• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Captain of luxury Costa Concordia cruise ship to face trial over deadly wreck
  • Recommended: Sweden stunned by third night of rioting
  • Recommended: North Korea sends top military official as 'special envoy' to China
  • Recommended: Guatemala's top court annuls Rios Montt genocide conviction

First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 22
    hours
    ago

    UN mediator: Syria government, rebels preparing for peace talks

    By Ayman Samir, Reuters

    CAIRO -- Syria's opposition and government are preparing to take part in an internationally-sponsored peace conference, the United Nations-Arab League mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said on Tuesday.

    "The Syrian people are building great hopes on the conference, as the opposition prepares itself to take part and likewise the Syrian regime prepares to take part in this conference," he told reporters at the Arab League.

    "The United Nations is working to organize the conference in the best way possible,” he added.

    The talks are due to take place in the Swiss city of Geneva in June.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is due to discuss current planning for the conference at a meeting in Jordan on Wednesday of the "Friends of Syria" club of countries.

    Brahimi admitted there were “many problems in the preparation for this conference,” saying that the first was to decide on who would represent the regime and the opposition.

    "The Geneva 2 conference is a great opportunity, and we hope that the brothers in Syria and the regional and international parties will cooperate to make it succeed,” he added.

    Syria's opposition is also due to meet in Istanbul on Thursday to announce its stance while the Arab League's Syria committee will meet in Cairo at the request of Qatar.

    Related:

    • Israel and Syria clash on Golan Heights cease-fire line
    • Analysis: In Syria, 'winning' is a relative term
    • Report: Syria's Assad vows 'no dialogue with terrorists'
    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    8 comments

    How much will these peace talks cost America? Fort hood shooter is still getting paid Afghanistan kills us,,,,,,,, they still get paid Iraqis killed us,,,,,, they still get paid. Obama's policy seems to be,,,,,,,, Pay radical Islamist.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: peace, syria, united-nations, john-kerry, lakhdar-brahimi, featured
  • 23
    Mar
    2013
    11:34am, EDT

    Palestinian activists frustrated by lack of US action as Obama ends visit

    Mussa Qawasma / Reuters

    A Palestinian woman argues with policemen during a demonstration against President Barack Obama's visit to the Church of the Nativity, revered as the site of Jesus' birth, in the West Bank town of Bethlehem on Friday.

    By Atia Abawi, Correspondent, NBC News

    RAMALLAH, West Bank -- Hundreds of Palestinians used President Barack Obama's visits to the West Bank during his trip to Israel to protest what they say is unfair treatment not just by the Israelis but by the American government.

    "Obama came to reaffirm his absolute support to Israeli repression and occupation of Palestinians," said Abir Kopty, an activist and spokeswoman for the group Palestinian Popular Resistance Committee.

    Despite Obama's appeals for ordinary Israelis to put pressure on their leaders to make a peace deal with the Palestinians, and urging them to put themselves in Palestinians' shoes, Kopty said Obama was part of the problem, not the solution.

    "He is the most pro-Israel president in U.S. history, and I see him complicit in our repression," Kopty said.

    President Barack Obama on Thursday urged the Israeli people to put themselves in the shoes of Palestinians and recognize their "right to self-determination, their right to justice." NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

    On his trip, Obama would have caught a glimpse of what some Palestinians call a wall to peace: a nearly 30-foot-high concrete barrier constructed through much of the 440-mile border between the West Bank and Israel. He would have also been able to see the Israeli settlements peppered throughout the land the Palestinians hope will one day be a part of a sovereign Palestine.

    Kopty and other activists erected more than a dozen tents in Bab al Shams, a village in the so-called E1 area of the occupied West Bank where Israelis plan to build thousands of new homes for settlers.  Palestinians feel the area is crucial to a contiguous Palestinian state.

    "They are illegal under international law," Kopty said. "They are part of an apartheid system implemented in the occupied territories since 1967, and with them, Israel has killed the so-called two-state solution."

    Obama and past U.S. presidents have perpetuated the problems in the region, Kopty said.

    "The negotiations for two-decades have been a great cover-up for continuous Israeli violation, settlement expansion, displacement and home demolitions," she said. "His trip was full of words about promised peace, but he fails to tell us what actions he will take to stop, for example, Israeli settlements."

    But for their part, Palestinian government leaders in the West Bank welcomed Obama's call for a Palestinian state to live side-by-side in peace with Israel.

    "It is a path to a better future for all the peoples of the region," Palestinian Liberation Organization executive committee member Saeb Erekat was quoted as saying in Palestinian papers.

    But Mustafa Barghouti, the head of the Palestinian National Initiative and member of the Palestinian parliament, said Obama needed to deliver more than appeasing words – that he needs to make decisions and be more decisive when it comes to his Israeli partners.

    "This is our very last opportunity for a two-state solution," he says. "If he doesn't stop the settlement activity, the only solution will be a one-state solution and it will mean a long way of suffering through an apartheid system."

    Related:

    'Amazing': Obama turns tourist in ancient city of Petra

    Obama urges justice for Palestinians

    Israel becomes a fortress nation, walls off Arab Spring

    Palestinians, Israelis lukewarm over Obama visit

    177 comments

    Two words. Tough @!$%#!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: israel, settlement, peace, obama, activists, palestinian-territories
  • Updated
    21
    Feb
    2013
    9:14am, EST

    What about Palestinians? Israeli coalition may be hard-pressed to answer

    Ronen Zvulun / Reuters

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signed his first coalition partner in centrist Tzipi Livni, a move that could get a nod of approval from peace activists and U.S. President Barack Obama. But how cohesive any message of peace will be depends largely on the makeup of the rest of the coalition.

    By Martin Fletcher, Correspondent, NBC News

    News analysis

    TEL AVIV -- In the Middle Eastern bazaar, the first sale of the day is prized beyond any other. It is called the “siftach,” and to clinch the deal the seller gives a discount to the buyer, to launch a good day’s business.

    In the case of the agreement announced Wednesday between Likud Beitenu leader Benjamin Netanyahu and Tzipi Livni, leader of  “Hatnua” (Movement) to join a coalition government, Netanyahu was desperate to get one of the several political parties he is negotiating with to be the first to reach agreement.

