Revolta no Mundo Árabe

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Lusitano89

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #525 em: Junho 18, 2013, 06:23:12 pm »
Morre jovem italiano que combatia com os rebeldes na Síria


Um jovem italiano que se convertera ao islão e morreu na Síria enquanto combatia com os rebeldes contrários ao regime de Bashar al-Assad, noticiou hoje a imprensa italiana.

Giuliano Ibrahim Delnevo, de 23 ou 24 anos, nascido em Genova, norte da Itália, foi identificado graças ao passaporte que levava no bolso.

Delnevo convertera-se ao islão em 2008 e era investigado pela justiça italiana por ligações a actividades suspeitas, segundo o procurador de Génova, Michele Di Lecce, segundo o site do jornal La Repubblica.

O jovem italiano, cuja família não tem ligações com a religião islâmica, entrou na Síria em 2012 a partir da Turquia e uniu-se aos extremistas sírios com o apoio dos combatentes chechenos que operam com os rebeldes, de acordo com o jornal Il Corriere della Sera.

Pelo menos 800 europeus combatem com os rebeldes na Síria, segundo a imprensa.

Lusa
 

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Lusitano89

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #526 em: Junho 18, 2013, 07:47:46 pm »
Guterres alerta para risco de alastramento do conflito


O alto comissário das Nações Unidas para os refugiados, António Guterres, alertou hoje para o perigo de a guerra civil síria alastrar ao resto da região e pediu ajuda urgente para os países vizinhos que acolhem refugiados.

"Cada vez há um risco maior de o conflito na Síria se alargar a outros países vizinhos. A comunidade internacional deveria superar as suas divisões e trabalhar unida para parar a luta, se queremos evitar que as chamas da guerra se espalhem pelo Médio Oriente", afirmou Guterres em Beirute.

O ex-primeiro-ministro português está no Líbano para uma visita oficial, recordando a urgente necessidade de fundos para poder ajudar os refugiados sírios e os países que os recebem.

Para o Líbano, são precisos 1,2 mil milhões de euros, defendeu Guterres num encontro com o primeiro-ministro libanês, Najib Mikati.

Esta quantia inclui 335 milhões de euros para ajudar o governo libanês a satisfazer as necessidades dos refugiados, uma vez que naquele país não há campos de refugiados e os deslocados pela guerra são alojados em casas de amigos, conhecidos, familiares e em edifícios públicos.

"Não há cidade ou aldeia no Líbano que não acolha refugiados sírios. O Líbano é um pequeno país com um grande coração", afirmou.

Lusa
 

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #527 em: Junho 20, 2013, 12:38:10 pm »
Citação de: "Lusitano89"
Morre jovem italiano que combatia com os rebeldes na Síria


Um jovem italiano que se convertera ao islão e morreu na Síria enquanto combatia com os rebeldes contrários ao regime de Bashar al-Assad, noticiou hoje a imprensa italiana.

Giuliano Ibrahim Delnevo, de 23 ou 24 anos, nascido em Genova, norte da Itália, foi identificado graças ao passaporte que levava no bolso.

Delnevo convertera-se ao islão em 2008 e era investigado pela justiça italiana por ligações a actividades suspeitas, segundo o procurador de Génova, Michele Di Lecce, segundo o site do jornal La Repubblica.

O jovem italiano, cuja família não tem ligações com a religião islâmica, entrou na Síria em 2012 a partir da Turquia e uniu-se aos extremistas sírios com o apoio dos combatentes chechenos que operam com os rebeldes, de acordo com o jornal Il Corriere della Sera.

Pelo menos 800 europeus combatem com os rebeldes na Síria, segundo a imprensa.

Lusa



não tenho pena nenhuma  :lol:
 

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Lusitano89

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #528 em: Junho 20, 2013, 01:12:18 pm »
Presidente libanês diz que Hezbollah cometeu erro com envolvimento na Síria


O presidente do Líbano, Michel Suleiman, considerou que o grupo xiita Hezbollah, aliado do regime de Damasco, cometeu um erro ao envolver-se no conflito sírio porque aumentou a tensão no Líbano, em entrevista publicada esta quinta-feira no jornal Al Safir.

