Fire in Syria (II): The Regime’s
Response<http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/fire-syria-ii-regime%E2%80%99s-response>
The disarray amongst the Syrian opposition is all-pervading. The factions
are at political loggerheads, trading charges of treason and incompetence.
Their preoccupation with meaningless media...
 <http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/syrian-crisis-three%E2%80%99s-crowd>
Syrian Crisis: Three’s a
Crowd<http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/syrian-crisis-three%E2%80%99s-crowd>
The conflict in Syria has recast the political fault lines in the Mideast.
Divisions that were once demarcated by ideology and religion, are today
centered around the issue of overthrowing the Assad...
Published on *Al Akhbar English* (http://english.al-akhbar.com)

Home <http://english.al-akhbar.com/> > Syria Alternatives (I): Man Cannot
Live by Guns Alone
------------------------------
Syria Alternatives (I): Man Cannot Live by Guns Alone
 A member of the Free Syrian Army's "Commandos Brigade" takes part in a
training session in Qusayr, on 10 May 2012. (Photo: AFP - STR)

By: Radwan Mortada <http://english.al-akhbar.com/author/radwan-mortada> [1]

Published Monday, June 11, 2012

*Since the start of the Syrian uprising, influential groups have emerged on
the ground which have been eclipsed in the media by the high-profile exile
politicians who enjoy international backing.*

Al-Radeef al-Thawri (“The Revolutionary Reserve”) shares with other armed
Syrian opposition groups the goal of toppling the ruling regime. But it
insists that Syria must not be destroyed in the process.

It also differs from other factions in believing that the overthrow of the
regime by armed revolt alone is unachievable, that the fractious state of
the opposition means that time is not on the revolution’s side, and that
alternative solutions therefore need to be explored, including dialogue
under UN auspices.

Al-Radeef was so named because it was formed as a support network for the
uprising in Syria, undertaking the provision of food and medical supplies
to areas in revolt. But it soon started assuming an additional role. It
formed a fighting wing to provide armed support to the demonstrators, even
though it had been strongly opposed to weaponizing the uprising, and its
leaders were involved at an early stage in peaceful protests demanding the
downfall of the regime.

Their opposition to taking up arms was primarily due to the huge imbalance
of military power with the regime’s armed forces, says al-Radeef’s
secretary-general, who is known as Abu Abd al-Rahman. “Kalashnikovs cannot
topple a regime, nor can RPGs,” he remarks.

While the peaceful course would have been more effective, the resort to
arms has “postponed the victory” of the revolution. “The movement saw the
peaceful nature of the revolution as the key to its success,” he explains.
But it felt compelled to take up arms “when the regime stopped
distinguishing between defenseless demonstrators and gunmen.”

He explains that this was partly done in expectation of international
support, but “the international community did not stand with us as it
should have.” Countries backing the rebels failed to provide them with
high-caliber weapons, and it became apparent that none were willing to
force the regime out through direct military intervention. “Fighting with
the weapons in our possession will only cause more bloodshed without
toppling it,” he says.

“From the start of the revolution, we kept hearing that a no-fly zone would
be imposed or there would be foreign intervention,” he says, “but none of
that happened and it is does not look as though it will happen, at least
not in the near future.”

To Abu Abd al-Rahman’s mind, while the peaceful course would have been more
effective, the resort to arms has “postponed the victory” of the
revolution. Moreover, “prolonging the duration of the revolution risks
wearing it down too,” he warns. A protracted rebellion “poses a real threat
to the society that sustains (the rebels). Shortages of food and healthcare
and the rising death toll could lead to disillusionment among the Syrian
families who are providing a safe haven for the fighters. They could
renounce the revolutionaries and demand the return of the regime.”

*Parallel Priorities*

Leaders of al-Radeef have been critical of external backers that are keen
to arm the revolutionaries but neglect the need for parallel food and
medical aid.

Many of them are professionals or businessmen who provide clandestine
support and funds for the revolution and are not known to the regime as
dissidents, operating in the shadows for their personal safety.

