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    17
    Aug
    2012
    7:22am, EDT

    Plane diverts to Syria, passengers asked if they could pay for fuel

    By The Associated Press

    PARIS -- An emergency layover in Syria's war-torn capital was bad enough. Then passengers on Air France Flight 562 were asked to open their wallets to check if they had enough cash to pay for more fuel. 

    The plane, heading from Paris to Lebanon's capital, diverted amid clashes near the Beirut airport on Wednesday. Low on fuel, it instead landed in Damascus, the capital of neighboring Syria, where a civil war is raging.



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    An Air France spokesman explained Friday that the crew inquired about passenger cash only as a "precautionary measure" because of the "very unusual circumstances."

     Sanctions against Syria complicated payment for extra fuel. 

    He said Air France found a way to pay for the fill-up without tapping customer pockets — and apologized for the inconvenience. 

    The plane landed safely in Beirut.

    261 comments

    His original plan was to surrender.

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  • 24
    May
    2012
    6:44am, EDT

    Two killed in Beirut as Syrian gunman clashes with Lebanon forces

    Hussein Malla / AP

    A Lebanese military intelligence agent holds his gun as he runs during clashes between Lebanese troops and a Syrian gunman who had engaged in an hours-long shootout with the security forces, in Beirut, Lebanon, on May 24, 2012.

    Anwar Amro / AFP - Getty Images

    Lebanese security forces take position as they storm a building in Beirut's Karakass district on May 24, 2012 following a shootout during the night with a man holed up inside a flat.

    Hussein Malla / AP

    A Lebanese soldier, right, and a policeman, left, take position in front of the apartment building where clashes erupted.

    Reuters reports — Two people were killed when Lebanese soldiers stormed an apartment in Beirut on Thursday where a gunman had exchanged fire with security forces, a security source at the scene said.

    The source told Reuters the gunman, a Syrian national, was killed when the soldiers broke into the apartment at around 6 a.m. (11 p.m. ET), following several hours of shooting.

    Boiling point: On Lebanon's Syria Street, a civil war brews

    They found the body of another man in the apartment, along with rifles and grenades, and two men who were arrested.

    Four soldiers were wounded, the source said.

    It was not immediately clear whether the incident was linked to recent sectarian violence in the Lebanese capital which has been fuelled by the conflict in neighboring Syria. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Hussein Malla / AP

    Lebanese soldiers help a young girl and her family flee her house via a backyard during the clashes.

    Anwar Amro / AFP - Getty Images

    Lebanese security forces detain an unidentified man outside a building in Beirut's Karakass district on May 24, 2012.

    Syria's chaos has come over the border into Lebanon, with gunmen clashing in deadly street battles. NBC's John Ray reports.

     

    8 comments

    Hell has taken over the Entire the Middle East. Let them all deal with their love for Murder. US stays out. We've done a good job so far. Killing is their biggest talent in their Holy Countries.

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    Explore related topics: world-news, middle-east, violence, lebanon, beirut
  • 23
    May
    2012
    1:34pm, EDT

    'Boiling point': On Lebanon's Syria Street, a civil war brews

    Syria's chaos has come over the border into Lebanon, with gunmen clashing in deadly street battles. NBC's John Ray reports.

    By John Ray, NBC News

    TRIPOLI, Lebanon – It only takes a two-minute stroll down Syria Street to see why so many people are so worried about what might happen next in Lebanon.

    A hole punched through the wall of the mosque by a rocket or mortar shell, smoke-blackened masonry, shops and apartments bearing the pockmarks of fierce gun battles.


    Syria Street is the aptly named thoroughfare that separates rival factions in Lebanon’s second city.

    For much of the past week, the two sides have been waging a mini-civil war.

    It is a direct spill over from the chaos in neighboring Syria.

    Photos: Violence on the streets of Tripoli

    One side of the street is home to a hard-line Sunni Muslim militia who run guns to rebels across the border.

    “President Assad is trying to destroy us,” says Sheik Bilal Masri, by way of explanation. “They cause trouble here to take the pressure of them in Damascus.”

    Since the Syrian crisis broke out, the price of weapons has exploded in neighboring Lebanon. ITN's John Ray meets the rebels buying the weapons and the dealers selling them.

    We meet a small group of his men. They are well-armed and apparently spoiling for a fight.

