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  • 1
    Apr
    2013
    7:08pm, EDT

    March the deadliest month yet in Syrian civil war, activist group says

    Reuters

    A man prays at the grave of a Free Syrian Army fighter at a cemetery at al-Karak al-Sharqi in Deraa on March 30.

    By Ben Hubbard, The Associated Press
    BEIRUT - March was the bloodiest month yet in Syria's 2-year-old conflict with more than 6,000 documented deaths, a leading anti-regime activist group said Monday, blaming the increase on heavier shelling and more violent clashes.

    Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the increased toll is likely incomplete because both the Syrian army and the rebel groups fighting the government often underreport their dead in the civil war.


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    "Both sides are hiding information," Abdul-Rahman said by phone from Britain, where his group is based. "It is very difficult to get correct info on the fighters because they don't want the information to hurt morale." 

    The numbers, while provided by only one group, support the appraisal of the conflict offered by many Syria watchers: The civil war is largely a military stalemate that is destroying the country's social fabric and taking a huge toll on civilians.

    The increase also reflects the continuing spread of major hostilities to new parts of Syria. While clashes continue in Aleppo, Damascus and Homs, Syria's three largest cities, rebels have launched an offensive in recent weeks to seize towns and army bases in the southern province of Daraa, largely with the help of an influx of foreign-funded weapons.

    The Observatory, which works through a network of contacts in Syria, said those killed in March included similar numbers of combatants on both sides: 1,486 rebels and army defectors and 1,464 soldiers from the Syrian army.

    But the number of civilians killed exceeded them both: 2,080 total for the month, including 298 children and 291 women.

    In addition, there were 387 unidentified civilians and 588 unidentified fighters, most of them foreigners fighting with the rebels, bringing the March total to 6,005, Abdul-Rahman said.

    He criticized the international community for not doing more to stop the bloodshed, which he said could increase.

    Without solution 'will get worse'
    "If there is no solution, we think the numbers will get worse in the coming months," he said. 
    The March toll surpassed what had previously been the deadliest month, August 2012, when airstrikes, clashes and shelling killed more than 5,400 people, Abdul-Rahman said.

    His total death toll for the conflict through the end of March was 62,554, a number he acknowledged as incomplete, suggesting the true figure could be twice as high.

    Besides the underreporting of dead fighters by both sides, he mentioned the tens of thousands of missing persons and captives held by the regime and the rebels. The fate of these people is rarely uncovered, he said.

    He also said more than 12,000 pro-government gunmen known as "shabiha," along with government informers may have been killed by the opposition and never reported.

    The constant stream of new reports, in addition to the lack of free access to much of the country, makes full investigations impossible.

    "Since there are more dying every day, it is very hard to go back and document those who died before," Abdul-Rahman said, calling for an independent international investigation inside Syria.

    The Observatory's numbers are not as high as those given by the United Nations.

    On Feb. 18, a U.N.-appointed Commission of Inquiry on Syria issued a 131-page report saying about 70,000 people had been killed in the conflict. The report compiled and corroborated death reports from a number of different sources.

    The U.N. has not updated its number since.

    The Syrian government does not provide regular death tolls for the conflict. Syrian officials did not immediately comment on the reported death toll.

    Assad's wife Asma breaks silence
    Assad's regime describes the conflict as a foreign conspiracy to weaken the country carried out by terrorists on the ground.

    In an attempt to boost that argument and rally regime supporters, Assad's wife, Asma, broke her long silence on the events shaking the country in a video shown on Syrian TV stations over the weekend and posted on the Internet.

    In the professionally produced 14-minute video, she was seen greeting, hugging and kissing women who were described as the mothers of Syrian soldiers killed in battle.

    The video, titled "With Your Soul, Protect the Jasmine," said it was filmed during a reception on Mother's Day, which is celebrated in much of the Arab world on March 21. Asma Assad, dressed casually and speaking in Arabic, thanked the mothers for their sacrifice.

    "Instead of fearing for yourselves, fearing for your lives, you feared for all of Syria," she said. "Instead of your children fearing only for you, they feared for all the mothers in the country. They went to protect the country knowing that Syria, the homeland, is the mother of all."

    When she finished her speech, a girls' choir broke into a patriotic song.

    The video, which was posted Friday on the official Facebook page of the president's office, is the first time Asma has spoken out in public since the start of the conflict. Her silence had prompted some to speculate that the British-born first lady disapproved of the regime's violent crackdown on the opposition.

    She appeared briefly at a pro-regime rally in January 2012, smiling with her children as her husband said the "conspiracy" against Syria was in its final stage.

    A month later, she accompanied her husband to a polling station during a referendum on a new constitution, but did not speak.

    In recent weeks, the president's office has published photos of her visiting the children of people killed in the civil war.

    Associated Press writer Zeina Karam contributed reporting from Beirut. 


    After two years of war, Syria's economy is facing crisis. Food is scarce, cash in short supply, while constant bombardments are causing more damage - which will cost billions to rebuild. Alex Thomson Channel Four reports.