Foreign sponsors demonstrated that their support is not motivated by love
of the Syrian people but hatred of President Bashar Assad’s regime. They
cite examples of cases in which foreign sponsors demonstrated that their
support is not motivated by love of the Syrian people but hatred of
President Bashar Assad’s regime. One figure based in Turkey, for example,
used to provide regular payments to three Free Syrian Army (FSA) members to
buy weapons and smuggle them into Syria. Two of them were injured in one
attempt and their feet had to be amputated. But when their colleague asked
for funds to pay for their treatment, this figure refused, saying his
group’s aid was confined to supplying arms, and they should seek the help
of some humanitarian organization.

They stress that it is not enough to arm the revolutionaries, and that food
and medical aid are vital to sustain the social base that supports them.

They also emphasize that vast numbers of people have been rounded up by the
authorities – they estimate that more than 100,000 are being held in
detention – and wonder why high-profile political figures and groups do not
highlight this issue and demand their immediate release.

Al-Radeef’s leaders also take a dim view of Western and Arab economic
sanctions against Syria, arguing that they damage the revolution by hurting
ordinary people, but have no impact on the regime, “When the price of a
kilo of rice reaches $100,” says Abu Abd al-Rahman, “Bashar will still be
able to feed it to his son, but the people will not.”

Despite its focus on relief, he says the movement now has several thousand
fighters in its armed wing, organized into various companies and brigades.
He stresses that the fighters answer to the movement’s leadership council,
and it is therefore in a position to lead a much-needed dialogue between
the various factions on the ground.

*Unrecognized Opposition*

Al-Radeef is one of several opposition movements that have emerged and
acquired powerful influence on the ground in Syria while barely attracting
any media attention – in stark contrast to the high-profile opposition
figures and spokespeople who wield little actual influence.

Its founders included professionals and business people, including
physicians, lawyers, small merchants and owners of large enterprises. Many
were jailed after joining the ranks of the revolution. Those still free
remain active in supporting the fighters with money, arms, food, medical
supplies and whatever other aid they can secure.

Foreign meddling has caused additional problems for the revolution, by
taking decisions on its behalf and using it as a bargaining-chip in
negotiations with the regime.The group is strongly critical of
foreign-backed exile politicians, who they say present themselves as
alternatives to the regime despite having lived outside the country for
decades. They view their foreign sponsors as constraining their freedom to
make policy, unlike the opposition activists inside the country who “live
the revolution and smell the blood that is shed.”

A political document produced by al-Radeef on “Syria in the post-Assad
stage” stressed the need for a “rational and realistic dialogue” between
all factions involved in the revolution in order to agree on a unified
stance against the regime, which it said would be a valuable political
gain. It charged that foreign meddling has caused additional problems for
the revolution, by taking decisions on its behalf and using it as a
bargaining-chip in negotiations with the regime itself.

Al-Radeef maintains that history shows that revolutions only ever succeed
when armed insurrection is combined with political action. Taking up arms
is a means of helping secure political conditions for a successful dialogue
that advances the revolution’s interests and fulfills its goals.
Accordingly, they see it as their duty to prevent further bargaining in the
revolution, and to win back its ability to chart its own course.

This article is an edited translation from the Arabic Edition.
 ------------------------------
 *Source URL:*
http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/syria-alternatives-i-man-cannot-live-guns-alone
--------------

 Syria (and Beyond) Live Coverage: 109 Killed Amid Reports of "Children as
Human Shields" and a "Plainclothes Army"
Tuesday, June 12, 2012 at 7:46
James Miller in Africa, Bahrain, EA Global, EA Middle East and Turkey, Kofi
Annan, Middle East and Iran, Oman, Qatar, Radhika Coomaraswamy, Sausan
Ghosheh, Syria, United Nations, Yemen

*Claimed video of plainclothes militia, "shabiha", being instructed by the
Syrian military in firing of artillery*

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=URrZXTSKLiQ&feature=player_embedded

*See also Syria (and Beyond) Live Coverage: A Regime on Its Last
Legs?<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/2012/6/11/syria-and-beyond-live-coverage-a-regime-on-its-last-legs.html>
Syria Opinion: The Vatican's Dangerous Game On "Persecution" Plays Into
Assad's 
Hands<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/2012/6/11/syria-opinion-the-vaticans-dangerous-game-on-persecution-pla.html>
*
 ------------------------------

