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From Russia and China with love:mass slaughter in Homs

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This is the last report filed by Sunday Times reporter, Marie Colvin, killed by the Syrian regime's artillery while reporting from inside Homs. Makes for an especially tragic and haunting read, knowing that the author was killed a day ago and Homs residents continue to suffer with no respite in sight. (the Assad regime stepped up its assault on Homs immediately after Russia and China's double veto at the UN security council, hence the thread title)
http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/public/news/article874796.ece

They call it the widows’ basement. Crammed amid makeshift beds and scattered belongings are frightened women and children trapped in the horror of Homs, the Syrian city shaken by two weeks of relentless bombardment.

Among the 300 huddling in this wood factory cellar in the besieged district of Baba Amr is 20-year-old Noor, who lost her husband and her home to the shells and rockets.

“Our house was hit by a rocket so 17 of us were staying in one room,” she recalls as Mimi, her three-year-old daughter, and Mohamed, her five-year-old son, cling to her abaya.

“We had had nothing but sugar and water for two days and my husband went to try to find food.” It was the last time she saw Maziad, 30, who had worked in a mobile phone repair shop. “He was torn to pieces by a mortar shell.”

For Noor, it was a double tragedy. Adnan, her 27-year-old brother, was killed at Maziad’s side.

Everyone in the cellar has a similar story of hardship or death. The refuge was chosen because it is one of the few basements in Baba Amr. Foam mattresses are piled against the walls and the children have not seen the light of day since the siege began on February 4. Most families fled their homes with only the clothes on their backs.

The city is running perilously short of supplies and the only food here is rice, tea and some tins of tuna delivered by a local sheikh who looted them from a bombed-out supermarket.

A baby born in the basement last week looked as shellshocked as her mother, Fatima, 19, who fled there when her family’s single-storey house was obliterated. “We survived by a miracle,” she whispers. Fatima is so traumatised that she cannot breastfeed, so the baby has been fed only sugar and water; there is no formula milk.

Fatima may or may not be a widow. Her husband, a shepherd, was in the countryside when the siege started with a ferocious barrage and she has heard no word of him since.

The widows’ basement reflects the ordeal of 28,000 men, women and children clinging to existence in Baba Amr, a district of low concrete-block homes surrounded on all sides by Syrian forces. The army is launching Katyusha rockets, mortar shells and tank rounds at random.

Snipers on the rooftops of al-Ba’ath University and other high buildings surrounding Baba Amr shoot any civilian who comes into their sights. Residents were felled in droves in the first days of the siege but have now learnt where the snipers are and run across junctions where they know they can be seen. Few cars are left on the streets.

Almost every building is pock-marked after tank rounds punched through concrete walls or rockets blasted gaping holes in upper floors. The building I was staying in lost its upper floor to a rocket last Wednesday. On some streets whole buildings have collapsed — all there is to see are shredded clothes, broken pots and the shattered furniture of families destroyed.

It is a city of the cold and hungry, echoing to exploding shells and bursts of gunfire. There are no telephones and the electricity has been cut off. Few homes have diesel for the tin stoves they rely on for heat in the coldest winter that anyone can remember. Freezing rain fills potholes and snow drifts in through windows empty of glass. No shops are open, so families are sharing what they have with relatives and neighbours. Many of the dead and injured are those who risked foraging for food.

Fearing the snipers’ merciless eyes, families resorted last week to throwing bread across rooftops, or breaking through communal walls to pass unseen.

The Syrians have dug a huge trench around most of the district, and let virtually nobody in or out. The army is pursuing a brutal campaign to quell the resistance of Homs, Hama and other cities that have risen up against Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, whose family has been in power for 42 years.

In Baba Amr, the Free Syrian Army (FSA), the armed face of opposition to Assad, has virtually unanimous support from civilians who see them as their defenders. It is an unequal battle: the tanks and heavy weaponry of Assad’s troops against the Kalashnikovs of the FSA.

About 5,000 Syrian soldiers are believed to be on the outskirts of Baba Amr, and the FSA received reports yesterday that they were preparing a ground assault. The residents dread the outcome.

“We live in fear the FSA will leave the city,” said Hamida, 43, hiding with her children and her sister’s family in an empty ground-floor apartment after their house was bombed. “There will be a massacre.”

On the lips of everyone was the question: “Why have we been abandoned by the world?”

