the use of poisonous substances has begun."

Taleb underscored that eventually in 2013 Jaish al-Islam used chemical armsagainst Jaish al-Hurr and took control of the entire Ghouta area.

"It was planned that Jaish al-Islam would seize power and take up the reins of the country after America's strike against the Syrian capital," Sputnik's interlocutor underscored.



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© REUTERS/ BASSAM KHABIEH
Chemical Agents Found by Syrian Troops Prove Militants Have Poisoning Substances - Russian Envoy to OPCW
The specialist fled the city of Douma in 2012, after he had been abducted and tortured.


"I am aware of everything that is happening there today, because I maintain relations with my relatives and friends," he said. "I know for certain that the situation there bears no resemblance to what the White Helmets say. I can say with confidence that the White Helmets are a terrorist organization in the full sense of the term. They often do 'reports' about saving victims from the rubble. But they conduct these operations to take 'pretty pictures' while the quality of the rescue mission suffers. Is that the kind of thing rescuers and humanitarian organization employees do?"

Taleb said that while the White Helmets show the bodies of murdered children claiming they've died as the result of chemical attacks, it is in fact the White Helmets themselves killing these unfortunate victims.

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© AP PHOTO/ SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENSE WHITE HELMETS
This photo provided by the Syrian Civil Defense White Helmets, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows members of the Syrian Civil Defense group helping a wounded man after airstrikes hit Ghouta, a suburb of Damascus, Syria, Thursday, March. 1, 2018
"Everything is being done to impose pressure on the Syrian government," the specialist said. "[Previously], Britain and the US created similar pseudo-humanitarian organizations in Iraq."

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© AFP 2018/ AMER ALMOHIBANY
Same Old: Notorious White Helmets Report a Chemical Attack, Blame Damascus Again
According to Sputnik's interlocutor, the truth about the militants' actions will find its way out in the next 10-15 days when the residents of Ghouta tell the story of their life under the rule of terrorists. Everyone will know about the hundreds of women and children who were kept in guerilla prisons. The Syrian people will unveil how many children died of hunger and cold and how their bodies were presented as evidence of the alleged chemical attacks by the Syrian Arab Army (SAA).

To illustrate his point Taleb referred to the situation in Hamuriyah, a town in Eastern Ghouta.

"There were reports that a couple of weeks ago chemical weapons were used against residents of Hamuriyah, claiming the lives of 26 children. Last week the inhabitants of this city raised the Syrian flag, asked the terrorists to go and let the government army in. Would they do that if the Syrian Arab Army really attacked them with this terrible weapon?" the Syrian specialist asked rhetorically.

As for extremists' sources of funding, Taleb said that money usually comes from the United States, Britain, France, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and other countries.

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© SPUTNIK/ MIKHAIL VOSKRESENSKIY
Assad Vows to Confront 'Western Scenarios' Targeting Unity, Sovereignty of Syria
[The other day], "Muhammad Alloush (brother of Zahran Alloush, the founder of Jaish al-Islam) thanked Germany for the 10 million euros in assistance. But where is this money? What is it being spent on? People in Ghouta are starving, they have not received the money which was sent for them. This money goes to support terrorists. All the money allocated by the US or Germany, or other countries [for humanitarian purposes] ends up in the pockets of the so-called armed opposition. This money could save starving [Syrians], but in reality this does not happen," the specialist said.

Zahran Alloush is a Syrian Sunni Salafist preacher who hails from the city of Douma in Eastern Ghouta. He founded and led the Jaish al-Islam opposition armed group. He was killed along with his deputy on December 25, 2015 as a result of a missile strike. After Zahran's death, his brother, Muhammad Alloush, became one of the leaders of the Syrian opposition. He represented the Syrian opposition during the Astana talks in January 2017.

In his youth, Taleb, who was raised in Douma, fell under the influence of Zahran Alloush. He later abandoned the Salafists misconceptions and is now engaged in exposing false extremist ideas.

The views and opinions expressed by Husam Taleb are those of the contributor and do not necessarily reflect those of Sputnik.

https://sputniknews.com/analysis/201803151062534130-us-syria-chemical-arms/
 
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Military representatives from Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Russia met at their joint operations HQ in Baghdad yesterday at the invitation of Iraq's Defence Minister to discuss ongoing security cooperation. The HQ was first established in 2014 to coordinate the war against ISIS

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The Russian military said its planes had not taken part in the Syrian regime’s assault in Eastern Ghouta where a monitoring group says airstrikes killed 80 in rebel-held zones on Friday.

Observatory, which says it determines whose planes carry out raids according to type, location, flight patterns and munitions used, said at least 76 were killed in Russian air strikes on the southwestern Ghouta pocket on Friday.

After a fierce air and ground assault, regime forces on Thursday captured Hammuriyeh town, in an isolated southern part of Ghouta.

Monitor, said rebels later launched a counter-attack and regained parts of the town, killing 14 regime fighters.

Elsewhere, however, it said the regime overran Al-Rihan town in an assault led by Russian officers and advisers.

The regime’s advance into Hammuriyeh had punched a corridor through the town into government-controlled territory.

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Turkish artillery fire of Afrin in northern Syria killed at least 22 on Friday, a monitor said.

“Since midnight (2200 GMT Thursday), 18 , including five Daesh , were killed by Turkish artillery fire on the city of Afrin,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

“There is fighting on the northern edge of the city,”

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a French militant sought by US authorities since emerging in a Daesh execution video in Syria, has been killed, sources close to the inquiry told AFP.

“The date and circumstances of his death aren’t yet known, but it appears he died in the summer of 2017,” one of the sources said.

Hauchard was seen holding a knife to the neck of US aid worker Peter Kassig in a gruesome video from November 2014.

The video also showed the execution of 18 Syrians identified as military personnel.

The US State Department added Hauchard to its black list of “specially designated global terrorists.”
 
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^^^^800 + khanzeer are killed in east ghouta. Buried secretly , to hide shame Some of Smart monkeys have surrendered they know.how to survve

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One of rats newest tactics how to survive battlefield just surrender:omghaha:
 
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