«Se (o Hezbollah) participar na batalha de Aleppo e morrerem mais dos seus combatentes, a tensão aumentará. Eles devem parar em Al Qusair e regressar ao Líbano», disse o líder.

Suleiman referia-se às últimas ofensivas do regime de Bashar al Assad, que no dia 5 de Junho recuperou o controlo da cidade de Al Qusair, perto da fronteira com o Líbano, com o apoio do Hezbollah, e lançou uma operação em Aleppo pouco depois contra os rebeldes, que ainda continua.

Na opinião de Suleiman, os incidentes no Líbano continuarão se o Hezbollah continuar com o seu envolvimento no conflito na Síria.

Nesse sentido, o presidente lembrou que durante o diálogo nacional libanês se chegou a um acordo entre os diferentes grupos políticos para manter o Líbano afastado das crises regionais, especialmente da guerra na Síria.

«Tínhamos chegado a um consenso sobre a declaração de Baabda (do diálogo nacional) para evitar interferências, mas infelizmente nem todas as partes estão comprometidas com ela», lamentou.

Suleiman salientou que o Hezbollah é um movimento de resistência, que inclusivamente conta com um dia festivo, 24 de Maio, que lembra a retirada israelita do sul do país.

Além disso, afirmou que a ideia de resistência, defendida pelo grupo xiita, está incluída no programa de governo dentro de um trinómio que inclui o exército e o povo.

No entanto, o Hezbollah «actua por conta própria e não leva em consideração nem o exército, nem o povo», afirmou.

Lusa
 

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HSMW

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #529 em: Junho 21, 2013, 06:06:20 pm »
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HSMW

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #530 em: Junho 26, 2013, 11:01:51 pm »
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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #531 em: Junho 27, 2013, 08:40:33 pm »
http://www.independent.co.uk/incoming/a ... rnalSearch

A return to Homs: ‘The atmosphere here is poisoned by fear of a kind I have only ever seen once before’

Some 400,000 have fled the centre, held by rebels, and are scattered across the city
Patrick Cockburn Author Biography  Thursday 27 June 2013






Khalid is too frightened of travelling the 100 miles from Homs to Damascus to ask officials if they know what happened to his three sons, who disappeared 16 months ago as government troops over-ran the rebel stronghold of Baba Amr. He has not heard anything from them since and does not know if they are alive or dead, though he has repeatedly asked the authorities in Homs, Syria’s third-largest city, about them.

Khalid, a thick-set man of 60 with grizzled white hair – who used to be a construction worker until he injured his back – says he dare not make the journey to Damascus because “as soon as the soldiers at the checkpoints on the road see I come from a place like Baba Amr, with a reputation for supporting the rebels, they are likely to arrest me”. He explains that he cannot risk being detained because he has a wife and four daughters who rely on him. He is the last man left in his family since his sons went missing.

Syria is full of parents trying to keep their children alive or simply seeking to find out if they are already dead. It is as if both sides in the civil war are in a competition to see who can commit the worst atrocities. A few days before I spoke to Khalid I saw a picture on the internet of a fresh-faced 23-year-old soldier called Youssef Kais Abdin from near the port city of Latakia. He had been kidnapped a week earlier by the al Qa’ida-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra while serving in the north-east of Syria, close to the Iraqi border. The next his parents heard of Youssef was a call from their son’s mobile at 4am from al-Nusra telling them to look for a picture of their son online. When they did so, they saw his decapitated body in a pool of blood with his severed head placed on top of it.

The Syrian conflict is a civil war with all the horrors traditionally inflicted in such struggles wherever they are fought, be it Syria today or Russia, Spain, Greece, Lebanon or Iraq in the past. For the newly appointed American National Security Adviser Susan Rice, David Cameron or William Hague to pretend that this is a simple battle between a dictatorial government and an oppressed people is to misrepresent or misunderstand what is happening on the ground.

Evidence that both sides have committed supporters prepared to fight to the death is borne out by the estimate of some 100,000 dead published this week by the pro-rebel Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. It concludes that fatal casualties come almost equally from the two sides in the civil war: broadly 25,000 of them government soldiers, 17,000 pro-government militia, 36,000 civilians and 14,000 rebel fighters, though the last two figures in particular are probably understated.