    So to entice Livni to sign, he sweetened his offer to include what Livni dearly wanted: the role of chief peace negotiator with the Palestinians, in addition to the guarantee of the post of justice minister for her and the post of minister of the environment for another member of her party.

    Her brief in a new Netanyahu government, then, would be to launch a new peace process with the Palestinians, according to the published agreement, “with the aim of reaching a settlement with them that will put an end to the conflict.”

    The significance of this is that the responsibility passes from the foreign minister, who loudly proclaimed that he did not believe in peace with the Palestinians, to Livni, who does.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is still in charge, but he may no longer be Israel's most consequential politician. The Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd takes a "deep dive" into the new face of Israeli politics, Yair Lapid.

    In addition to being the first step toward forming Netanyahu’s third government, it allows him to send a signal to U.S. President Barack Obama, expected in Israel on his first state visit next month, that he is serious about moving toward peace and that Obama should support him; Netanyahu’s relationship with Obama is famously fraught.

    What this means in practice, however, is far from clear. It depends on who else joins Netanyahu and Livni in building a coalition government. Pundits expect Netanyahu to focus his attention next on the Labor party, as well as a couple of the religious Jewish parties, and only then to go for broke -- to offer a role to the two young newcomers, one on the left and one on the right, who have surprisingly found common cause.

    The question: Can Netanyau pull off a brilliant ploy and form a government without the second- and third-largest parties, Yair Lapid’s ‘Yesh Atid’ (There is a Future) and Naftali Bennett’s Bait Hayehudi (Jewish Home)?

    Or is it so brilliant? When the voters speak clearly and give the second- and third-largest number of votes to two new parties with new leaders and a large majority of new members of parliament, shouldn’t this call for change be reflected in any new government?

    The problem is, and this brings us back to Livni’s role as peace negotiator, Bennett and Lapid, who agree on many social and economic issues, could not be further apart on the central question: What about the Palestinians? Bennett is absolutely clear: No Palestinian state. Lapid is with Livni.

    So is there a real change in the Israeli government’s position vis a vis peace talks? As always, Netanyahu is hard to read. Does he really want Livni to take Israel down the road to compromise and peace? Or does he just want to form a new government so badly that he will offer any enticement to make it happen?

    Cynics argue the latter. Some others believe that maybe a miracle is at hand.

    And as Israel’s first president, David Ben Gurion, once said: To be a pragmatist in Israel, you have to believe in miracles.

    Martin Fletcher is the author of "The List," "Breaking News" and "Walking Israel."

    Related:

    Fatah, Hamas hold talks ahead of possible negotiations with Israel

    UN panel: Israel must withdraw all settlers from the West Bank

    Surprisingly centrist vote has Netanyahu reaching to the left

    This story was originally published on Thu Feb 21, 2013 4:42 AM EST

    261 comments

    Oh, hell. More of the same. Israel's fascists will not permit peace. Their appetite for land, power, and money will not permit a homeland for the people of Palestine.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: israel, palestinians, peace, analysis, likud, featured, netanyahu, livni, updated, lapid, naftali-bennett, yesh-atid, beitenu, hatnua, bait-hayehudi
  • 8
    Jan
    2013
    4:15am, EST

    Flag fury ignites some of Northern Ireland's worst violence in 15 years

    ITN's Neil Connery reports from Belfast, where a fifth consecutive night of violence followed a loyalist rally outside City Hall.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    A spat over the flag fluttering over a local government building might sound trivial. But in Northern Ireland, the decision to stop permanently flying the British flag outside Belfast City Hall has sparked some of the worst violence since the 1998 Good Friday peace deal.

    Dozens of officers have been injured in attacks on police lines by furious protesters who, night after night, have thrown stones, bottles, fireworks, and, sometimes, Molotov cocktails -- violence that police say is orchestrated by the Ulster Volunteer Force, a pro-British paramilitary group.

    Gunshots were heard Saturday, although police said later it appeared that blank rounds had been used. Monday night saw a mix of peaceful protest and riots during which police used water canon and fired plastic bullets, ITV News reported. 

    Peter Muhly / AFP - Getty Images

    Loyalist protesters confront police as they gather at Belfast City Hall during a city council meeting Monday evening.

    According to one pro-British politician, the demonstrators are staging a “revolution with a small r” against attempts by Irish nationalist parties to “remove their Britishness.”

    Irish nationalists say they wanted to stop flying the flag from outside city hall because it is also used by pro-British paramilitaries and others to mark out their territory in the divided city and “intimidate” Catholics.

    The Good Friday Agreement was credited with largely ending three decades of sectarian violence known as "The Troubles," during which British troops were sent in to patrol the streets and at least 3,600 people were killed.

    It created an elected Northern Ireland assembly and devolved government in which power is shared between all sides, with traditional arch-enemies remarkably sitting side by side. The assembly meets in an imposing historic building, Stormont, over which the British flag flies for just 15 pre-agreed days each year. The recent violence was sparked by a vote that agreed a similar policy at local government level in Belfast last month.

    Naomi Long, deputy leader of the Alliance Party, warned Northern Ireland was now facing "an incredibly volatile and extremely serious situation."

    "I don't think anyone should underestimate the threat it poses to long-term peace and security in Northern Ireland," she told NBC News.

    "If people continue with violence, if it continues to escalate, if paramilitary involvement in that violence continues to grow, there's a real risk that we lose the progress we've made," Long said.

    In the month since Belfast City Council in Northern Ireland voted to limit the numbers of days the Union flag flies over its City Hall, 62 police officers have been injured, tens of thousands of dollars' worth of damage caused and senior loyalist paramilitaries have been involved in orchestrating the violence.  Channel Four Alex Thomson Channel Four Europe reports.

    Long described the violence as a "reality check." While politics had delivered the peace process, she said, true reconciliation between the divided communities had been "left to one side because it's painful and difficult."

    "What we have had is a papering over of the cracks," she said. "We have deep divisions, deep hatred and sectarianism and it won't go away by itself."

    Long, a member of the U.K. parliament, said she and other politicians had received death threats after the Alliance Party members on Belfast City Council voted for an attempted compromise deal over the flag on Dec. 3. 

    It allowed the British flag to be flown on a number of designated days -- about 17 or 18 depending on the year -- rather than all the time or not at all.

