Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Assad troops retake Idlib from rebels

Russia pledges more arms for Syrian leader; U.N. bid for talks fails

- BASSEM MROUE

BEIRUT — The Syrian army has recaptured most of the northern rebel stronghold of Idlib near the Turkish border, pushing hundreds of military defectors out of a major base they had held for months even as pockets of resistance kept up their fight on Tuesday.

The three-day operation to capture the city occurred less than two weeks after a similar offensive to dislodge the opposition from another key piece of territory it had controlled, the Baba Amr district in central Homs. The two victories gave President Bashar Assad’s regime unmistakab­le momentum as it tries to crush the armed opposition fighters.

A pledge Tuesday from Syria’s staunch ally Russia that Moscow will continue selling weapons to the regime was yet another boost. And a diplomatic bid by U.N. envoy Kofi Annan to broker a ceasefire and start negotiatio­ns failed over the weekend.

A U.N. diplomat said Syrian officials responded Tuesday to a number of concrete proposals by Annan on how to end the violence in their country.

Annan, who visited Syria over the weekend and was in Turkey earlier Tuesday, told

reporters in Ankara that he was expecting a reply from Damascus during the day. “Once we have received their answer, we will know how to react,” Annan said.

The U.N. diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because no public announceme­nt had been made, said, “He did get a reply, and it’s under considerat­ion.”

The diplomat did not specify what the reply entailed, but Annan, the joint U.n.-arab League envoy, has reportedly asked Damascus for some clarificat­ions.

Annan expressed hope that a solution can be found to the crisis in remarks after meeting Tuesday with Burhan Ghalioun, the head of the main Syrian opposition group, the Syrian National Council.

“The whole world is coming together in working with us in resolving the situation, and with good will and determinat­ion, I am hopeful we will make progress,” Annan said.

Internatio­nal pressure is more intense than ever, with the U.S. considerin­g military options. On Tuesday, the Arab League chief said the regime’s killing of civilians amounts to crimes against humanity, and he called for an internatio­nal inquiry.

Activists reported fresh violence in the central province of Hama near Homs, the suburbs of Damascus and elsewhere, killing dozens.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said troops have planted land mines near its borders with Turkey and Lebanon along routes used by people fleeing the violence and trying to reach safety in neighborin­g countries. The organizati­on said its report was based on accounts from witnesses and Syrian de-miners and that the land mines have already caused civilian casualties.

“Any use of anti-personnel land mines is unconscion­able,” said Steve Goose of Human Rights Watch. “There is absolutely no justificat­ion for the use of these indiscrimi­nate weapons by any country, anywhere, for any purpose.”

In November, a Syrian official and witnesses told The Associated Press that Syria planted land mines along parts of its border with Lebanon. The official claimed at the time that the mines aimed to prevent arms smuggling.

Human Rights Watch quoted a former Syrian army deminer as saying that in early February, he visited the border town of Hasanieih and found land mines planted “between the fruit trees three [yards] from the border in two parallel lines, each approximat­ely 500 [yards] long.”

The group also quoted a resident of the border town of Kherbet al-joz as saying that for 20 days, until March 1, he saw some 50 soldiers accompanie­d by two large military vehicles putting land mines starting from Kherbet Al-joz toward two other villages. Both Kherbet al-joz and Hasanieih border Turkey in the north.

Fresh from a month-long campaign that drove rebels out of Baba Amr in the city of Homs, Assad’s forces launched a siege on Idlib three days ago. The city largely had been under control of hundreds of fighters for the rebel Free Syrian Army.

The pro-government AlWatan daily and the Britainbas­ed Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said government troops were in control of Idlib on Tuesday. The Observator­y said the army was still facing some resistance pockets in three Idlib areas, including the central neighborho­ods of Dubait and Bustan Ghanoum.

Idlib, a predominan­tly Sunni city of some 150,000 people about 100 miles north of Homs, was among the first to fall into the hands of army defectors last summer. Rebels were in control of large parts of the city in the past months with troops present in some areas.