2023 GMT: *Syria.* The battles near Homs are heating up, and the Free
Syrian Army seems to be making significant headway:

 edward dark @*edwardedark* <https://twitter.com/edwardedark>

FSA back in Baba Amro, Homs - stunning combat footage with tank destroyed
youtube.com/watch?v=nZI7xS… <http://t.co/wUpttZv2>
youtube.com/watch?v=JdTVoB… <http://t.co/FN76FnRJ>
#*Syria*<https://twitter.com/search/%23Syria>
 12 Jun 12 <https://twitter.com/edwardedark/statuses/212553026945294337>

2003 GMT: *Tunisia.* The Ministries of Interior and Defense have declared a
night-time 
curfew<http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/12/us-tunisia-salafis-curfew-idUSBRE85B1A720120612>in
the capital Tunis and seven other suburbs and cities following clashes
with Salafi Islamists and other protesters angered by an art exhibition
they say insults Muslims (see 1234 GMT).

The curfew begins at 9 p.m. and ends at 5 a.m. and will be enforced
throughout the capital, the suburbs of Ben Arouss, Ariana, and Manouba, and
the cities of Sousse, Monastir, Jendouba and Ben Guerdane.

Minister of Interior Ali Larayedh told Parliament earlier on Tuesday that
he expected the violence to continue in the coming days.

1953 GMT: *Syria.* Activists report 56 dead today, including 16 in Deir Ez
Zor Province, 15 in Aleppo Province, and 12 in Homs Province.

1849 GMT: *Syria.* Helicopters have also reportedly been
used<http://www.facebook.com/LCCSy/posts/382995041759314>in Kherbat al
Ghazali, north of Daraa (
map<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=32.697177,36.271362&spn=0.807808,1.454315&iwloc=0004c24ae9bf3e3a400bd>).
It appears that the Syrian regime is growing more desperate to make quick
gains before the meeting between Russia and the US in moscow:

1832 GMT: *Syria.* Blogger Bjørn H Jespersen has been recording and
categorizing
the weapons used by the Syrian
military<http://board-temporary.blogspot.com/2012/02/weapons-used-on-homs.html>and
the shabiha in Syria. One observation --- the columns of vehicles and
weapons being deployed to Homs differs greatly from those used recently,
consisting of lighter weapons and trucks outfitted with guns, in contrast
to the columns of armored tanks and armored personnel carriers we're
accustomed to seeing:

"The column in this video is in stark contrast to the columns shown in the
leaked videos in the section below (from June 5.), and my immediate
thoughts are that the attempt to bring these weapons to use might have to
do with a number of factors. One could be that the regime has lost a large
number of its BMPs and tanks. Not that I believe the number they have lost
in itself is critical, but the number of tank-crews lost might have started
to be. Also since the title of the video says "...Al Shabiha reinforcements
coming to Homs..." this could be seen as a way to arm this group of loyal
militia-like personnel more heavily, instead of risking defections by using
the ordinary soldiers."

Perhaps Jespersen, who has clearly done his homework, is on to something.
Perhaps the Syrian military is afraid of defections, and so is sending less
powerful equipment into battle so that if it did disappear into the hands
of the insurgents it would not pose as strong a threat. Perhaps the Syrian
tank crews are also demoralized at the sharp increase in casualties and
destroyed armored vehicles, and is hoping to stem that tide.

This could also explain the use of helicopters in places like Homs. So far,
the insurgents have not found a way to effectively combat the Syrian air
force.

1809 GMT: *Syria.* The Syrian government may have verbally attacked the US
(see previous entry) but the UN Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping
Operations, Herve Ladsous, has verbally attacked the government of
Syria<http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=273623>.
In fact, there are a series of revelations this hour from the UN:

   - According to Ladsous, the government of Syria is responsible for
   artillery strikes, tanks, and now helicopters to directly attack civilians.
   - UN monitors were directly and purposefully shot at while trying to
   reach Haffeh: Ladsous said, "One of our observers was almost injured... We
   thought he was injured, but in fact the bullet did not penetrate (him) but
   hit his boot." Ladsous also said that there were many bullet holes in the
   UN's cars.
   - Syria is now in a full scale civil war, according to Landsous.