    Riots continue to erupt in Belfast, Northern Ireland, after lawmakers announced restrictions over flying the Union Jack. ITV's Mark Mallett reports.

    Cops hurt as British unionist protesters try to storm Belfast City Hall in flag spat

    An angry mob tried to storm the council chamber on the night of the vote and protests have continued sporadically since, with Monday seeing the fifth straight night of violence as the council met for the first time since last month’s controversial vote.

    Police said Monday afternoon in an emailed statement that 96 people had been arrested since the latest unrest broke out and 61 police officers had been injured.

    'Attempt to kill': Police in Belfast attacked as flag riots rage on

    Billy Hutchinson, leader of the Progressive Unionist Party, which he said provides political advice to the UVF, told NBC News that the flag decision had “driven people mad.”

    “I think what this is about is ordinary citizens who feel people are trying to remove their Britishness,” he said.

    “You need to remember that this is the United Kingdom and the flag of the country is the union flag,” he added. “It would be a bit like if people wanted to take down the Stars and Stripes from some local government in the U.S.”

    Paul Mcerlane / EPA

    Local shoppers waiting for a bus watch as riot police follow pro-British protesters away from Belfast's City Hall during a protest Saturday.

    State collusion in 1989 murder of Belfast lawyer 'shocking,' British PM says

    Hutchinson said this was one of a number of actions by Sinn Fein that were “outside the spirit of the Good Friday Agreement.”

    “I think the flag issue is a very big issue, I think it was the straw that broke the camel’s back … the catalyst that brought people onto the streets,” he said.

    “I think it is serious, I think people need to recognize this is a revolution with a small ‘r.’ We cannot sustain this sort of inequality coming from Sinn Fein, who are disguising it as equality. They cannot force this through,” he said.

    “I think if you listen to what the protesters are doing and saying, I think it is a threat [to the peace process]. It’s not a threat of armed violence… it’s a threat of community and political action,” he added.

    Hutchinson stressed he believed in peaceful protest, and would seek to persude any UVF members taking part in violence to stop.

    Clinton condemns violence, revisits family legacy in trip to Belfast

    Jim McVeigh, leader of Sinn Fein’s councilors on Belfast City Council, said they had thought it would be better to have no national flags at city hall, but had agreed to the compromise deal, which was passed with votes from the nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party, and the non-aligned Alliance Party.

    “The issue of the flag and allegiance and identity is a very important one here in Belfast. [In the city] you will see flags are used to mark out territory … to intimidate,” he told NBC News, highlighting murals painted on walls and national colors on curbs.

    Cathal Mcnaughton / Reuters

    A burnt out car blocks Dee Street in east Belfast Sunday near a mural that supports the Ulster Volunteer Force paramilitary group.

    McVeigh, who said he has had death threats since the vote, said he had expected some protests after the decision on Dec. 3, but added no one anticipated it would be “as ferocious as it has been.”

    “The bottom line is we made the right decision. We’re not going to change that decision. The flag is not going to go back up [permanently]. These protests are futile,” he said.

    A spokesman for the police trade union in Northern Ireland, who asked not to be named, told NBC News that the police were “severely stretched” in dealing with the riots and also the threat from dissident Irish nationalist groups.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Detained American, Internet freedom on agenda as Google boss visits North Korea
    • Video: Police say paramilitary group 'orchestrating' Belfast violence
    • India gang-rape case: Accused duo offer to testify against others
    • Chinese protest outside newspaper gates in rare censorship demo
    • Cat caught smuggling contraband into Brazil prison
    • US drone strikes kill at least 18 Pakistani militants, sources tell NBC
    • Assad gives defiant speech as Syrian rebels edge closer to Damascus
    • Chavez ally re-elected, cementing position as possible caretaker president
    • Drug-resistant malaria threatens deadly global 'nightmare'

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    197 comments

    Britain should get out of Ireland. Its the right thing to do.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: british, ireland, europe, world, peace, northern-ireland, flag, uk, featured, belfast
  • 25
    Dec
    2012
    8:45am, EST

    Pope's Christmas message pushes for peace in Syria, Nigeria

    Franco Origlia / Getty Images

    Pope Benedict XVI delivers his Christmas Day message from the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica on Christmas day in Vatican City.

    By Reuters

    VATICAN CITY -- Pope Benedict used his Christmas message to the world on Tuesday to say people should never lose hope for peace, even in conflict-riven Syria and in Nigeria where he spoke of "terrorism" against Christians.

    Marking the eighth Christmas season of his pontificate, the 85-year-old read his "Urbi et Orbi" (to the city and the world) message to tens of thousands of people in St Peter's Square and to millions of others watching around the world.

    Slideshow: Christmas around the world

    Paul J. Richards / AFP - Getty Images

    In churches and bus stations, on water skis and bicycles, people from the Middle East to middle America celebrate Christmas.

    Launch slideshow

    Delivering Christmas greetings in 65 languages, Benedict underscored his view that the hope represented by Christmas should never die, even in the most dire of situations.

    Pilgrims, locals mark Christmas in Bethlehem


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In his virtual tour of the some of the world's trouble spots, he reserved his toughest words for Syria, Nigeria and Mali.

    "Yes, may peace spring up for the people of Syria, deeply wounded and divided by a conflict which does not spare even the defenseless and reaps innocent victims," he said.

    "Once again I appeal for an end to the bloodshed, easier access for the relief of refugees and the displaced, and dialogue in the pursuit of a political solution to the conflict."

    The leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics also condemned conflicts in Mali and Nigeria, two countries where Islamist groups have waged violent campaigns.

    Reverends Gabriel and Jeanette Salguero of the Multicultural Lambs Church in New York City, talk about how to find the true spirit of Christmas and how to incorporate that into your daily life year round.

    Bombings, amputations
    "May the birth of Christ favor the return of peace in Mali and that of concord in Nigeria, where savage acts of terrorism continue to reap victims, particularly among Christians," he said.

    In Nigeria, the Islamist sect Boko Haram has killed hundreds in its campaign to impose sharia law in the north of the country, targeting a number of churches.

    In Mali, a mix of Islamists with links to al Qaeda have occupied the country's north since April, destroying much of the region's religious heritage. They have also carried out amputations to help impose strict Islamic law on a population that has practiced a more moderate form of Islam for centuries.