    Not many yards away, posters of Syria’s President Bashar Assad striking stern military poses adorn walls on the other side of the street.

    Here the people share Assad’s Alawite faith and, it seems, the same determination to defend his regime.

    Omar Ibrahim / Reuters

    A man hides behind sandbags amid clashes in the Bab al-Tebbaneh neighborhood in Tripoli, Lebanon, on Thursday.

    “No one wants a civil war in Lebanon,” a local Alawite leader tells me.  “But everyone should be warned: There will be repercussion for anyone who tries to meddle in Syria.”

    Conflict along Syria Street is nothing new. But the outside world began to take notice on Monday when for the first time in four years, gun battles broke out on the streets of Lebanon’s capital, Beirut.

    2 killed, 18 hurt as Syria conflict spills over into Lebanon

    It was a brief glimpse back into the abyss for a nation scarred by years of civil strife.

    In 2005, Syrian troops were forced to withdrawal from Lebanon, but Damascus is still a big player in the fractured politics of a country that sees rival Muslim and Christian sects share power in a set of uneasy alliances.

    Syria’s most powerful friend here is Hezbollah, the militant Shiite group that probably holds the key to whether Lebanon survives in one piece.

    Inside Syria rebel stronghold: 'The city is on mute' 

    Its heartland in the south of Beirut has been tense, but so far its leader, Hassan Nasrallah, has kept his forces out of the fray.

    But for how long?

    The fatal shooting of two Sunni clerics followed by the kidnapping of Lebanese Shiite pilgrims in Syria shows how unpredictable events have become.

    A message to Assad? War games held near border

    For more than two decades, Timur Goksel has watched events in Lebanon. Once of the U.N. Mission here, he now lectures at the American University in Beirut.

    He tells me the country has rarely felt so dangerous.

    “I hope I am wrong because this is scary. If the faction leaders lose control of these young guys with the guns then we’re in trouble,” he said.

    Their bloody history has taught the Lebanese to be a fatalistic people.

    “The country is at boiling point,” another seasoned observer told me with a shrug.  “What is coming will be very bad.”

    NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports from war-torn Homs showing how parts of the city have been ravaged by fighting while others spared.

     

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    81 comments

    Who else but a moron Arab Muslim shoots his AK-47, loaded with a full banana clip into mid air to celebrate a wedding? Just the Arab Muslim moron (they are all morons, I am just trying to be politically correct outside the parentheses) that does so at his friends' wedding, killing a dozen guests 'b …

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    Explore related topics: syria, lebanon, hezbollah, assad, sunni, shiite, beirut, tripoli, nasrallah, alawite, john-ray
  • 21
    May
    2012
    4:23am, EDT

    2 killed, 18 hurt in Beirut as Syria conflict spills over into Lebanon

    Bilal Hussein / AP

    Anti-Syrian gunmen seek cover during deadly overnight clashes in Beirut, Lebanon, early on Monday.

    By msnbc.com news services

    BEIRUT -- Gunmen fired rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns early Monday in intense street battles in the Lebanese capital, killing at least two people and wounding 18 others as fears mounted that the conflict in neighboring Syria was bleeding across the border.

    The clashes in Beirut's Tariq al-Jadideh district were some of the fiercest since sectarian fighting four years ago brought Lebanon back to the brink of civil war.

    Lebanon and Syria share a complex web of political and sectarian ties and rivalries, which are easily inflamed. Last week, clashes sparked by the Syrian crisis killed at least eight people and wounded dozens in the northern city of Tripoli.

    The revolt in Syria began 15 months ago, and there are fears the unrest will lead to a regional conflagration that could draw in neighboring countries. The U.N. estimates the conflict has killed more than 9,000 people since March 2011.

    The violence in Beirut followed the killing of two members of a political alliance opposed to Syrian President Bashar Assad on Sunday in the north of the country.


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    Residents in the northern region of Akkar blocked roads and burned tires to protest against the killing and demonstrations spread south to the main coastal highway and to Beirut, where several roads were cut off.

    Report: Car bomb kills 9, wounds 100 in Syria

    A Reuters cameraman in Tariq al-Jadideh said shooting could be heard for almost seven hours overnight.