However, the BBC's Paul Danahar, just returning from Syria, takes issue
with that last assessment:

 Paul Danahar

   - ✔

@*pdanahar* <https://twitter.com/pdanahar>

MT “@*HalaGorani* <https://twitter.com/HalaGorani>: AFP: "UN peacekeeping
chief says Syria now in full a civil war."” no it isn't yet, too much of
country not actually at war
12 Jun 12 <https://twitter.com/pdanahar/statuses/212585689773121537>

  Paul Danahar

   - ✔

@*pdanahar* <https://twitter.com/pdanahar>

UN monitors are unarmed & as saw in
#*Homs*<https://twitter.com/search/%23Homs>don't go in if fighting
going on. If 'full- scale' war they'd never leave
their hotel in #*Damascus* <https://twitter.com/search/%23Damascus>
12 Jun 12 <https://twitter.com/pdanahar/statuses/212596781534547969>

However, the surprises from the UN just keep coming this afternoon. Kofi
Annan, chief architect of the failed peace plan, through his spokesman
stated that he believed that helicopters have been used for the first
time<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/middle-east-live/2012/jun/12/syria-bashar-al-assad#block-22>against
the civilian populace:

*

Yes, if they had been used before, it has not been documented; this time it
has been documented. Our observers have videotaped helicopters in the skies
with fire coming out of them; so whether [they are] helicopters with
machine guns on them, or helicopter gunships … we have not been able to
make that distinction yet but yes, they are being used and we have observed
them being used.
*

We'd disagree with this assessment, as in the last several months
helicopters have been video taped while firing at ground targets north of
Aleppo. That video, while taken by sources we believe were reliable, were
taken by amateur video. *The Guardian* provides THIS video, however, which
is edited together from footage verified by the
UN<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/middle-east-live/2012/jun/12/syria-bashar-al-assad#block-21>.
They also provide a description below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFPVYTmHgjs&feature=player_embedded


*

In Homs where increased and intensified fighting is taking place,smoke
drift into the sky from buildings and houses hit by shelling. Next the
observers traveled to Talbiseh and al-Rastan,north of Homs city. The roads
were empty and all shops, garages, health centers were closed. The bridge
on the highway between Talbiseh and al-Rastan appeared shelled.

A Syrian opposition flag - with three stars - draped from the bridge as the
smoke and fire continued to burn. UN military observers on patrol to these
towns noticed helicopters firing.

There was fresh blood on corridors and outside some of the houses. The UN
patrol team spoke with both side - Syrian army soldiers and oppositions
free Syrian army - to try and ascertain the extent of this increased heavy
weapons and attacks.

*

*The Guardian* also provides video, picture, and testimonial
evidence<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/middle-east-live/2012/jun/12/syria-bashar-al-assad#block-20>that
assault helicopters have fired Russian-made missiles at civilian areas
in Homs.

1708 GMT: *Syria.* The Foreign Ministry has condemned the US for "blatant
interference <http://www.sana.sy/eng/21/2012/06/12/424977.htm> in the
internal affairs of Syria, its open support for terrorists, covering up
terrorists' crimes, distorting facts about Syria at the United Nations, and
extorting countries and the international community to beleaguer Syria".

The unnamed source, quoted by State news agency SANA, specifically
criticised the State Department for a declaration of concern on Monday
about the situation in several cities. The American spokeswoman raised the
possibility of a "massacre" in al-Haffeh, the town in Latakia Province
currently besieged by regime forces.

The Foreign Ministry claimed that the "massacre" could actually be
committed by "armed groups", citing the claimed interception of a phone
call between insurgents in Turkey and Syria.

1503 GMT: *Syria.* In Bianoun, north of Anadan, shells are also falling
today (click here for a
map<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=36.2786,37.236786&spn=0.386922,0.727158&iwloc=0004c247be088ebd85e37>,
and see update at 1310
GMT<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/2012/6/12/syria-and-beyond-live-coverage-109-killed-amid-reports-of-ch.html#1310>).
It appears that once again the cluster of suburbs north of Syria's largest
city are receiving heavy bombardment. As we've seen in the past, the reason
for the danger and death to the north may have nothing to do with protests
or insurgents there, but may have more to do with discouraging protests
inside Aleppo, a city that currently has shells screaming overhead:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvvhb3D03Lc&feature=player_embedded



1439 GMT: *Syria.* We're still watching the live-stream from
Homs<http://bambuser.com/v/2739702>,
and the gunfire and explosions are still intense. Unfortunately, there are
serious connection problems, and the video keeps stopping. Then again, the
fact that the video has gone live at all, during this intense bombardment,
is a miracle.