    At midnight mass in the Church of Nativity in Bethlehem, the cradle of Christianity, the message was of peace, love and goodwill to all mankind. NBC's Martin Fletcher reports.

    Benedict also held out a Christmas olive branch to the new government in China, asking is members to "esteem the contributions of religions". China does not allow its Catholics to recognize the pope's authority, forcing them to be members of a parallel state-backed Church.

    Late on Monday night, Benedict presided over a Christmas Eve Mass in St Peter's Basilica, where he urged people to find room for God in their fast-paced lives filled with the latest technological gadgets.

    "Do we have time and space for him? Do we not actually turn away God himself? We begin to do so when we have no time for him," he said.

    Scientists unravel secret of Rudolph's red nose

    Archbishop: Christianity still relevant
    Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, who leads the global 80-million-strong Anglican Communion, said in his Christmas day sermon that the answer to the question of whether Christianity had "had its day" was a "resounding no".

    "Silent Night" is a favorite carol that has been translated into hundreds of dialects, but it had a most humble birth not far from Salzburg, Austria. NBC's Michelle Kosinski takes a visit to Salzburg to explore the history of the carol from its very beginnings, through its most remarkable performance on Christmas Eve, 1914.

    Last month, the Church of England narrowly voted against allowing women bishops - to the dismay of Williams and Prime Minister David Cameron - in a move its leaders said risked undermining its role as the established church in society with clerics in parliament's upper chamber.

    The media, many politicians and some members of the public have criticized the Church of England for failing to allow women bishops and for failing to back government plans for gay marriage at a time when it is under pressure to modernize.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Boy's Christmas wish: Adoption of little brother caught in US-Russia spat
    • Syria activists: Several die after Assad's forces use 'poisonous gases'
    • US civilian killed by Afghan policewoman in 'insider' attack
    • North Korea missiles could reach US, says South
    • At Egypt polling stations, strong sentiments for and against
    • Germany's latest big export: Christmas markets
    • 6-year-old girl shot in face by Taliban and left for dead gets free surgery in US
    • Video: How Will and Kate are spending the holidays

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    128 comments

    The Vatican is the biggest shareholder in the Beretta Arms company and they're calling for peace? Yeah well...the man also tells us to be feeding the poor while sitting on a golden throne...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nigeria, europe, peace, syria, pope, christmas, mali
  • 10
    Oct
    2012
    3:00am, EDT

    Pakistani teen blogger shot by Taliban 'critical' after surgery

    Gunmen hunted down young Malala Yousufzai at her school, shooting her in the head after she dared to criticize the extremists who are ravaging her country. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

    By Mushtaq Yusufzai, NBC News

    PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- As a shocked Pakistan prayed for her recovery, Malala Yousufzai, the 14-year-old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban for writing a blog about daily life in the war-torn Swat Valley, was still in a critical condition Wednesday after surgery to remove a bullet, her surgeon told NBC News.

    Standing up for Pakistani school girl shot by Taliban

    Doctors said her head, face and neck started swelling Tuesday night, prompting doctors to call an emergency meeting at 1 a.m. Wednesday (4 p.m. ET) when they decided to operate on her.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Surgery at the Combined Military Hospital in Peshawar started at 2 a.m. and was completed at 5 a.m. Wednesday (5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday ET). The doctors' panel treating Malala, which includes military and civilian staff, is led by senior neurosurgeon Mumtaz Khan. 

    Talking to NBC News after the surgery, Khan said Malala's brain had started swelling as its left portion was damaged by the bullet.

    He said they operated on the damaged part of her brain and neck and removed the bullet from her body.

    A short documentary profiling an 11-year-old Pakistani girl on the last day before the Taliban closed down her school. (By Adam B. Ellick)

    "Malala is still in critical condition and had been shifted to the intensive care unit of the hospital, but I am optimistic and by the grace of Allah she will recover," Khan said.

    A plane is on standby at Bacha Khan International airport to take her to the United Arab Emirates for treatment if doctors decide this is necessary.

    Girl shot by Taliban to be sent abroad for treatment, Pakistani president says

    Malala was nominated for the International Children's Peace Prize in 2011 for a blog she wrote under a pseudonym for the BBC's Urdu-language news service. She started writing it when she was just 11.

    She also won the National Peace Prize in Pakistan, was honored with a school named after her, and quickly became an outspoken critic of the Taliban in Pakistan and a public advocate for peace.

    ISPR via AFP - Getty Images

    Soldiers carry Malala Yousufzai, 14, at an army hospital following an attack by gunmen in Peshawar, Pakistan, on Oct. 9, 2012.

    In her blog, Malala chronicled life in the Swat Valley under the brutal and oppressive rule of the local faction of the Pakistani Taliban, who carried out public floggings, hung dead bodies in the streets, and banned education for girls.

    In early 2011, the militants had added Malala to their hit list. 

    Nosheen Abbas, of BBC Urdu, told NBC News that Malala was "very passionate about education, and she spoke about that a lot to me."


    "It angered her deeply when girls' schools were closed, and she was affected, and her class fellows were affected. She would talk about (hiding school bags)," she said.

    "She was so open about what they were doing to her city, and she was so vocal about it -- that is what made her so threatening," she added.

     Abbas tried to explain why the Taliban had reacted so strongly.

    "When it's coming from a child, it's innocent, it's honest, it's open, and I think that's what was so threatening," she said of the blog.

    "I think that code of honor that used to exist where women and children, they weren't attacked, they were honored in a way never touched. I think that no longer exists, I think that is what it shows," she added.

    Pakistani school girls pray for the recovery of Malala Yousufzai in Multan, Pakistan on Oct. 10.

    Grief across Pakistan
    Meantime, the shooting drew a huge outpouring of reaction across Pakistan. The front pages of national newspapers carried pictures of a bandaged and bloody Yousufzai being brought to hospital.  "Hate targets hope" the Express Tribune said in a headline.

    Pakistan's president, prime minister, and heads of various opposition parties joined human rights group Amnesty International and the United Nations in condemning the attack.

    "Pakistan's future belongs to Malala and brave young girls like her. History won't remember the cowards who tried to kill her at school," Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said on Twitter.