    Related:
    2,000-year-old synagogue hit by shelling, looters
    Texas 'straight shooter' may replace Syria's Assad

    Students killed as mortars hit Syrian university

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    3 comments

    It seems that more and more reports are being made about the inundation of Syria by foreign 'jihadi' sunni terrorists mostly from Saudi Arabia; the home of all the infamous hijackers.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: syria, death-toll, asma-al-assad
  • 28
    Jan
    2013
    11:51pm, EST

    Report: Syria President Assad announces wife Asma is pregnant

    Syrian Arab News Agency via EPA

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, photographed here with wife Asma al-Assad in February 2012, announced that she is pregnant with their fourth child.

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A fawning profile of Syrian President Bashar Assad Monday revealed, as an aside to the larger story, that his wife Asma Assad is pregnant with their fourth child.


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    “The man seems calm and in control,” the al-Akhbar article says of Assad, whose country has been embroiled in a bloody civil war for 22 months. “His confidence level stands out. Also, there’s the news of the pregnancy of his wife Asma, which could not be dealt with as a simple personal matter between a couple.”

    Asma Assad, 37, was born in London to upper-class Syrians. She was an investment banker before leaving England for Syria, where she married Assad two months after he assumed the presidency in 2000. Before him, his father Hafez Assad ruled the country for 30 years.


    Asma Assad has not been seen recently – which Arab online news site Al Bawaba attributes to her pregnancy. Citing a Syrian news outlet, Al Bawaba reports that she was five months pregnant in November, which means her due date is imminent.

    This also means she likely became pregnant in June, a remarkably violent month for Syria. United Nations monitors left the country that month because it was deemed too dangerous, and because Assad had refused to abide by cease-fires.

    Eight thousand people had been killed in the conflict – the death toll is currently at 60,000, the U.N. estimates – and Syrian citizens were fleeing for the country’s borders. Thousands were leaving each day; now tens of thousands are leaving, most at night, dodging fire from Assad's troops.

    Asma Assad had also become a controversial figure, with diplomatic wives around the world pleading with her to reason with her husband. Around the same time, a hacker had released thousands of emails from the Assads’ email accounts, revealing Asma Assad’s love for Chanel dresses and crystal-encrusted Louboutin shoes – and also her fierce loyalty to her husband and his hard-line approach. 

    The European Union then slapped her with sanctions, saying she could no longer travel to Europe or shop at European companies.

    Vogue, meanwhile, had taken down a glowing profile of Asma Assad from 2011 – titled “A Rose in the Desert.” The Vogue piece, which is still available on a website dedicated to President Assad, begins: “Asma Assad is glamorous, young and very chic – the freshest and most magnetic of first ladies.”

     

    151 comments

    Who's the father?

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    Explore related topics: syria, bashar-al-assad, asma-al-assad
  • 21
    Mar
    2012
    1:50pm, EDT

    EU to impose travel, shopping ban on Assad's wife

    By Reuters

    European Union states are set to ban Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's wife Asma from travel to and shopping in the EU, diplomats said, cranking up pressure on his government to end a bloody crackdown on popular unrest.

    A British-born former investment banker who had once cultivated an image of a woman inspired by Western values, Asma al-Assad has become a hate figure for many Syrians. She has stood by her husband during a year-long crackdown on popular unrest in which the U.N. says at least 8,000 people have died.

    In recent weeks she became the focus of media attention when a trove of emails between her and her husband obtained by Britain's Guardian newspaper appeared to show them shopping for pop music and luxury items while Syria descended into bloodshed.


    The EU has responded to Syria's violence with a broad range of sanctions, which include a ban on Syrian oil imports to Europe and measures against the Syrian central bank and other companies and state institutions.

    On Friday, it is expected to take new steps. For Asma, they will mean she will no longer be able to travel to the EU or buy products from EU-based companies, in her own name.

    Foreign ministers of EU member states are set to agree on a new round of measures, the bloc's 13th, and impose asset freezes and bans on travel to the EU against 12 people, include Asma.

    Finally, UN reaches agreement over 'extremely dangerous crisis' in Syria

    A prohibition for European companies to do business with two more Syrian entities is also planned.

    "The text (of sanctions) has gone through," said one EU diplomat, referring to an agreement reached by EU envoys in Brussels to a list of new sanctions. Another diplomat confirmed Assad's wife is included in the list of sanctioned individuals.

    The list still needs formal approval from ministers. It will become public on Saturday when new sanctions are due to go into effect.

    Assad himself has been a target since May last year, but sanctions have had little impact on his policies so far.

    Violence has intensified in recent weeks as pro-government forces bombard rebel towns and villages, looking to sweep their lightly armed opponents out of their strongholds.

    The international community has struggled to formulate a joint approach in the face of opposition from Russia and China to any resolution by the U.N. Security Council.

    Assad absorbed a major diplomatic blow on Wednesday, however, when Russia and China joined the Security Council in voicing support for U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan's bid to end violence that has brought Syria to the brink of civil war.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    55 comments

    That'll bring Assad around. Once he finds out his wife can't travel and shop, he'll be begging for terms in no time.

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    Explore related topics: eu, syria, assad, featured, asma-al-assad

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