Ban Ki-moon, the secretary-general of the United Nations, said last week: “We see neighbourhoods shelled indiscriminately, hospitals used as torture centres, children as young as 10 years old killed and abused. We see almost certainly crimes against humanity.” Yet the international community has not come to the aid of the innocent caught in this hell.

Abdel Majid, 20, who was helping to rescue the wounded from bombed buildings, made a simple plea. “Please tell the world they must help us,” he said, shaking, with haunted eyes. “Just stop the bombing. Please, just stop the shelling.”

The journey across the countryside from the Lebanese border to Homs would be idyllic in better times. The villages are nondescript clusters of concrete buildings on dirt tracks but the lanes are lined with cypresses and poplar trees and wind through orchards of apricot and apple trees.

These days, however, there is an edge of fear on any journey through this area. Most of this land is essentially what its residents call “Syria hurra”, or free Syria, patrolled by the FSA.

Nevertheless, Assad’s army has checkpoints on the main roads and troops stationed in schools, hospitals and factories. They are heavily armed and backed by tanks and artillery.

So a drive to Homs is a bone-rattling struggle down dirt roads, criss-crossing fields. Men cluster by fires at unofficial FSA checkpoints, eyeing any vehicle suspiciously. As night falls, flashlights waved by unseen figures signal that the way ahead is clear.

Each travelling FSA car has a local shepherd or farmer aboard to help navigate the countryside; the Syrian army may have the power, but the locals know every track of their fields.

I entered Homs on a smugglers’ route, which I promised not to reveal, climbing over walls in the dark and slipping into muddy trenches. Arriving in the darkened city in the early hours, I was met by a welcoming party keen for foreign journalists to reveal the city’s plight to the world. So desperate were they that they bundled me into an open truck and drove at speed with the headlights on, everyone standing in the back shouting “Allahu akbar” — God is the greatest. Inevitably, the Syrian army opened fire.

When everyone had calmed down I was driven in a small car, its lights off, along dark empty streets, the danger palpable. As we passed an open stretch of road, a Syrian army unit fired on the car again with machineguns and launched a rocket-propelled grenade. We sped into a row of abandoned buildings for cover.

The scale of human tragedy in the city is immense. The inhabitants are living in terror. Almost every family seems to have suffered the death or injury of a loved one.

Khaled Abu Salah, an activist who took part in the first demonstrations against Assad in Homs last March, sat on the floor of an office, his hand broken and bandages covering shrapnel wounds to his leg and shoulder.

A 25-year-old university student, who risked his life filming videos of the slaughter of Baba Amr residents, he narrowly escaped when he tried to get two men wounded by mortar fire to a makeshift clinic.

He and three friends had just taken the wounded to the clinic, which was staffed by a doctor and a dentist, and stepped away from the door when “a shell landed right at the entrance”, he recalled last week.

“My three friends died immediately.” The two men they had helped were also killed.

Abu Ammar, 48, a taxi driver, went out to look for bread at 8am one day last week. He, his wife and their adopted daughter had taken refuge with two elderly sisters after their home was hit by shells.

“When I returned the house was obliterated,” he said, looking at all that remained of the one-storey building. Only a few pieces of wall still stood. In the ruins a woman’s red blouse was visible; bottles of home-made pickled vegetables were somehow unscathed. “Dr Ali”, a dentist working as a doctor, said one of the women from the house had arrived at the clinic alive, but both legs had been amputated and she died.
 

DarkKyo

Member
The whole situation is just horrifying beyond words... Fuck China and Russia for promoting the slaughter of innocents for purely political reasons. There is no better example of the extent that the evil tendencies of their callous leaders will go to.

As for the Assad regime... I wish there were a special kind of hell to send those fuckers to.
 
Well. I did not expect anythin else from Putin, as his propaganda trying to make all those revolutions and protests look like American(CSI) invasion.
I am and many other Russian people support Syrian people.
 

~Devil Trigger~

In favor of setting Muslim women on fire
Well. I did not expect anythin else from Putin, as his propaganda trying to make all those revolutions and protests look like American(CSI) invasion.
I am and many other Russian people support Syrian people.

what are the chances he loses the upcoming elections?
 

YoungHav

Banned
I don't agree with what Russia and China are doing, nor will I condemn them. Will America actually take a stand this time around without self-interests and public manipulation being involved? I would like to see that. You can't whine about Russia/China's Syrian support but at the same time have supported the "War on Terror" by the Bush Administration.
 
