Los Angeles Times

U.N. peacekeepe­rs reported seized by Syrian insurgents

The 21 captives will be held until Assad’s forces leave a nearby area, the rebels say.

- By Patrick J. McDonnell patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Nabih Bulos in Amman, Jordan, and Batsheva Sobelman of The Times’ Jerusalem bureau contribute­d to this report.

BEIRUT — Twenty-one members of a United Nations peacekeepi­ng force in southern Syria near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights were taken captive Wednesday, apparently by armed rebels, according to the U.N. and opposition activists.

The action represents a potentiall­y serious escalation of the violence and chaos sweeping Syria, where an armed insurgency seeking to topple the government of President Bashar Assad is nearing its second year.

Amateur video purportedl­y from the scene shows armed men flanking three white vehicles emblazoned with U.N. logos.

The U.N. peacekeepe­rs’ ‘freedom of movement and safety and security must be respected by all parties.’

— Ban Ki-moon,

U.N. secretary-general

A man identified as a spokesman for a rebel brigade known as the Martyrs of Yarmouk said in the video that the U.N. personnel would not be released until the Syrian military leaves the vicinity of a nearby village called Jamla, the scene of recent clashes.

If the Syrian forces do not pull back within 24 hours, the rebel spokesman said, the U.N. personnel would be treated as “prisoners of war.” He accused the U.N. of collaborat­ing with Syrian forces.

There was no immediate indication that anyone was injured as the peacekeepe­rs were seized, the U.N. said.

The Security Council and a spokesman for SecretaryG­eneral Ban Ki-moon issued statements condemning the “detention” and demanding the immediate release of the monitors. The peacekeepe­rs’ “freedom of movement and safety and security must be respected by all parties,” the statement from the secretaryg­eneral’s office said.

The incident apparently occurred when about 30 “armed fighters” detained a convoy of peacekeepe­rs from the U.N. Disengagem­ent Observer Force as the group was on a regular supply mission near an observatio­n post, the U.N. said.

All or most of the peacekeepe­rs are believed to be from the Philippine­s, and the U.N. has dispatched a team in the region to assess the situation.

The incident comes at a time of increasing tensions near the Golan Heights, as the battles raging in much of Syria have come close to the disputed area recently. Some Syrian artillery shells have landed on the Israeliocc­upied side.

On Monday, Israel warned the Security Council that it could not be expected to “stand idle” as Syrian shells continue to land on its territory.

The 1,011-member U.N. observer force has been in the area since 1974, after the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Both sides agreed to a U.N. presence to monitor the ceasefire line between Israeli and Syrian forces. Before the uprising in Syria, the zone had been relatively peaceful for decades.

Israel seized the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Middle East War and later annexed the mountainou­s plateau in a move never recognized by the internatio­nal community.

Meanwhile, the U.N. said Wednesday that the number of Syrians who have f led their homeland has officially exceeded 1 million. The U.N. refugee chief warned that Syria was “spiraling toward full-scale disaster.”

The milestone had long been anticipate­d as the inf lux of refugees has continued inexorably, straining the resources of neighborin­g nations, especially Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq.

In Syria, the violence is said to have displaced an additional 2-million-plus people from their homes.

Aid groups and internatio­nal observers have been sounding alarms for months about what they call a humanitari­an catastroph­e. In fact, officials say many more than 1 million people have fled Syria; the official figures include only those who have registered with the U.N. as refugees or are in the process of registerin­g. Large numbers have not registered.

The Syrian conf lict erupted in March 2011 with antigovern­ment protests and soon became an all-out armed rebellion.

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