    A roadside bomb exploded in Douma, Syria this weekend near a United Nations convoy carrying the head of a Syria ceasefire monitoring mission and a senior U.N. Official. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    Security sources said the fighting pitted gunmen from the Future Movement, loyal to anti-Syrian former Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri, against the pro-Syrian Arab Movement Party headed by Shaker Barjawi.

    The state news agency said two people were killed and 18 wounded.

    Fragile political faultline 
    The fighting underscores how the bloodshed in Syria, where Assad's regime is cracking down on an uprising against his rule, is inflaming emotions in its tiny neighbor Lebanon. Lebanon has a fragile political faultline precisely over the issue of Syria.

    There is an array of die-hard pro-Syrian Lebanese parties and politicians, as well as support for the regime on the street level. There is an equally deep hatred of Assad among other Lebanese who fear Damascus is still calling the shots here. The two sides are the legacy of Syria's virtual rule over Lebanon from 1976 to 2005 and its continued influence since.

    Inside Syrian rebel stronghold: 'The city is on mute'

    The fighting was the among the most intense fighting in Beirut since May 2008, when gunmen from the Shiite Hezbollah militant group swept through Sunni neighborhoods after the pro-Western government tried to dismantle the group's telecommunications network.

    More than 80 people were killed in the 2008 violence, pushing the country to the brink of civil war.

    There was no sign that Hezbollah was involved in the latest violence.

    'Critical period'
    Many of Lebanon's Sunni Muslims sympathize with Syria's Sunni-led uprising against Assad, whose father sent forces into Lebanon during its 1975-1990 civil war. The Syrian army finally pulled out in 2005 under international pressure.

    A message to Assad? War games held near Syrian border

    Prime Minister Najib Mikati said on Sunday: "The government is determined to continue to shoulder its national responsibilities amid this critical period in Lebanon and the region, and it will take all measures necessary to preserve civil peace."

    World powers remain divided on how to end Syria's crisis. The U.S. and other Western and Arab nations have called for Assad to leave power, and the U.S. and European Union have placed increasingly stiff sanctions on Damascus. But with Russia and China blocking significant new U.N. punishments, U.S. officials are trying to get consensus among other allies about ways to promote Assad's ouster.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    20 comments

    If any rulers have to be ousted in ME, then seventh century autocratic, highly corrupt, despotic and bigoted Sunni rulers of Saudi Arabia with 5000 princes and princes, Kuwaiti, UAE and other Sunni Arab League nations qualify most. They invented Iraqi wars and manipulated high oil prices. They are r …

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    Explore related topics: featured, syria, lebanon, assad, sunni, beirut
  • 27
    Mar
    2012
    6:31am, EDT

    Syria accepts Annan peace plan, but clashes continue

    Syrian state television broadcast footage of President Bashar-al-Assad making a rare public appearance in the Baba Amr neighborhood of Homs, the heart of the uprising and where his crackdown has been most brutal. ITN's John Ray reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Syria accepted a cease-fire drawn up by U.N. envoy Kofi Annan on Tuesday, but the diplomatic breakthrough was swiftly overshadowed by intense clashes between government soldiers and rebels that sent bullets flying into Lebanon.

    Opposition members accuse President Bashar Assad of agreeing to the plan to stall for time as his troops make a renewed push to kill off bastions of dissent. And the conflict just keeps getting deadlier: The U.N. said the death toll has grown to more than 9,000, a sobering assessment of a devastating year-old crackdown on the uprising that shows no sign of ending.

    Annan's announcement that Syria had accepted his peace plan was met with deep skepticism.


    "We are not sure if it's political maneuvering or a sincere act," said Louay Safi, a member of the opposition Syrian National Council. "We have no trust in the current regime. ... We have to see that they have stopped killing civilians."

    British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Assad's decision to accept the plan was only a first step. "We will continue to judge the Syrian regime by its practical actions, not by its often empty words," he said.

    Fmr. National Security Adviser to President Carter Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski joins Morning Joe to discuss America's relationship with Russia, the war in Afghanistan, and reports that Syria has accepted a U.N.-backed peace plan.

    In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Assad must act quickly to convince the world he is serious about peace by "silencing his guns and allowing humanitarian aid to get in."

    On a two-day visit to Beijing, Annan told Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao that he faced a long and difficult task in his mission to end fighting in Syria, but global cooperation with China and other countries was the only way to do it.

    "I indicated that I had received a response from the Syrian government and will be making it public today, which is positive, and we hope to work with them to translate it into action," Annan told reporters in Beijing after meeting Wen.