Freedom aren't free. Gotta pay with blood if you want changes. You just cant start a revolution and then sit back and wait for outside helps.
 

squidyj

Member
The whole situation is just horrifying beyond words... Fuck China and Russia for promoting the slaughter of innocents for purely political reasons. There is no better example of the extent that the evil tendencies of their callous leaders will go to.

As for the Assad regime... I wish there were a special kind of hell to send those fuckers to.

Honestly it feels more like the stupidity of the UN security council veto system that noone will change because IF I CAN'T HAVE A VETO I'M OUT OF THIS FUCKING SHIT.


what did you pay for yours?

about tree fiddy, used to be a buck o' five but inflation yknow.
 
As long as the legality of any intervention is dependent on a Russian veto this will be the result. At this point I would be willing to support a NATO and Arab coalition to enforce a no fly zone and full protection of the civilian population. Fuck waiting for a UN security council mandate, the people of Syria are being massacred by a madman with Russian artillery shells for a show of political strength by the Kremlin.

If we (US, UK, France, Arab League) don't intervene even though we have the power and will to do so then, well, the blood is on our hands.

what are the chances he loses the upcoming elections?

Nil.
 
I don't agree with what Russia and China are doing, nor will I condemn them. Will America actually take a stand this time around without self-interests and public manipulation being involved? I would like to see that. You can't whine about Russia/China's Syrian support but at the same time have supported the "War on Terror" by the Bush Administration.

Ugh can we have one thread not bashing the U.S.? Really thought this could be one. Oh well.
 

clemenx

Banned
What's the difference with what Bahrein did with US support in the middle of the Arab Spring and this? Just scale I think.

It's all about allies, US vetoes to everything regarding Israel are shit as well.

I'm not condoning them but it isn't any worse than what the standard powerful country does.
 

Emwitus

Member
What surprises me is how fast the arab league is quick to condemn actions by western nations but aren't able to mobilize to stop a deranged dictator. Are they still sending observers to tweet?
 
what are the chances he loses the upcoming elections?

0. After december parlament elections we hoped that he at least could not win in first tour, but now they clearly going for 55-58%. Protests will be big, and we working hard to make something out of it. Revolution could happen though.
 

Sealda

Banned
I am pretty sure USA and the west care less about the actual suffering of the people and their causalities than the opportunities to get another USA friendly state in the ME .


It is all just a political game and USA and UK are happy to see someone taking arms against the russian and chinese backed regime.

Few countries has as elitist foreign politics and politicians/diplomats as the UK.

There are few countries UK diplomats despise more than Russia.
 
That was a haunting read.
Colvin was fearless... and although I'm sad she's gone, she definitely knew this outcome was possible. R.I.P.... and, of course, to all the innocent Syrian civilians that have had their families and homes destroyed.
Fucking horrible.
 

BlueTsunami

there is joy in sucking dick
On the lips of everyone was the question: “Why have we been abandoned by the world?”

Makes me angry

I know for a fact that the Western (American) media has never been there for them to begin with
 

Kud Dukan

Member
Shit, I didn't realize until just now that Marie Colvin was the reporter in Syria who Anderson Cooper was talking to last night on CNN while I was watching. Damn...
 

SUPREME1

Banned
I don't agree with what Russia and China are doing, nor will I condemn them. Will America actually take a stand this time around without self-interests and public manipulation being involved? I would like to see that. You can't whine about Russia/China's Syrian support but at the same time have supported the "War on Terror" by the Bush Administration.



Why not? One has nothing to do with the other.
 
French photojournalist Remi Ochlk (sic?) was killed along with her. Also Pulitzer-prize winning foreign correspondent Anthony Shadid died late last week, but that was from an Asthma attack I think while trying to leave the country with his guides I believe after reporting in country.

Syria is looking pretty dangerous for reporters these days.

Edit: Not to downplay the mass slaughter of civilians or anything.
 
CHEEZMO™;35383470 said:
Eh, posting anyway. People need to see what it's like on the ground in there.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVkF7HrP-ZE

this first video is insane. the sound of the incoming shells must be terrifying.
I dont know that a bombing campaign is the answer with the regime deliberately positioning its heavy armour in densely populated areas, but I wouldnt object to the Turkish army (and by extension, NATO) creating a humanitarian zone/corridor around the Turkish border and inside Syrian territory. I hate the idea of this fuck, Assad, and his psycho brother being secure and comfy in the knowledge that Russia will seek to block international action at every turn.
 