    The attack was also condemned by many leaders of ethnic Pashtun tribes in northwest Pakistan.

    "This attack is against Pashtun and Islamic practices," said Khurshid Kaka Ji, leader of a jirga, or tribal council, in Swat, a one-time tourist destination of peaks and meadows where the military has battled the Taliban intermittently since 2007.

    "The security forces and police deployed should capture the attackers and punish them. If they do not catch these people, then the peace that Swat has gained through bloodshed will be shaken."

    Reuters and NBC's Waj Khan contributed to this report from Islamabad.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Deadly crossing: Death toll rises among those desperate for American Dream
    • More weapons in Syria could trigger 'all-out war'
    • Hong Kong residents unhappy after US allows visa-free travel for Taiwanese
    • Romney: Risk of conflict higher in Mideast after Obama policies
    • NBC's Kerry Sanders answers questions about Chavez's re-election
    • Thai princess clears shelves during 8-hour, $40,000 UK antique shopping spree
    • 'It was an artistic statement': Vandal tags Mark Rothko painting at London museum
    • Snipers, commandos to welcome Germany's tough-talking Merkel in Greece
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    508 comments

    Is this the same Taliban that is backing the Syrian rebels that Obama has been aiding ? The same ones who kill and maim American soldiers ? The same ones who did this to a little girl ? Think about that come November !

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, taliban, peace, blog, featured, swat-valley, malala-yousufzai
  • 27
    Jun
    2012
    11:19am, EDT

    Venezuela tribe seeks return of sacred stone called 'Grandmother' from Germany

    Thomas Peter/Reuters

    German artist Wolfgang von Schwarzenfeld stands in front of a stone from Venezuela that is part of the Global Stone installation in the Tiergarten park in Berlin, Tuesday.

    By Reuters

    BERLIN -- Wolfgang von Schwarzenfeld's sculptures in a Berlin park were meant to promote world peace, but the 79-year-old German now finds himself at war with a Venezuelan tribe which accuses him of stealing a sacred pink stone known to them as "Grandmother." 

    The Venezuelan government is championing the Pemon Indians of the "Gran Sabana" region by demanding the return of the polished stone from Berlin's Tiergarten park -- putting the German government in something of a dilemma.  


    With Caracas calling it robbery, and the sculptor arguing that the stone was a legal gift, the monolith is emitting more negative energy than its esoteric fans in Berlin are used to. 

    Blissfully unaware of the diplomatic tug-of-war, Robert, a Berlin gardener, got off his bicycle to light joss sticks among the stones from five continents that form the "Global Stone Project", awaiting friends for an afternoon shamanic ritual. 

    But newly arrived Venezuelan tourists Grecia Melendez and Juan Carlos Brozoski knew all about the war of the stone and suspected there were political motives behind the protests. 

    "(President Hugo) Chavez always wants a conflict with someone," said 32-year-old Melendez, taking photos of the stone, which is engraved with the word "love" in different languages -- and graffiti with couples' names and hearts. 

    'A symbol of a united mankind'
    Von Schwarzenfeld, a frail figure with whispy white hair and scuffed brown shoes, waved a sheaf of documents authorizing the removal of the stone from the Canaima National Park in 1998. 

    As with all the stones arranged in a circle in Berlin, a "sister" stone remained behind. Every summer solstice, their burnished surfaces reflect the sun "as a symbol of a united mankind, hopefully one day in peace", he said. 

    The project was inaugurated in 1999 near Berlin's landmark Potsdamer Platz and Brandenburg Gate. As children played among the stones, Von Schwarzenfeld defied Venezuela to take back what he called a "gift to Berlin" from former president Rafael Caldera. 

    "Peace for me does not mean the absence of conflict," said the artist, undeterred by threats and what he too suspects are "political motivations" behind the tussle over the stone. 

    A video circulated on Youtube has mobilized public opinion in Venezuela, recounting the mythical origins of the Kueka (grandmother in the Pemon language) and its pair, and voicing locals' sense of loss. 

    "This man decided to take the Kueka without caring about its cultural value for the Pemon community," Venezuelan activist and ecologist Any Alarcon says in the video. 

    Venezuela prosecutors investigating
    Culture Minister Pedro Calzadilla told state television the donation was "illegitimate" because the stone was part of "the cultural patrimony of the (Pemon) community". Prosecutors are looking into the stone's removal because "whoever authorized the removal of the Grandmother committed a crime," he said. 

    After Pemon tribespeople demonstrated outside Germany's embassy last week with spears, feather headdresses and banners saying "The Pemon People Want Our Wise Grandmother Back," the German envoy promised to relay their feelings to Berlin, while telling them it would be no easy task to return the stone. 

    German Foreign ministry spokesman Andreas Peschke said Berlin wanted a solution "agreed by all sides -- Venezuela, the indigenous groups, the artist and the city of Berlin". 

    Von Schwarzenfeld was not convinced, saying the stone's removal would sacrifice "the 15 years of my life and all the money I spent. If it is taken away, it ruins the whole project." 

    Beside him stood German anthropologist Bruno Illius, who has studied the Pemon tribe for two decades. He said there was "no such thing as a 'holy stone' for the Pemones, just small magical stones with practical purposes, like helping you to catch fish." 

    Illius rubbished stories about the stone's removal bringing misfortune on the tribe, like drought and the disappearance of the ants they eat in spicy sauce, saying he had eaten plenty of ants on three visits to the region, as recently as last year. 

    "This is all a fraud, a deception," the professor said. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Reflecting on queen's historic meeting with ex-IRA commander
    • A special series: What the world thinks of US
    • Ex-colleagues: Egypt's Morsi was conservative, open-minded student
    • Syrian pro-government TV station attacked, 3 employees killed
    • One man's mission: Promote Chinese patriotism in face of Western onslaught
    • Spain's economic crisis turns middle-class families into illegal squatters
    • Iraq orders Voice of America, 43 other media outlets to close
    • Report: Syrian general, dozens of other soldiers defect to Turkey

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    9 comments

    And the U.S. government has taken away so much of my people's sacred material called gold.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, venezuela, stone, peace, grandmother, sacred, feautred
  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    5:39am, EDT

    Reports: West may offer Syria's Bashar Assad immunity if he gives up power

    SANA via EPA, file

    Syrian President Bashar Assad is accompanied by his wife Asma while casting his vote during a referendum on a new constitution on Feb. 26 in in Damascus.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    The U.S. and U.K. are considering letting Syria’s President Bashar Assad have immunity from prosecution if he agrees to relinquish power, according to reports.