Homs, an ancient city at the centre of a province with a population of two million, is a good place to judge the course of the war. It was an early scene of anti-government action in 2011 in the course of which peaceful protests turned into irregular but devastating warfare. Most of Homs today is controlled by the Syrian army, aside from a few important areas including the Old City in the centre, which is held by rebels. Some 400,000 people have fled from here and are now scattered across the rest of the city. The houses they leave behind are occupied by opposition fighters, a fair number of whom are non-Syrian jihadi volunteers intent on waging holy war. “It is very difficult to talk to the Salafi [Islamic fundamentalists] in the Old City,” says Monsignor Michel Naaman, a Syriac Catholic priest who used to live there and who has sought to mediate and arrange ceasefires between the Free Syrian Army and government forces.

But the political geography of Homs is not just divided between pro- and anti-government forces but has grey areas of uncertain or disputed control, where hundreds of thousands of people are trying to survive pressures from both sides. They live in an atmosphere poisoned by fear of a kind I have not seen since Baghdad at the height of the sectarian civil war in 2006-7. Where else in the world would not just vulnerable refugees but army generals surrounded by armed guards make me promise not to reveal their names for fear that they and their families might be targeted for retaliation?

Homs is full of people who are refugees within their own city. A lowly government civilian employee, who gave his name as Walid but did not want his exact job identified, told me how he had been forced to move twice.

“I was living in al-Khalidiya when I was kidnapped by the Free Syrian Army because I worked for the government,” he said. “Fortunately, I knew somebody in the group who said I was a good man and they let me go, but the shock of my kidnap killed my father who died of a heart attack.” Munir moved to another area on the outskirts of northern Homs call al-Waar, where neither government nor rebels are in full control. He said, “I had to leave again because the rebels would set up checkpoints at night and ask people if they were Sunni or Alawite or they would ask for money or take your car.”  

I had some experience of al-Waar, the district from which Munir had to flee a second time. It is a large area in the north of Homs with high-rise buildings and plenty of accommodation with a population that has risen to 700,000 from 150,000 before the crisis. I had asked to visit a military hospital there earlier this week, had received permission and was guided there by security men in a civilian car. We took a highly circuitous route, driving west out of the city and then circling back to avoid “hot areas”.  Earth embankments started to appear on roads indicating they were not secure, including the main highway north to Hama. Our guides consulted with soldiers at checkpoints, which were more and more heavily fortified, as to whether it was safe to go ahead and we finally reached the hospital gates, only to be told that the head of the unit would not let us in without a permit from military intelligence.

Some people in Homs flee because they are in areas that support the rebels and others because they are known to work for the government. Most simply want to get to a place of safety. In Homs this is often means taking refuge in a school where the government provides food, water and the basics of life. At one school (again the person in charge asked me not to identify it), where I had met Khalid whose three sons were missing, I talked to Abu Nidal who worked in Homs water and sanitation department. He, too, came from Baba Amr and had left there for two months during the heavy fighting in 2012 when the Syrian army stormed it. “We went back and stayed six or seven months but [in March this year] the rebels came back, the situation was very bad and we had to leave again.” He said Baba Amr was now empty and when I drove past it the entrance to the district was blocked by rubble and there was nobody to be seen on the road beyond.

The policy of the government, as expressed by the Governor Ahmad Munir, is not to storm areas in Homs it does not control unless other options have been exhausted. He said he was trying to deal with each case “without a special military operation”. He had just arranged for the Syrian army to move into the rebel town of Tal Kalakh near the Lebanese border and for 39 local FSA leaders to surrender. He did not expect the same thing to happen in the Old City because “there are lots of gangs and nobody to negotiate with”. The storming of the rebel stronghold of Qusayr earlier this month may have made other communities more determined to avoid similar destruction.

Rickety local ceasefires do not solve the Syrian crisis but they do prevent a lot of people being killed, jailed or driven from their homes. The fact that people in Homs have become inured to living in a constant state of terror does not make their suffering any better. “It must be very dangerous to be a young man of military age here in Syria,” I said to a group of refugees in Homs, leading them to laugh dryly and respond: “No, you are wrong. They kill men in their 60s and 70s as well!” I asked if they expected things to get better and they dolefully shook their heads.

