Dulu Hamas dan Fatah jg saling bantai secara biadab.

Niruin contoh dari keluarga nabi yg saling bantai dgn biadabnya,
misalnya si Husein dipotong kepalanya lalu ditancapkan di tombak,
hehehe...



On 5/20/13, Bukan Pedanda <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> Lihat videonya..
>
> --
>
>
> http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidesyria/2013/05/201351965828852287.html
>
> Fighting on the ground in Syria is as fierce as ever. It has been
> messy from the start, but now the battle is further complicated in the
> face of an often vicious propaganda war between the government and the
> rebels.
> The conflict has been unfolding for more than two years now, and much of the
> focus has been on what the Syrian government, its army, and its
> supporters are doing to their own people.
> Most recently, pro-government militias were accused of killing as many as
> 200 people in the town of Baniyas.
> Our position in this case is very clear, we will name the crime as a
> crime and we will not give any cover to anyone who commits them.
> Especially the crimes that violates the very principles of humanity and
> of our revolution.
> Louay al-Mokdad, political and media coordinator for FSA
> It is one of several such accusations, but the al-Assad government
> has never acknowledged any of them. They say all operations target what
> they call "terrorists".
> But this is a war, and war has two sides. Therefore, the opposition rebels
> can be just as guilty of atrocities.
> In Syria in April, the head of one opposition group, al-Nusra Front,
> formally pledged allegiance to the al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.
> Now there are reports that a large numbers of fighters from the
> opposition Free Syria Army (FSA) - even entire units in some cases - are
> defecting to al-Nusra.
> Al-Nusra was established in January 2012 and since then has used car
> bombs and suicide attacks in its efforts to bring down the al-Assad
> government. In December, the US state department put the group on its
> list of terrorist organisations.
> And this week, the FSA faced criticism after a video was released
> that apparently shows a rebel commander cannibalising the body of a
> government soldier.
> When the video became public, the opposition Syrian National Council
> (SNC) released a statement, saying: "The Free Syrian Army is a national
> army above all ... formed to defend civilians and deliver the Syrian
> people from the mentality of revenge and crime."
> The SNC said it "completely rejects the ill-treatment of the wounded
> and the disfigurement of the dead". It also promised that if the video
> is confirmed to be genuine, the perpetrator will face justice.
> Most serious analysts recognise that this is not in fact an
> indigenous movement who are protesting the Assad government but an
> attempt [by] the western powers to dismantle Syria in accordance with a
> plan designed by the Israelis.
> James Fetzer,  professor emeritus at the University of Minnesota
> But the FSA has made similar promises before, following reports of summary
> executions of al-Assad supporters.
> Rights groups like Human Rights Watch (HRW) remain unconvinced.
> "It is not enough for Syria’s opposition to condemn such behaviour or blame
> it on violence by the government. The opposition forces need to
> act firmly to stop such abuses," said Nadim Houry, HRW's Middle East
> deputy director.
> "One important way to stop Syria’s daily horrors, from beheadings to
> mutilations to executions, is to strip all sides from their sense of
> impunity.
> "These atrocities are shocking but so is the obstruction of some
> Security Council members that still do not support an ICC referral for
> all sides," he said.
> The United Nations is now calling for a full investigation into reports of
> atrocities on both sides.
> So, is this week's report of abuse merely an isolated incident, or
> has the opposition committed more such atrocities? And despite its
> shocking nature, is it any worse than what the government has been
> doing?
> To discuss this, Inside Syria, with presenter Kamahl Santamaria, is joined
> by guests: Rania Abouzeid, the Middle East correspondent for Time magazine;
> James Fetzer, a professor emeritus at the University of Minnesota; and
> Louay al-Mokdad, the political and media coordinator for the Free Syrian
> Army.
> "This is a very personal war, being fought often by people who
> were once neighbours - it's dehumanising .... It also comes against a
> backdrop of these other very disturbing images that we have seen of
> Baniyas of what looked like hundreds of people killed ... who were dead
> and basically tossed in the corner against the wall like last week's
> trash - so it's a very, very ugly war."
> - Rania Abouzeid, Time magazine correspondent
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>


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