    "I have a six-point plan which the Security Council has endorsed, dealing with issues of political discussions, withdrawal of heavy weapons and troops from population centers, humanitarian assistance being allowed in unimpeded, release of prisoners, freedom of movement and access to journalists to go in and out," he said. "So we will need to see how we move ahead and implement this agreement that they have accepted."

    Finally, UN reaches agreement over Syria efforts

    However, the U.S. ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, expressed skepticism about the development, saying it would be best to look for action, not words from Assad.

    Ford told lawmakers in Washington that he had no information beyond the press reports of the development.

    "We will see now in the days ahead what exactly Assad has said,'' Ford said at a hearing on human rights in Syria.

    The diplomat, who left Syria last month because of the violence there, added: "I have to tell you that my own experience with him is you want to see steps on the ground and not just take his word at face value."

    The United Nations said on Tuesday that more than 9,000 civilians have been killed in the Syrian government's year-long assault on protesters opposed to Assad, an increase of nearly 1,000 over its previous estimate.

    "Violence on the ground has continued unabated, resulting in scores of people killed and injured," Robert Serry, the U.N. special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, told the 15-nation Security Council.

    "Credible estimates put the total death toll since the beginning of the uprising one year ago to more than 9,000," he said. "It is urgent to stop the fighting and prevent a further violent escalation of the conflict."

    The Syrian opposition, meanwhile, welcomed the government's acceptance of a U.N. peace plan, a member of the Syrian National Council said.

    Syria's rebel fighters are desperate for arms and ammunition. Members of the Free Syrian Army were forced from Idlib - one of the last rebel strongholds. ITN's John Irvine reports from outskirts of Idlib, the north western city which rebels surrendered last week.

    Bassma Kodmani told The Associated Press by telephone that "we welcome all acceptance by the regime of a plan that could allow the repression and bloodbath to stop."

    She is a Paris-based member of the opposition Syrian National Council.

    "We hope that we can move toward a peace process," she said.

    Incursion into Lebanon
    Meanwhile, Syrian troops advanced into north Lebanon on Tuesday, destroying farm buildings and clashing with Syrian rebels who had taken refuge there, residents told Reuters.

    "More than 35 Syrian soldiers came across the border and started to destroy houses," said Abu Ahmed, 63, a resident of the rural mountain area of al-Qaa.

    Another resident told Reuters that the soldiers, some traveling in armored personnel vehicles, fired rocket-propelled grenades and exchanged heavy machine-gun fire with rebels.

    Regional English-language news channel Al-Jazeera has previously reported an escalation in tensions along the border. It said residents claimed the Syrian military planted landmines close to inhabited areas while, in early October, a Syrian army tank reportedly fired shells at Lebanese military targets inside Lebanon's borders.

    Any movement into Lebanese territory would escalate a conflict that already is spiraling toward civil war. There are concerns the violence could cause a broader conflagration by sucking in neighboring countries.

    Officials: Iranian arms used against Syria protesters

    Annan called for Beijing's support and advice, according to a pool report.

    "And I know you've already been helpful but this is going to be a long difficult task and I am sure that together we can make a difference," Annan told Wen.

    Annan's trip to China followed a similar one in Russia, where he asked Moscow to back his mission to end fighting in Syria.

    Russia and China have shielded Assad from U.N. Security Council condemnation by vetoing two Western-backed resolutions over the bloodshed, but approved a Security Council statement this week endorsing Annan's mission.

    Report: Syria leader's wife says she's 'real dictator'

    However, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Syrian people, not foreign powers, should decide their own fate.

    Russia has said Annan has its full support and that his mission could be the last chance to avoid a protracted and bloody civil war but would need more time.

    "I would like the decision on the fate of the Syrian state, society, political system and people to be taken not by the respected leaders of world powers, even by those acting in good faith, but by the Syrian people themselves, by all the levels of the Syrian society," Medvedev said at the end of a nuclear security summit in Seoul.

    Reuters and msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report. Follow Alastair Jamieson on Twitter.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Bomb plot foiled: Cache of suicide vests found in Afghan defense ministry
    • In Brazil, 'Gang of Blondes' kidnapped women, emptied their bank accounts
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world 

    230 comments

    I give it a couple of weeks and they will find a reason to start killing again.

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