    The Guardian newspaper reported that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was aiming to convince former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan to host a peace conference to discuss the idea further.


    The paper said Yemen President Ali Saleh’s departure from power – in which he was given immunity from prosecution despite the killing of civilians – was seen as a potential model.

    The Telegraph newspaper said Assad would be given safe passage to Switzerland to take part in the peace talks under the plan.

    The paper said British officials believed it was “worth having a go” with the idea, but added that a well-placed British government source admitted it was a “very optimistic” scenario.

    'Transitional process'
    The plan was drawn up following bilateral talks between the U.S./U.K. and Russia at the G-20 meeting in Mexico, where the British source said Russian president Vladimir Putin had “indicated that they were not hooked on Assad staying in power indefinitely."

    P.J. Crowley, former State Department spokesman, joins Andrea Mitchell Reports to talk about how US and Russia might work together to prevent a civil war in Syria.

    “Of course they go on to say that it’s not up to the international community to decide. But those of us who had bilaterals with Putin thought there was just enough out of these meetings to make it worth pursuing the objective of negotiating some sort of transitional process in Syria,” the source added, according to The Telegraph.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    The Telegraph said the official was asked if this might involve immunity for Assad.  “It is hard to see a negotiated solution in which one of the participants agrees voluntarily to go to the International Criminal Court,” the source replied.

    The paper said Western officials hoped the peace talks in Switzerland would take place in “the next few weeks.” The summit would be attended by Assad or other Syrian government officials, opposition figures, U.N. Security Council members, and other countries such as Turkey, Saudia Arabia and possibly Iran.

    Former National Security Adviser for President Carter, Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski, joins Morning Joe to discuss the latest in Egypt, the G20 summit in Mexico, China's relationship with Russia and the impact it could have on the U.S. and Syria.

     “The Russians argue that the Iranians should be invited,” the British source said, according to The Telegraph. “As far as we are concerned, the answer is no. We have no illusions: it could capsize just on whether Iran is invited or not, but it is worth a try given the gravity of events.”

    Three Russian ships headed for Syria, US says

    Follow Ian Johnston

    A U.K. Foreign Office said in an email sent to msnbc.com and other media that the British government was continuing “to do everything we can to bring an end to the violence in Syria.”

    “If Assad accepts a political transition then there is a range of options that could be considered, but there is no new offer, and the longer the killing goes on, the fewer options Assad will have,” the statement said.

    “The details of any transition need to be agreed, including with the Syrian opposition, and we will continue to collect evidence so there can be no expectation on the part of those killing that they can avoid justice and accountability,” it added.

    However, a Foreign Office spokesman told msnbc.com that the U.K. would not be able to intervene if Assad was given a safe haven by another country.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Damage and destruction litter a street in the battered city of Qusayr, southwest of Homs in western Syria, on Wednesday.

    As the diplomats looked for a solution to the crisis, the death toll continued to mount Thursday.

    Activists told The Associated Press that two people were killed during the shelling of rebel-held areas in the city of Homs. 

    PhotoBlog: Syrian army shells Homs and Qusayr

    Oscar Fernandez-Taranco, the U.N. assistant secretary-general for political affairs, warned on Tuesday that time was running out for the current U.N.-backed peace process for Syria.

    "The Secretary-General (Ban Ki-moon) remains gravely concerned about the intensification of violence and rising death toll, as well as continued human rights abuses and unmet humanitarian needs," Fernandez-Taranco said, according to Reuters.

    UN suspends Syria monitoring due to rising violence

    Ban said last month that at least 10,000 people have been killed in the Syria conflict, but U.N. diplomats say the actual number is likely much higher. 

    "The situation in Homs is particularly alarming," Fernandez-Taranco told the 15-nation Security Council during a discussion on the Middle East, Reuters reported. "The tragic human suffering from the escalating conflict calls for urgent and concerted efforts to avoid a full-scale civil war." 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 1.5 million children in imminent danger of starvation in West Africa
    • Three US troops, at least 18 Afghans, killed in suicide blast
    • New Greece government agreed, says socialist party leader
    • Chinese artist Ai Weiwei barred from own court case
    • 42,000 modern-day slaves rescued but millions in bondage, trafficking report says
    • Brazil's plans for 60 dams in Amazon makes for Earth Summit controversy
    • Three Russian ships headed to Syria, US says

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    308 comments

    Why is it that evil murdering dictators for the most part get to just leave their country with millions or billions of their citizens dollars and live like a king in the "West" after we brand them a terrorist and say publicly they have slaughtered their citizens indiscriminately.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: peace, syria, prosecution, bashar-assad, featured, immunity
  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    6:04am, EDT

    US offers 'safe passage' to Afghan Taliban leaders

    By Fakhar ur Rehman, NBC News, and Alastair Jamieson

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- The United States and Afghanistan have agreed to "give safe passage" to representatives of the Afghan Taliban to help them to enter future peace talks, officials announced Friday.

    It may  represent a significant step forward towards the resumption of peace talks that were suspended in Qatar last month, and  comes just weeks ahead of a NATO summit in Chicago on the future of Afghanistan. 


    Speaking at a joint press conference with U.S. Special Envoy Marc Grossman and Pakistani Foreign Secretary Jalil Abbas Jilani,  Afghan Deputy Foreign Minister Javed Ludin said: "Time is short, peace is urgent."

    New blow to US-Afghan links? Congressional delegation meets Karzai foes

    "We need to find and encourage and create safe passage for peace talks," with the Afghan Taliban, he added.

    His comments came after the three countries held their sixth meeting aimed at political reconciliation in Afghanistan.

    A U.S. Embassy official confirmed to NBC News that the countries have agreed to allow and facilitate travel of the Afghan militants to participate in any future talks. The official said details of how it would work in practice have not been announced.