However, this is not the only video camera in Homs. Another angle shows
today's shelling near the Khalid ibn Walid
mosque<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=34.745703,36.73502&spn=0.098596,0.181789&iwloc=0004c24774b060d4ba706>in
central Homs, very close to where the livestream appears to be coming
from:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LBzlxnPbgjU&feature=player_embedded





Homes burn in the Juret al Shayah
district<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=34.980502,37.699585&spn=3.145777,5.817261&iwloc=A>,
west of the mosque:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8EPIuuDgXY&feature=player_embedded



Al 
Rastan<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=34.837477,36.947021&spn=0.787879,1.454315&iwloc=0004c247893dbf257c976>,
north of Homs, a badly beaten opposition stronghold, was also shelled today:

1429 GMT: *Syria.* According to the Associated Press, 10 people were killed
in Deir Ez 
Zor<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=35.367776,40.24292&spn=0.78277,1.454315&iwloc=0004c2475141b6b7cdc11>early
this morning when a mortar
fell in the middle of a
protest<http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g3MfRpOxhsozDh8dOQAEM5x13uTQ?docId=ea7bcd66d22f45ea906285bd95624b18>
:

Amateur video of the mortar attack in Deir el-Zour showed dead people in a
street as survivors screamed in panic and tried to remove their bodies.
Other videos showed some of the wounded receiving treatment at a hospital.
The Local Coordination Committees activist group and the Britain-based
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 10 died in the barrage.

1420 GMT: *Libya.* A man has been injured in a
bombing<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/middle-east-live/2012/jun/12/syria-bashar-al-assad#block-15>at
the headquarters for the International Committee of the Red Cross in
Misurata.

An ICRC spokesman said: "The ICRC confirms that an explosion occurred in
our Misrata office at 3.50am on 12 June. The nature of the explosion is
still not verified yet, but the authorities were informed and were on site
early at five in the morning."

>em?The Guardian has also posted information about a suspected militant
group that may be responsible for the
attack<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/middle-east-live/2012/jun/12/syria-bashar-al-assad#block-16>
.

1354 GMT: *Syria.* Some of the strongest allegations of regime wrongdoing
to emerge in recent weeks are coming from Al
Haffeh<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=35.586968,36.161499&spn=0.780639,1.454315&iwloc=0004c246d62bb5501b37a>,
in Lattakia province. According to a UN spokesperson, the area is far too
dangerous<http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/nationworld/sns-rt-us-syria-crisis-haffehbre85b0ow-20120612,0,4800085.story>to
allow UN monitors into the city:

"The security situation is not safe for them to enter. They were at the
last checkpoint and the government said 'you can go through', but we deemed
it unsafe," Sausan Ghosheh told Reuters by phone from Damascus.

1342 GMT: *Syria.* Beyond our live-streaming video that we posted in a
previous entry, Al Jazeera has spoken with Activist Hadi al-Abdallah,
living in Homs, who reports that many districts are heavily shelled, by
artillery, mortars, and helicopters:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSt_VQWf9HQ&feature=player_embedded



Abdallah says that perhaps more than 60 are already wounded today, and the
field hospitals have no resources to help them. Many, he says, will die
without surgery, but the doctors cannot move into the affected
neighborhoods because of the shelling, and the shabiha and security forces
who prevent aid from entering Homs.

1332 GMT: *Syria.* According to activists on the ground, the central
districts of Qusayr, south of Homs, are being shelled by artillery as well
as helicopter gunships today.
Video<http://www.facebook.com/LCCSy/posts/458465197500010>also appears
to show a helicopter in action, and shells landing close to a
Christian church in the center of the city
(map<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=34.505672,36.580589&spn=0.01236,0.022724&iwloc=0004c24666df0a5936370>
):

1310 GMT: *Syria.* According to multiple sources, the town of
Anadan<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=36.284689,37.082634&spn=0.193446,0.363579>,
a few kilometers north of Aleppo, has been heavily shelled today. The LCCS
reports that crops are now on
fire<http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=478460285514446&set=a.221856221174855.74557.217848338242310&type=1>,
the result of the explosions, a report we've been hearing more frequently
in recent days. Interestingly, the timing of the shelling may have been
tied to a protest on the campus of Aleppo University. When the artillery
positions in southern Aleppo fire on the northern suburbs, the shells pass
directly over the University, a stark warning to the protesters to stay in
line.