By pledging at a meeting in Qatar last weekend to send more arms and equipment to the rebels, the 11-member so-called “Friends of Syria”, including the US, UK, France, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, decided in effect to stoke the civil war in Homs and the rest of Syria. To pretend it is not a civil war or to support the rebel side as somehow uniquely representative of the Syrian people flies in the face of demonstrable facts. West of Homs in the port city of Tartus on the Mediterranean there is a long wall with pictures of many of the 2,000 young men from the city killed fighting as soldiers for the government in the last two years. The Syrian state, in control of most of the country, is not going to implode just because the rebels receive fresh supplies of money and arms.

As for Khalid and his hopeless search for his three missing sons, he says, “I wish the Free Syrian Army and the government would leave ordinary people out of it and go and fight each other.”
"All the world's a stage" William Shakespeare

 

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HSMW

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #532 em: Junho 28, 2013, 06:38:04 pm »
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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #533 em: Julho 07, 2013, 01:52:02 pm »
Estes sim sabem desenrascar!  :shock:
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Lusitano89

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #534 em: Julho 09, 2013, 08:53:55 pm »
Portugal exige fim da violência no Egipto e defende inclusão da Irmandade Muçulmana


O ainda ministro dos Negócios Estrangeiros, Paulo Portas, afirmou hoje que Portugal acompanha a posição europeia de exigir o fim da violência do Egipto e defendeu que a transição democrática no país deve incluir a Irmandade Muçulmana.

«A interrupção de um processo constitucional e democrático é sempre uma circunstância muito preocupante. Nós acompanhamos a posição europeia de exigir a cessação da violência», afirmou Paulo Portas.

Numa audição ordinária na comissão parlamentar de Negócios Estrangeiros, o ainda ministro da tutela afirmou que o «carácter inclusivo» da transição democrática «inclui a Irmandade Muçulmana, que venceu as eleições democráticas».

Portugal acompanha os «esforços diplomáticos que têm sido feitos pelos países europeus para ajudar a conter a violência e permitir que haja um processo democrático, constitucional e permitir que permita a um pais tão determinante na região como o Egipto e com a história que o Egipto tem, evitar qualquer espectro de guerra civil ou de conflito».

O Egipto mergulhou na violência após o afastamento de Morsi e na segunda-feira mais de 50 pessoas foram mortas durante uma manifestação de apoio a Morsi realizada no Cairo.

A Irmandade Muçulmana, que apoiou a candidatura presidencial de Morsi e defende o regresso do presidente deposto, considerou que os confrontos foram «um massacre» e que «soldados» e «polícias» dispararam sobre a multidão.

O exército, citado pelo jornal governamental Al-Ahram, deu uma outra versão, afirmando que «terroristas armados» atacaram as instalações da guarda.

O economista Hazem al-Beblawi, antigo ministro das Finanças, foi hoje nomeado primeiro-ministro interino do Egipto e o prémio Nobel da Paz (2005) Mohamed ElBaradei, uma figura da oposição laica egípcia, foi o nome escolhido para a vice-presidência do país, cargo que terá como principal foco as relações internacionais, anunciou hoje o porta-voz da Presidência egípcia, Ahmed al-Muslimani.

Lusa
 

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HSMW

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #535 em: Julho 10, 2013, 03:03:24 am »
Citar
Translation from LiveLeak

00:10 while on the left there is a struggle for the safety of the route on the right troops begin the liberation of industrial facilities.


00:20 infantry supported by tanks and infantry fighting vehicles have to attack several buildings. The buildings are a large number of well-protected firing points, making it difficult to attack.


00:33 street on which the infantry will move forward, sweep many snipers and machine-gun crew.
00:42 manufactures armored reconnaissance.
1:00 tank cover each other without giving grenade pop out militants.
1:22 rear covers BMP tanks.
1:58 comes into action the infantry.
02:10 under heavy enemy fire, the soldiers can not attack and have to go forward, hiding behind the tanks.
2:52 tankers to bring the problem to the nearest infantry attacked the building.
3:35 to bring the infantry to the barricades that would jerk to the left she could break into the building.
4:50 gunmen fired at the tanks.
4:58 cannon BMP helps them to calm down.
5:10 only as observers detect enemy tanks opened fire.
5:33 militants are trying to get the infantry, but it is protected.
6:25 slowly but surely, the soldiers are coming forward.
9:42 emplacements in the attacked building is finally destroyed.
9:50 tanks suppress fire on the infantry, leading off with the other buildings, these homes will be the next target.
10:47 And now, under the cover of the left tank, infantry goes to the assault.
11:02 purged of militants building.
11:25 by completing the task, the machine returned.