    U.S. sees Taliban talks suspension as tactical move

    Jilani announced the establishment of two new groups, one to represent the efforts of the three countries at the United Nations, and another responsible for "safe passage." "Safe passage will be to help bring Afghan Taliban in to peace talks," he told NBC News.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Rahmat Gul / AP

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    Talks were suspended last month amid a string of public setbacks that have scandalized and angered Afghans, notably U.S. soldiers' burning of copies of the Koran and the killing of 16 Afghan villagers for which a U.S. soldier is in custody.

    Dr Gareth Price, senior research fellow at Britain's Chatham House think thank, told msnbc.com the move could be seen as a "confidence-building measure".

    "The US has made clear it will remain in Afghanistan in some form - that's the stick, if you like, so maybe this is the carrot," he said.

    On Tuesday, White House sources told Reuters that President Barack Obama's administration may hand over a Taliban detainee at Guantanamo Bay prison directly to the Afghan government in order to help revive peace talks.

    As foreign forces prepare to exit Afghanistan, the White House had hoped to lay the groundwork for peace talks by sending five Taliban prisoners, some seen as among the most threatening detainees at Guantanamo, to Qatar to rejoin other Taliban members opening a political office there. 

    Sources: Scant evidence 'torture' aided war on terror, Senate probe finds

    While that plan has not been scotched entirely, several sources familiar with preliminary discussions within the U.S. government said the United States may instead, as an initial gesture meant to revive diplomacy, send one of those detainees directly to Afghan government custody. 

    The sources identified the detainee as a former Taliban regional governor named Khairullah Khairkhwa, who is seen by American officials as less dangerous than other senior Taliban detainees now held at the U.S. military prison in Cuba. 

    Karzai slams NATO over 18-hour Kabul gunbattle

    More than a year ago, the White House launched what began as a secretive diplomatic bid to coax the Taliban, the Islamist group that ruled Afghanistan until 2001, into peace talks. That campaign has become central to U.S. strategy as officials conclude the Afghan war will not end on the battlefield alone. 

    Five alleged members of the Taliban are being detained in Afghanistan after authorities discovered a huge amount of explosives in a truck. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    It remains far from clear whether the Taliban would embrace sharing power in Afghanistan and whether the militants are cohesive enough to agree on a joint diplomatic approach. 

    But Washington's strategy, before the summit in Chicago, is to build on what officials see as military progress against the Taliban, and encouraging signs from the Afghan and Pakistani governments, to heap pressure on the Islamist group. 

    The Chicago summit is expected to further detail plans for the withdrawal of most of NATO's 130,000 troops there by the end of 2014 and set the course for future ties between Afghanistan and the West.

    After an 18-hour assault, the Taliban took responsibility for the destruction. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    U.S. efforts to broker the talks were dealt a blow last month when the Taliban suspended its participation and appeared to reject even minimal restrictions for prisoner transfer. 

    'Deplorable': U.S. defense chief condemns urinating Marines video

    Meanwhile, President Obama has reviewed potential threats to the United States before next week's anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden, but there is no concrete evidence al-Qaida is plotting any revenge attacks, the White House said on Thursday. 

    U.S. Navy SEALs shot bin Laden last year in a raid on the al-Qaida leader's compound in Pakistan before dawn on May 2 local time, which was May 1 in the United States. The killing is touted by the Obama administration as one of its top national security accomplishments. 

    Osama bin Laden's widow, kids leave Pakistan

    "At this time, we have no credible information that terrorist organizations, including al-Qaida, are plotting attacks in the United States to coincide with the anniversary of bin Laden's death," White House press secretary Jay Carney said on Thursday. 

    Slideshow: After the raid: Inside bin Laden's compound

    Farooq Naeem / AFP - Getty Images

    U.S. forces found and killed the al-Qaida leader in the affluent Pakistani town of Abbottabad, where he had been living in a large compound.

    Launch slideshow

    That assessment was echoed in an FBI and Department of Homeland Security intelligence bulletin issued on Wednesday to state and local law enforcement agencies. 

    The bulletin said U.S. agencies "have not detected signs of homeland plotting by these groups in the intervening months." 

    Abbottabad: One year after bin Laden

    Despite the lack of evidence of a threat, the bulletin cautioned that al-Qaida "probably would view a homeland attack on this anniversary as a symbolic victory that would help reassert the group's global relevance following the major leadership losses and operation setbacks it has suffered over the past year." 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Report: Osama bin Laden's widows, kids headed to Saudi Arabia
    • Israel grapples with insecurity as it celebrates independence
    • At least four killed as two bombs hit Nigeria newspaper offices
    • Aiding terrorists? Syrian women risk all to help dissidents
    • Murdoch: Hacking scandal cost 'hundreds of millions'
    • Analysts say North Korea's new missiles are fakes
    • Israeli military chief: I doubt Iran's 'rational' leadership will make nuclear bomb

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    235 comments

    The only "safe passage" the Obama administration should be offering the Taliban terrorists is "safe passage" to hell. The mass murdering, child raping Islamic terrorists want to kill everyone of us and enslave our children. And we're offering them "safe passage."

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, afghanistan, pakistan, terror, taliban, peace, al-qaeda, featured
  • 10
    Apr
    2012
    4:02am, EDT

    Syrian troops shell Hama on cease-fire deadline day

    By msnbc.com news services

    BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Syrian tanks shelled the central city of Hama and parts of Homs came under mortar fire on Tuesday, opposition activists said, on the day President Bashar Assad had agreed to halt the use of heavy weapons and withdraw forces from urban areas.

    Tanks were still present in both cities, activists said.

    A collapse of the truce deal by U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan could move Syria closer to an all-out civil war. A 13-month uprising has turned increasingly violent in response to a brutal regime crackdown.


    "Shelling woke me this morning at 8:30 a.m. (2:30 a.m. ET) and I can now hear one shell every 10 minutes or so," said Waleed Fares, describing what he said was mortar fire striking neighborhoods in the center and east of Homs, the hub of a 13-month-old uprising.

    Syria truce prospects fade; US 'outraged' by new attacks

    In Hama, Manhal Abu Bakr reported hearing shelling overnight and said tanks were still patrolling the city.

    "At 2 a.m. (8 p.m. Monday) we heard two shells fall and the sound of tanks moving around the streets," he said.

    "There is no gunfire now. They shell us at night so that it is hard to film," he said over Skype. Internet video, which Abu Bakr said was filmed in Hama overnight, showed nighttime explosions in a built-up district.

