Sejak islam itu timbul maka mereka tidak henti-hentinya saling berbunuhan...

Islam itu, saya bilang dan saya ulang adalah malapetaka untuk ummat manusia, 
artinya juga malapetaka untuk orang Islam sendiri.


الخميس 02 ذو 
الحجة 1433هـ - 18 
أكتوبر 2012م

Peace envoy warns Syrian conflict could set region `ablaze'
U.N.-Arab League peace envoy for Syria Lakhdar Brahimi speaks during a news 
conference after meeting with Lebanon's Prime Minister Najib Mikati (not 
pictured) at the government palace in Beirut October 17, 2012. (Reuters)   

Al Arabiya with agencies

International peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi has warned that the Syria conflict 
risks setting the region "ablaze," as clashes broke out across the border with 
Lebanon. Even as Brahimi appeared to be winning support within Syria for a 
ceasefire, rebels shot down an army helicopter Wednesday while a fierce battle 
for the Damascus-Aleppo highway raged around the northwestern town of Maaret 
al-Numan. The U.N. and Arab League envoy warned of the conflict spreading as he 
visited neighboring Lebanon, the latest leg of a Middle East tour aimed at 
ending more than 19 months of bloodshed. "This crisis cannot remain confined 
within Syrian territory," the veteran trouble-shooter told reporters. "Either 
it is solved, or it gets worse... and sets (the region) ablaze."

Clashes in Lebanon

His words came just hours before reports of clashes across the restive 
Syria-Lebanon border.

A Lebanese security official said armed men in Lebanon used machineguns to 
shoot into Syrian territory, and the Syrian army responded with rounds fired 
from tanks and machineguns.

"The Syrian army fired shells into Lebanon after unidentified armed men opened 
fire across the border near the village of Aboudiyeh" in northern Lebanon the 
official said, adding there were no casualties.

Ever since the outbreak of the anti-regime revolt in Syria, multiple exchanges 
of fire have taken place across the border.

Lebanon has made two official complaints against the Syrian authorities over 
territorial violations, while the regime of President Bashar al-Assad accuses 
Lebanon of allowing arms and fighters to enter into Syria illegally.

Spiraling into Turkey

The conflict has at times also spilled over into neighboring Turkey. Bilateral 
tensions have soared, with Ankara taking an increasingly strident line since a 
shell fired from inside Syria killed five Turks on October 3.

A mortar bomb fired from Syria struck Turkish territory on Wednesday but caused 
no casualties, Turkish NTV reported.

Turkey struck back with retaliatory fire, as it has systematically done since 
the first incident, Anatolia news agency said.

Brahimi said a truce for the four-day Muslim Eid al-Adha holiday from October 
26 would be "a microscopic step on the road to solving the Syria crisis."

"The Syrian people, on both sides, are burying some 100 people a day," said 
Brahimi.

"Can we not ask that this toll falls for this holiday? This will not be a happy 
holiday for the Syrians, but we should at least strive to make it less sad.

"If the Syrian government accepts, and I understand there is hope, and if the 
opposition accepts," a truce would be a step "towards a more global ceasefire."

Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi, who met Brahimi on Tuesday, backed the call 
for an Eid truce and Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Ankara 
supports Brahimi's proposal.

"For us, there isn't any sacrifice too great if the blood stops flowing in 
Syria even for a day, an hour," Davutoglu told television station A Haber.

"The Arab League, Turkey and Iran have declared their support for this 
proposal," he said, adding he expected those who backed the plan to make a 
statement on Friday.

Davutoglu said the plan was also backed by major Syrian ally Iran, adding that 
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Iranian President Mahmoud 
Ahmadinejad had discussed it at a regional summit in Azerbaijan.

Death toll

Thirty thousand people have been killed in the uprising, which began with 
peaceful demonstrations and now pits mainly Sunni Muslim rebels against an 
Alawite president. There are fears of broader Middle East sectarian conflict 
between Sunni powers sympathetic to the rebels and Shiites who back Assad.

The death toll has topped 1,000 a week for at least two months as divided world 
powers have condemned the bloodshed in what has become a largely stalemated 
conflict, but failed to agree on a political solution.

Syrian officials have questioned whether the disparate rebels, who agreed on a 
joint leadership on Tuesday to encourage supporters to provide them more 
powerful weapons, could commit to or honor any ceasefire deal.

But Brahimi said opposition figures had told him any ceasefire by Assad's 
forces would be reciprocated immediately.

جميع الحقوق 
محفوظة لقناة 
العربية © 2010




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