Parece que finalmente aprenderam como se faz...  :roll:
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mafarrico

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #536 em: Julho 11, 2013, 08:10:13 pm »
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... 47_ISC.PDF

http://www.bbc.co.uk/democracylive/hous ... s-23256225

Citar
Syria
65. The Syrian Government has not explicitly confirmed details of its chemical weapons capability although it has spoken, in hypothetical terms, about using such weapons to deter foreign invaders. There is no doubt amongst the UK intelligence community that the Syrian regime possesses vast stockpiles of these deadly weapons.

SYRIA’S CHEMICAL WEAPONS STOCKS
Open source assessments vary considerably, but suggest that Syria’s stockpiles of chemical weapons include the following:
• Mustard gas (sulphur mustard): yellow or brown oily liquid which causes blisters and burns to the skin and, if inhaled, can damage the lungs. Symptoms may only emerge hours after exposure.• Sarin: a clear, colourless liquid which attacks the central nervous system and can be spread as a gas or liquid; just a few drops on the skin can be fatal. It was used in a 1995 attack on the Tokyo underground system which killed 13 and injured over 1,000.• Ricin: a highly toxic protein derived from the castor oil plant, ricin is poisonous if inhaled, injected or ingested; a few grains of this white powder can cause organ failure and death in a matter of days.• Vx: the deadliest nerve agent ever created, Vx is a clear or amber-coloured oily liquid. A fraction of a drop absorbed through the skin can kill in minutes.***.

66. In December 2012 the foreign Secretary said that he had seen evidence that Syria was preparing to use its chemical weapons,75 and in January 2013 SIS told us that “the most worrying point about our intelligence on Syria’s attitude to chemical weapons is how low a threshold they have for its use.”76 Since then, there have been multiple reports in the media that sarin may have been used in small quantities against, and possibly by, Syrian opposition forces, and in June the US, UK and french governments said that they have high confidence that the Assad regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale.

67. The security of these chemical weapons stocks is also of serious concern. The Chief of SIS noted the risk of “a highly worrying proliferation around the time of regime fall.”77 There has to be a significant risk that some of the country’s chemical weapons stockpile could fall into the hands of those with links to terrorism, in Syria or elsewhere in the region – if this happens, the consequences could be catastrophic. ***.78

75 ‘UK’s Hague confirms ‘evidence’ of Syria chemical arms plans’, BBC News, 8 December 2012.76 Oral Evidence – SIS, 24 January 2013.77 Oral Evidence – SIS, 24 January 2013.78 Oral Evidence – Foreign Secretary, 22 November 2012.
"All the world's a stage" William Shakespeare

 

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #537 em: Julho 12, 2013, 01:57:36 pm »
Contra a Esquerda woke e a Direita populista marchar, marchar!...

 

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mafarrico

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #538 em: Julho 14, 2013, 08:49:07 pm »
Marc Ginsberg, a former Mideast adviser to President Jimmy Carter, reviewed the week’s events in the Middle East. Topics included Egypt and U.S. response thus far, the future of the Muslim Brotherhood in the Mideast, and potential U.S. role in the civil war in Syria. He also responded to telephone calls and electronic communications.

http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/MarcG
"All the world's a stage" William Shakespeare

 

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Re: Revolta no Mundo Árabe
« Responder #539 em: Julho 15, 2013, 03:50:38 pm »
Citar
translation of russian:
0:13 In this part will not be told about the battle.
0:17 We show syrian troops before battle.
0:22 We show them, without embellishment.
0:42 After a few minutes they will go clean the country from bandits.
2:05 They are all very different, unites them in one thing, love of homeland.
2:28 No one will answer, whether they all come back. But they know what for they are fighting.
5:33 Armored vehicles come back to pick up next group of solders.
10:13 Footage of battle in the next part (Part 7)
Citar
The Operation in Al Qaboun: Roadworks - Part 7.1


(Clicar para aumentar.)
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