    Colleagues mourn TV cameraman shot dead on Lebanon-Syria border

    The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said most cities were relatively calm on Tuesday after heavy bloodshed in recent days, but reported no clear sign of troop withdrawals.

    Syrian troops' message: 'We are present'
    There were no immediate reports of action by fighters of the rebel Free Syrian Army, whose commanders have said they will order a cease-fire only if they are satisfied that Assad's forces have indeed pulled back and stopped offensives.

    The Observatory said there was an overnight bombardment in the town of Mara in Syria's northern province of Aleppo.

    Syrian troops have fired across the border into Turkey, hitting a refugee camp. It's the latest incident suggesting that a cease-fire meant to take effect this week is unlikely to go ahead. ITV's Richard Pallot reports.

    In Douma, a suburb of the capital Damascus, an activist said tanks were still on the fringes of town on Tuesday morning.

    Residents of the southern city of Deraa, where the popular revolt against Assad erupted in March 2011, reported sporadic gunfire.

    "Security is everywhere and you feel they have redeployed in key locations," said Nayef Hassan, an engineer.

    Security forces and the army remained stationed in Deraa, said an activist who called himself Abu Firas, and security checkpoints still separated districts of the old city.

    "The troops at checkpoints are appearing in strength to say 'we are present'," he said.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Amid Iran tensions, neighbor becomes den of spies
    • A rare peek inside North Korea
    • Tunnel linked to looming North Korea nuclear test? South Korea thinks so
    • Syria truce prospects fade; US 'outraged' by new attacks
    • Leftist rebels kidnap natural gas workers in Peru

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    28 comments

    I thought Assad wanted guarantees from the wahabi terrorist yesterday? If he is asking for guarantees then there is no agreement and with the western backers providing funding and arms to these jihadist, Assad is right to ask for guarantees.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mideast, peace, syria, annan, united-nations, assad, featured, cease-fire
  • 30
    Mar
    2012
    6:21am, EDT

    UN orders immediate Syria cease-fire: 'The deadline is now'

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Syrian President Bashar Assad must order a cease-fire immediately, a spokesman for UN chief envoy Kofi Annan said Friday, telling reporters: "The deadline is now".

    "We expect him to implement this plan immediately," Ahmad Fawzi, a spokesman for Anna, told a news briefing in Geneva, adding that Assad should not wait for opposition groups to make the first move.


    Annan's peace proposal calls for the withdrawal of heavy weapons and troops from cities and towns, humanitarian assistance, the release of prisoners and free movement and access for journalists. It does not hinge on Assad leaving office.

    For the first time since 1990, Arab League countries meet in Iraq's capital, but only half of the members showed up to discuss a UN proposal for Syria. NBC's Duncan Golestani reports.

    "If you read the agreement...it specifically asks the government to withdraw its troops, to cease using heavy weapons in populated centers. The very clear implication here is that the government must stop first and then discuss a cessation of hostilities with the other side and with the mediator," Fawzi said.

    Report: Syria is torturing children, UN human rights chief says

    He added that Annan would soon visit Iran to discuss Syria peace proposals, although no date for the trip has been set.

    Annan has already been to Cairo, Ankara, Doha, Beijing and Moscow to try and secure international agreement on how to deal with Assad.

    Britain pledges $800,000 to Syria opposition to topple Assad regime

    The comments come ahead of a 70-nation summit in Istanbul on Sunday, to be attended by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, which aims to consolidate international backing for Syria opposition groups.

    Britain on Thursday became the first western country to pledge a specific sum of financial support for non-military opposition groups in Syria, offering $800,000 to be spent on communications and human rights protections.

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • US soldier dies saving Afghan girl
    • Sarkozy: Toulouse shootings caused 9/11-like trauma
    • Tiger attacks conservationist John Varty at South Africa wildlife park
    • 14 dead in prison riot in Honduras
    • Spanish workers strike against labor reforms
    • French gunman buried in Toulouse
    • Britain pledges $800,000 to Syria opposition to topple Assad regime

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    70 comments

    If Syria doesn't stop the violence, the UN will write a letter to Assad telling him he's a really naughty boy. They might even stamp the letter with a seal of the UN just to make it more intimidating when Assad reads it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: un, middle-east, clinton, peace, syria, assad, featured
  • 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
    • Strauss-Kahn hit with preliminary sex-ring charges
    • Syria responds to Annan's peace proposal; Homs shelled again
    • Expert: Al-Qaida web forums crippled in suspected cyber-attack

    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.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: lebanon, world, peace, syria, united-nations, beirut, assad, featured
Older posts

Browse

  • featured,
  • world-news,
  • syria,
  • china,
  • europe,
  • afghanistan,
  • world,
  • middle-east,
  • israel,
  • pakistan,
  • egypt,
  • iran,
  • russia,
  • updated,
  • uk,
  • north-korea,
  • africa,
  • london,
  • military,
  • assad,
  • france,
  • protest,
  • environment,
  • al-qaida,
  • britain,
  • taliban,
  • nuclear,
  • italy,
  • terrorism,
  • india,
  • asia,
  • germany,
  • japan,
  • vatican,
  • economy,
  • crime,
  • south-africa,
  • human-rights,
  • mexico,
  • pope
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (175)
    • April (275)
    • March (432)
    • February (332)
    • January (323)
  • 2012
    • December (332)
    • November (332)
    • October (313)
    • September (360)
    • August (362)
    • July (310)
    • June (351)
    • May (427)
    • April (404)
    • March (427)
    • February (347)
    • January (284)
  • 2011
    • December (357)
    • November (3)

Most Commented

  • Girl's organs removed after vacation death; family believes they may have been sold (624)
  • Chef to the stars Miki Nozawa dies following confrontation over unpaid bill (415)
  • North Korea fires more missiles, condemns US and South for 'war measures' (490)
  • Six Americans, Afghan children among dead in Kabul suicide attack (537)
  • 'Love has won out over hate': France becomes 14th country to allow gay marriage (1610)
  • Palestinian kids swept up in wave of Israeli arrests (382)
  • Toronto mayor denies crack-smoking claim (244)

Other blogs

  • The Body Odd
  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • PhotoBlog
  • US News
  • Open Channel

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • World news on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise