Syria ALL ASSAD

emolia
emolia: 1-im from syria and the truth in syria is : there r an armed groups ( ruiners) they kill the syrian army and the civilians
2- there r no sectarianism in syria we all love each other with no religious partitions
3- our president is NOT a killer he is so kind and intelligent
4- Palestine is the land of palestinian people not for settler israelians and the victory is not so far
5- some arabian countries are losing the arabic identity
4- no one ask US and France to intervention in syria
5- thanx RUSSIA , CHINA , BRAZIL , INDIA and all understanding countries
6- WE LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE U BASHAR ALL ASSAD WE WILL ALWAYS BE NEXT U
12 years ago Report
19
nader_pal23
nader_pal23: from palestine .. i love bashar all assad too .. but some people r stupid .. israel and amirca playing on our countries
12 years ago Report
5
dave3974
dave3974: nothing to do with any other countries , this is your mess
12 years ago Report
7
Lora123
Lora123: There are some countries in the world that everyone thinks should have a wall around them so that the people there can solve their own problems. Syria has built it's own wall around itself. The fire that is smoldering there will one day grow to burn everyone inside the wall.

Heart breaking times are coming, and I fear for the good people of Syria. Emolia, if you could see what is obvious to the rest of the world, you would be afraid too.

Good luck Emolia. Allah akbah.
12 years ago Report
4
SIDDU REDDY
SIDDU REDDY: fjyfugkjbjbjkgjgbjbmbjgkh,nl/iopid
12 years ago Report
1
Lora123
Lora123: Well isn't Mr. Siddu Reddy a wonderful representative of the citizens of Bangalore, India. I'm sure he attends the finest schools there.
12 years ago Report
1
Lolita Papas
(Post deleted by Lolita Papas 12 years ago)
Lora123
Lora123: I understand Emolia's situation. She knows that the internet is being watched, and she is writing things to praise Al Assad so that no one will break down her door at night and make her family disappear.

The United Nations reports that 2200 Syrians have been killed by the Syrian army and secret police since the protests began. Dozens of Syrian soldiers have been shot for refusing to kill other Syrians.

There are more than 10,000 Syrians living in a refuge camp across the border in Turkey, including many Syrian soldiers who refuse to kill anyone.

People around the world know what is happening in Syria, and are doing things to help. Bashir Al Assad and thirty five other senior members of the Syrian government and army cannot leave Syria. They are wanted by Interpol for crimes against humanity. If they leave Syria, they will be arrested and probably spend the rest of their lives in jail. It is not only western nations that are disgusted with what is happening in Syria. The Arab League, including the Saudis, have told Assad to stop what he is doing and allow free elections.

Here is an article that was in The Los Angeles Times, a newspaper from the United States.

============================================

September 03, 2011|Ellen Knickmeyer and Roula Hajjar | Knickmeyer and Hajjar are special correspondents

BEIRUT — The protesters and family members gather outside hospitals in Syria for what has become a grim routine of the uprising against President Bashar Assad's regime: reaching out for the dead and wounded, trying to wrest their bodies away from security forces.

Syrian troops and security officers on Friday seized at least 15 more dead and injured protesters from two hospitals in the suburbs of Damascus, the capital, firing on relatives of the victims and others, according to witnesses and activists.

The struggle over the dead and dying underscores how hospitals, medical workers and even corpses have become weapons for the government and its supporters as they try to crush a nearly 6-month-old protest movement against Assad's rule.

With security forces largely in control of public medical care, "people prefer to die rather than go to a hospital," Khaled, a demonstrator, said Friday in the eastern city of Dair Alzour, where activists said three of the day's estimated 18 deaths occurred.

Khaled, who like many protesters asked that his full name not be used for safety reasons, described an instance this week at a hospital in his city. Activists had learned that a wounded confederate had been taken to a hospital, he said, only to be left to bleed to death by medical workers sympathetic to the regime. The body was confiscated by security forces, Khaled said, and has not been released to the man's family.

Deprivation of medical care and misuse of hospitals have become "routine, systematic," said Wissam Tarif, an activist now outside Syria. "What we have seen is security forces based in the hospitals. It is the security forces that have control of the hospitals, and in most cases the medical personnel cannot do anything about it."

Accounts from Tarif and other activists Friday detailed some of the abuses: security forces seizing the bodies of slain activists to block mourners from holding funerals, which could turn into protests against the government; and taking wounded activists who need treatment away from hospital wards.

Activists describe doctors and nurses abusing bleeding, helpless protesters, especially at state-run medical centers.

By tradition, many doctors are Alawites, members of the same minority Muslim sect as the Assad family, explained an Alawite sympathetic to the protest movement.

Taken by a doctor friend to a Damascus hospital recently to observe the abuses, the man said he saw a doctor slap a wounded patient. Hospital personnel told the man that medical ethics did not oblige them to treat traitors, he said.

In a report released in July, Amnesty International describes similar abuses by medical workers. The report cites a case in which male and female nurses in the town of Talkalakh beat an injured 21-year-old activist, stitched his wounds without administering painkiller, then beat him again on his wounds.

Medical care for injured demonstrators is increasingly being driven underground to makeshift clinics in homes or mosques. Pharmacists who sell equipment for blood transfusions or tetanus vaccine for treating bullet wounds have been arrested, Tarif said .

Early in the uprising, Tarif said, he watched in the Damascus suburb of Duma as security forces and protesters scrambled to pull wounded people out of one another's grasp. Wounded are routinely "taken, kidnapped," from hospitals, he said.

"There is clear evidence that the regime is using a specific strategy of attacking injured, attacking hospitals, kidnapping bodies, and preventing bodies from being buried with dignity," said Tarif, who is making a documentary about medical abuses in the early months of the protests.

On Friday, the Local Coordinating Committees of Syria opposition coalition reported clashes over bodies and the injured outside hospitals in the Damascus suburbs of Kafarbatna and Arbaeen, after government forces opened fire on protests that broke out nationwide after Friday prayers.

In Arbaeen, activists and family members rushed 15 wounded protesters, some unconscious, to a private hospital, said Fady, who said he accompanied the crowd. Opposition supporters generally regard private hospitals as more neutral than those run by the government.

"The hospital was surrounded with security forces, who were shooting at everyone to keep the dead and injured from entering the hospital," Fady said.

Members of the Syrian army's 4th division came to the hospital and seized wounded protesters, Fady said. Security forces arrived separately in ambulances and took away the dead, he said.

Syria's brutal crackdown has failed to quell the uprising.

Many of the protest leaders are adamant that their movement will remain nonviolent despite what the United Nations says is more than 2,200 civilian deaths.

Under the slogan "Death Before Indignity," demonstrators gathered by the thousands Friday in cities across Syria. But the centers of Damascus and Aleppo, the two main cities and critical bastions of support for Assad, remained largely quiet.

Friday also saw the European Union approve tough new sanctions that analysts say are likely to significantly increase the financial pressure on Assad's government.

The EU measure includes a ban on imports of Syrian oil to Europe, cutting off the market to which Assad's government channels 95% of Syria's crude. Oil accounts for about one-third of the regime's revenue.

The United States imposed oil-import and financial sanctions last month after Assad's government ignored repeated U.S. demands that it stop the armed assaults on civilians.
12 years ago Report
5
Lolita Papas
(Post deleted by Lolita Papas 12 years ago)
emolia
emolia: oh really? if syrian people r dying in the streets becoz of the army i wll say that kids
i feel so sad that u people r stupid and suzana maybe u r saying that coz ur dad or ur brother r one of who kill army and civilians and maybe u r not from Syria
SYRIA IS STRONG
12 years ago Report
1
emolia
emolia: by the way my father's friend dead becoz one of the ruiners and they deform his body so what can u all say now??????? u didnt see what they r doing with army they r animals y no one can believe, there r no brain in ur head there r a stone
(Edited by emolia)
12 years ago Report
2
emolia
emolia: THANX NADER
12 years ago Report
1
emolia
emolia: i live in the middle of lattakia so no one try to tell me that we r dying here plz
12 years ago Report
3
emolia
emolia: hahaha lora u r funny talk about america if someone say anything about the government on the phone they will kill him
no one will KNOW how we were living in a peace so dont talk about things THAT U DONT KNOW
12 years ago Report
1
emolia
emolia: suzana shut up im not a child respect ur self we r talking like young people
12 years ago Report
4
davidk14
davidk14: .

Emolia is in denial.

.
12 years ago Report
2
emolia
emolia: david u r playing the role of a storyteller haha
12 years ago Report
1
davidk14
davidk14: haha
12 years ago Report
0
boring91rl
boring91rl: introduce myself...
12 years ago Report
0
syrian
syrian: God bless syria and its leader BASHAR ALASSAD and help us to end the mess that America is trying 2 create in our beloved country.
12 years ago Report
1
akcharmy
akcharmy: reseaches said that most of the syrian people support their president and his reforms,and i saw the armed people in my city since the 1st day of this crisis,so plz no one can say it's a "peaceful protests"
12 years ago Report
2
Malobear
Malobear: God bless syria and its leader BASHAR ALASSAD and help us to end the mess that America is trying 2 create in our beloved country?
I suggest you and your fellow countrymen look at how to bridge the class differences and Rich from Poor. America has nothing to do with what ales Syria. A matter of fact America has nothing to do with Syria period.
12 years ago Report
2
albguy
albguy: bashar al ass is a pagan , a taghut , a criminal whose end is near just like his comrades mubarak n gaddafi
12 years ago Report
2
dave3974
dave3974: akcy i think the armed people were your own soldiers shhooting the public---------twit
12 years ago Report
0
syrian
syrian: malobear i think u r as clever as a bear 2 say so what do u mean by country men i am farther more educated than u i speak 4 languages could u speak ur own one
12 years ago Report
2
davidk14
davidk14: .

It's not about how many languages you can speak, it's what you say that counts.

.
12 years ago Report
5
Page: 12345678910 ... Last