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Friday, May 24 2013
A Future For All Syrians
THE future of democracy in Syria is the subject of many concerns: people are worried about the treatment of minorities and women, possible acts of revenge, and the likelihood of transitional justice. Some ask about universal human rights ...
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Syrian rebels vow to fight on after retreat in Aleppo

AFP ALEPPO SYRIAN rebels vowed to fight on in Aleppo a day after being driven out of a key district under heavy shellfire, which was targeting other parts of the strategic city on Friday.

That came as world powers were set to name veteran Algerian diplomat Lakhdar Brahimi as their new envoy to seek a peaceful and politically workable end to a 17-month uprising that has cost more than 21,000 lives.

A rebel commander, Hossam Abu Mohammed, said his men were still fighting in parts of Aleppo’s southwestern district of Salaheddin after most fled on Thursday under heavy bombing and advancing troops.“We’llnot let Salaheddin go,” the Free Syrian Army’s Abu Mohammed said by telephone as the third day of a government offensive to take the city raged.

The army again bombed parts of Salaheddin on Friday, as well as the Sakhur and Hanano districts of the east of the city, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, adding that the violence killed two civilians. Just before dawn, a MiG 21 fighter jet dropped four bombs on rebel positions in Hanano.

One struck the courtyard of the FSA headquarters in the neighbourhood and another a nearby house, wounding a number of people.

Angry residents shouted hostile slogans against France and the United States, saying: “No one is helping us.” “We are behind the Free Syrian Army, but it is because of them that all of this is happening,” one of them lamented.

Fighting on Thursday killed 27 people in Aleppo, 15 of them civilians, the Britain-based Observatory said.

They were among at least 191 people killed nationwide — 107 civilians, 45 rebels and 39 soldiers.

On Thursday, Abu Mohammed said fighters withdrew to the Sukari district, a bit more than a mile (1.5 kilometres) to the southeast of Salaheddin, and were preparing for a counter-attack.

Wassel Ayub, who commands the Nur al-Haq Brigade, said the FSA had withdrawn “to open a new front in Saif al-Dawla and Mashhad.” In Damascus, a security source said regime forces were “advancing quickly” towards Saif al-Dawla, immediately east of Salaheddin, but that the next big battle would be in Sukari, Syrian President Bashar al- Assad, meanwhile, appointed Health Minister Wael al-Halqi as his new premier following the defection this week of Riad Hijab, a leading Sunni Muslim in his minority Alawite-dominated regime.

Halqi served as ruling Baath party secretary from 2000 to 2004 in his home province of Daraa, south of Damascus, cradle of the anti-Assad revolt.

Key Assad ally Iran backed moves to start peace talks between his government and the opposition as it hosted a 29-nation conference on the conflict on Thursday. Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi told reporters after the meeting that “a major part of the opposition has announced that it is ready to negotiate with the Syrian government in Tehran without any preconditions.”

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