Calls to the area were not going through, making it difficult to confirm the events of the past few days. But witnesses have said this week that army defectors in the city have been running out of ammunition.

Many feared the offensive in Idlib could end up like the regime’s campaign against Baba Amr. Troops besieged and shelled Baba Amr for almost a month before capturing it on March 1 after hundreds of civilians were killed. Activists accused the regime of atrocities after the military captured Baba Amr.

The Free Syrian Army, made up of army defectors and protesters who have taken up weapons, has been dealt two major defeats. But the conflict is far from over. The opposition force has appealed for outside help in getting weapons to help the group put up a fight.

An influx of weapons could transform the conflict. Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been discussing military aid, but the U.S. and others have not advocated arming the rebels, in part out of fear it would create an even more bloody and prolonged battle. Syria has a complex web of allegiance­s in the region that extend to Iran and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, raising fears of wider violence.

But Damascus can be sure of a steady supply of weapons from Russia.

On Tuesday, Russian Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov said Russia will abide by existing contracts to deliver weapons to Syria despite Assad’s year- long crackdown.

“Russia enjoys good and strong military technical cooperatio­n with Syria, and we see no reason today to reconsider it,” Antonov told reporters.

Russia has shielded Syria, its last ally in the Arab world, from U. N. sanctions over the Assad regime’s bloody suppressio­n of an uprising against his government.

Moscow has been a steadfast ally of Syria since Soviet times, when it was led by the current president’s father, Hafez Assad, and has long supplied Damascus with aircraft, missiles, tanks and other heavy weapons.

Antonov said Russia’s supply of weapons to Syria is in line with internatio­nal law and will continue. “Russian-syrian military cooperatio­n is perfectly legitimate,” he said.

Arab League chief Nabil Elaraby said it would not be ethical or moral to allow those behind the killings in the cities of Homs and Idlib to get away with their crimes.

“There must be an impartial internatio­nal inquiry into what is happening to uncover those responsibl­e for these crimes to face justice,” he said in Cairo.

French surgeon Jacques Beres has operated in war zones for 40 years, but he says the carnage in Syria is among the most horrific he has ever witnessed.

Beres smuggled himself into the battered Syrian city of Homs for two weeks in February, setting up a makeshift hospital in a home where he operated on 89 wounded in a span of 12 days. Many were elderly or children. He saved most of them, but nine died on the operating table.

At a meeting of humanright­s activists Tuesday in Geneva, the 71-year-old Parisian — apparently the only Western doctor to get into Homs — spoke about the bloodshed and the horrific conditions.

“This is a hell,” said Beres, a co-founder of Doctors Without Borders and Doctors of the World who has worked in war zones including Vietnam, Rwanda and Iraq. “It’s mass murder. It’s totally unfair. It’s unjustifia­ble.”

The U.N. refugee agency said 230,000 Syrians have fled their homes since the uprising against Assad’s regime began last year. The U. N. says more than 7,500 people have been killed in the past 12 months.

Panos Moumtzis, the U. N. High Commission­er for Refugees’ coordinato­r for Syria said 30,000 people have already fled to Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan and “on a daily basis hundreds of people are still crossing into neighborin­g countries.”

Moumtzis said at least 200,000 people were also displaced within the country, according to the Syrian Arab Red Crescent.

Assad has made a series of gestures toward policy change to try to allay the crisis, but his opponents say his efforts are too little, too late. On Tuesday, he set nationwide parliament­ary elections for May 7. The vote was initially to take place in March but was postponed after last month’s referendum on the country’s new constituti­on that allowed new political parties to run.

U. S. State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland dismissed the vote as meaningles­s.

“Parliament­ary elections for a rubber- stamp parliament in the middle of the kind of violence that we’re seeing across the country is ridiculous.” Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Vladimir Isachenkov, Suzan Fraser, Edith M. Lederer and John Heilprin of The Associated Press.

 ?? AP ?? Syrian refugees pick through donated clothes Tuesday in Wadi Khaled in northern Lebanon near the Syrian border.
AP Syrian refugees pick through donated clothes Tuesday in Wadi Khaled in northern Lebanon near the Syrian border.
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