And what happens after those shells land? Heartbreaking video shows 2 dead
toddlers, a crying infant with a severe injury, and an injured man, being
treated in a field hospital, reportedly today in Anadan. The
video<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_mnkWUvwLFU>is a sad reminder of
the human cost of this conflict, and isn't easy to
watch. While we can;t verify the video, it appears to match reports carried
by activists and the Al Jazeera Arabic network. Another graphic
video<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oij1rtsp4ag&feature=youtu.be>,
from a different source, claims to show more dead adults in the town.

1302 GMT: *Syria.* We're watching the live-stream from
Homs<http://bambuser.com/v/2739380>(see the last entry and click on
the link to see the latest video feed).
The shelling has intensified, with huge explosions happening regularly
perhaps only a few hundred meters away from the camera. Heavy smoke is also
rising from the city, and there is sporadic gunfire.

1254 GMT: *Syrian.* A day after perhaps several thousand shells fell on the
city of Homs, perhaps the heaviest shelling so far, we are once again
receiving a live-video stream <http://bambuser.com/v/2739324>, which
matches some eyewitness reports, of heavy shelling of central
Homs<https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215253448853172848529.0004c24627be88e8811d0&msa=0&ll=34.745703,36.73502&spn=0.098596,0.181789&iwloc=0004c24774b060d4ba706>
:

 Human Rights Watch presents the downside of Qatar's successful
bid<http://www.hrw.org/embargo/node/107841?signature=98030612146326550c609a5aaf964422&suid=6>to
host the 2022 World Cup in football.

*

Underpinning this push is a vast army of migrant workers, who comprise a
staggering 94 percent of Qatar’s workforce --- 1.2 million of its 1.7
million residents --- the highest percentage of migrants to citizens in the
world. Qatar’s World Cup selection means that worker recruitment will reach
new heights: media have reported that over a million additional workers may
be needed to carry out World Cup-related construction.

Yet the deeply problematic working conditions of migrant workers throughout
the country mean that realizing Qatar’s World Cup vision may depend on
their abuse and exploitation unless adequate measures are taken to address
the human rights problems widespread in the construction industry in Qatar.

This report documents pervasive employer exploitation and abuse of workers
in Qatar’s construction industry, made possible by an inadequate legal and
regulatory framework that grants employers extensive control over workers
and prohibits migrant workers from exercising their rights to free
association and collective bargaining. It also addresses the government’s
failure to enforce those laws that at least on paper are designed to
protect worker rights. It examines why violations of workers’ rights go
largely undetected, and looks at the barriers that workers face in
reporting complaints or seeking redress.

Based on interviews with 73 migrant construction workers in Qatar, industry
employers, government officials, diplomats, and labor attachésfrom major
labor-sending countries, journalists, academics, and worker advocates, as
well as correspondence with both government officials and companies, it
examines key factors that trap workers in exploitative jobs, including
exorbitant recruitment fees, and the restrictive kafala (sponsorship)
system that prevents them from changing jobs or leaving the country without
a sponsor’s permission. In the worst cases, workers described conditions
that amounted to forced labor. At the request of the workers we spoke to,
this report does not name their employers.*

 1113 GMT: *Syria*. Insurgents have said they are are trying to smuggle out
civilians trapped in fierce fighting in al-Haffeh in Lattakia Province.

Three fighters contacted by phone said hundreds of insurgents are fighting
a tank and helicopter-backed assault in rugged mountains near the
Mediterranean coast. They said they sent civilians to the outskirts of
Haffeh when the siege began last week, but tehse areas now under fire,
surrounded by the army and pro-regime militia.

"Every few days we manage to open a route to get out the wounded, so some
families were able to escape yesterday," said one rebel who called himself
Abdulwudud. "We're trying to move the families all out so they can flee to
Turkey," about 25 kilometres (15 miles) away.

0946 GMT: *Oman*. Omani riot police detained 29
activists<http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/witnesses-omani-police-detain-activists-protest>during
Monday's protest near police headquarters in Muscat, demanding the
release of prisoners and faster reforms.