If you search "Russia Today Syria" on youtube you'll see that it's all the US's fault.
Russia Today the trusted sourceleftists for extreme Western leftists, glue sniffers(truthers)/birthers, people who are Anti-Western/US, and tin foil hatters worried about Chemtrails and the lizard people.

Am I missing anyone?
 
this first video is insane. the sound of the incoming shells must be terrifying.
I dont know that a bombing campaign is the answer with the regime deliberately positioning its heavy armour in densely populated areas, but I wouldnt object to the Turkish army (and by extension, NATO) creating a humanitarian zone/corridor around the Turkish border and inside Syrian territory. I hate the idea of this fuck, Assad, and his psycho brother being secure and comfy in the knowledge that Russia will seek to block international action at every turn.
I've said it once and I'll say it again they can turn to the one regional power that often acts without care to the UN and has manhandled the Syrian military before, and cut short some Assad special weapons program. Yeah it sounds bizarre and unlikely but it beats be fucking shelled.
 

pje122

Member
Shit, I didn't realize until just now that Marie Colvin was the reporter in Syria who Anderson Cooper was talking to last night on CNN while I was watching. Damn...

Yeah, check it out:
Wikipedia said:
She began wearing an eyepatch after losing the sight in her left eye when coming under a surprise attack by Mummar Gadaffi (1986) who in a shock interview pulled out her eye when she insulted him.
Pretty gnarly...
 

squidyj

Member
I've said it once and I'll say it again they can turn to the one regional power that often acts without care to the UN and has manhandled the Syrian military before, and cut short some Assad special weapons program. Yeah it sounds bizarre and unlikely but it beats be fucking shelled.

Yeah I don't think the public support is there in said nation for that action.
 
Yeah, check it out:

Pretty gnarly...

that snippet claiming that gaddafi pulled out her eye is false. someone must have trolled her wiki page.
wiki said:
She began wearing an eyepatch after losing the sight in her left eye when coming under Sri Lankan government RPG shrapnel fire on April 16, 2001; she was attacked after calling out "journalist, journalist!" while reporting on the Sri Lankan Civil War
 

Stumpokapow

listen to the mad man
Journalists killed in Syria--some while covering the event, some because they were covering the event:

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Marie Colvin, Sunday Times

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Remi Ochlik, Freelance Photojournalist

5qfyr.jpg

Anthony Shadid, New York Times

z2PhX.jpg

Gilles Jacquier, France 2

ybta4.jpg

Basil al-Sayed, Freelance Journalist

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Rami al-Sayed, Citizen Journalist

hacWg.jpg

Mazhar Tayyara, Agence France-Presse

8gUr1.jpg

Shukri Abu al-Burghul, Radio Damascus (funeral procession)

Not pictured because I didn't want to post a picture of him with his eyes gouged out
Ferzat Jarban, Freelance


Committee to Protect Journalists - Tax-deductible donation, all donations matched dollar-for-dollar by the Committee's chair
Reporters without Borders / Reporters sans Frontiers
Reporters without Borders USA 501(c)3 for US tax deductions
 
I am pretty sure USA and the west care less about the actual suffering of the people and their causalities than the opportunities to get another USA friendly state in the ME .
It is all just a political game and USA and UK are happy to see someone taking arms against the russian and chinese backed regime.

Few countries has as elitist foreign politics and politicians/diplomats as the UK.

There are few countries UK diplomats despise more than Russia.


Please. The Syrian resistance is most likely more anti-american than Assad himself and we still discuss supporting them with supplies.


If we did help they'd be no more friendly then they are now.
 
It's heartbreaking. Shame on you arabs. Shame on you.
Who are you talking about, and what significance is it if they are Arab?

I'm glad someone thought to mention bahrain... seems we're not alone in the west being able to veto an end to human suffering or to turn a blind eye to violence carried out by our allies.

The death of these reporters does sadden me. They risk it all to tell us what horrors go on, far from the comfort of our homes. RIP.

Assad has to go. If this carries on, even the Russians and Chinese will see that. Who could welcome him or one of his delegations after this?
 
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