Witnesses said activists with placards lined up a road opposite the
headquarters and were quickly surrounded by police. "They put them on a bus
and took them away," Zaher al-Abri, a local journalist at the scene, said.
"Some were handcuffed but most were not." He reported seven women and 22
men had been taken away.

Activists said Monday's protest was the third since Saturday. The previous
two ended peacefully with officials only threatening to deploy riot police.

Meanwhile, authorities have arrested 10
activists<http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/oman/oman-crackdown-on-dissent-nets-poet-and-blogger-1.1034411#.T9bcf6zjl_d.twitter>in
a series of detentions. Six people were seized on Friday night,
including blogger Hassan Rukaishi, authors Hammoud Al Rashedi and Nabhan Al
Hanashi. and poet Hamad Al Kharusi.

0752 GMT: *Yemen*. Yemeni forces have
re-captured<http://english.alarabiya.net/articles/2012/06/12/220144.html>the
town of Jaar in the south of the country from insurgents.

Government troops and allied tribesmen began an offensive last month to
retake large parts of Abyan Province held by the insurgents since last year.

The Ministry said the army, backed by local fighters from popular
committees set up during last year's uprising against President Saleh's
rule, entered the city on Tuesday after heavy fighting that killed at least
20 insurgents and four Yemeni soldiers.

A spokesman for the insurgency Ansar al-Sharia said the army had taken
control of the town of more than 100,000 people and said a statement would
be issued later. Residents said the militants fled under cover of darkness,
leaving behind flyers asking inhabitants to forgive them and asserting that
they did not want to “cause any harm to Jaar and its inhabitants.”

Armoured vehicles moved into the center of Jaar hours after al-Qaeda
militants withdrew towards the nearby town of Shuqra, when “fighting with
the army became fiercer,” one resident said.

0745 GMT: *Syria*. The Local Coordination Committees of Syria are reporting 13
people killed so far today <http://www.lccsyria.org/8888>, 11 in Deir Ez
Zor Province.

For the first time, United Nations monitors are reporting fire from Syrian
helicopters on insurgent
positions<http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/12/us-syria-crisis-idUSBRE84S0P020120612>
.

"UN observers reported heavy fighting in Rastan and Talbiseh, north of
(Homs), with artillery and mortar shelling, as well as firing from
helicopters, machine guns and smaller arms," UN spokeswoman Sausan Ghosheh
said.

UN envoy Kofi Annan said he was gravely concerned about violence in Homs
and in al-Haffeh, a town in Lattakia Province on the coast.

CNN dramatically reports that we now have "A Battle for Syria's Cities":

0645 GMT: *Syria*. A sometimes frantic day on Monday with continued
shelling of towns and cities such as Homs, battles between regime forces
and insurgents. The Local Coordination Committees of Syria reported 109
people killed <http://www.lccsyria.org/8884> by the security forces,
including 36 in Idlib Province, 19 in Deir Ez Zor Province, 17 in Homs
Province, and 15 in Hama Province.

A United Nations report on "Children in
Conflict"<http://www.un.org/children/conflict/_documents/A66782.pdf>included
the Syrian regime among its worst offenders against the young,
documenting
interrogations, executions, and
detentions<http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=408167>
.

In one incident in March, Government forces allegedly rounded up dozens of
boys aged eight to 13 before a four-day attack on the village of Ayn
l'Arouz in Idlib Province: "[The children were] used by soldiers and
militia members as human shields, placing them in front of the windows of
buses carrying military personnel into the raid on the village."

"Eventually, the village was reportedly left burned and four out of the 34
detainees were shot and burned, including the two boys aged 14 and 16
years," the report said.

UN special representative Radhika Coomaraswamy declared, "Rarely, have I
seen such brutality against children as in Syria, where girls and boys are
detained, tortured, executed, and used as human shields."

And then there is the question of whether plainsclothes shabiha --- the
militia recently noted for their alleged role in mass killings in towns and
villages like Houla and al-Qubair --- are working alongside the Syrian
military. Visual evidence for the possibility emerged on Monday, with
claimed footage of shabiha receiving instructions from uniformed personnel
on how to fire artillery (see top of entry).
Article originally appeared on EA WorldView (http://www.enduringamerica.com/).


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to