@muselhumanist muselhumanist schrieb:Leider gibt es wahrscheinlich wirklich Fälle von ernsthaftem Hunger, aber daran sind alle Kampfparteien schuld, welche bei ihren Häuserkämpfen keine Rücksicht auf eingesperrte Zivilisten nehmen. Aber diese Greuelpropaganda ist einfach nur abstoßend.
Aus
@Ashert001 Artikel:
http://claysbeach.blogspot.fr/2014/01/the-syrian-double-revolution-and-euro.html". The “third option” paid for the spotlight dearly, with threats to their lives. The voices from local committees and grassroots networks denouncing both the Assad regime and the Islamists trying to hijack the revolution intensified in the recent period. It is now much harder to ignore and marginalize them, let alone claim they don´t exist and that it is only Al-Qaeda militias in the horizon.
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A revolution against the Assad regime, and a revolution against the Islamists attempting to take over. A revolution to overthrow a regime, and a revolution to fight another repressive regime in the make. A double revolution with all what it entails of fighting sieges, lack of basic needs, its injured, its refugees, bombs, armed militias, detentions, torture, kidnappings, lack of freedom of movement, crackdown on freedoms in both the regime areas and the Islamist-controlled ones, desperation.. etc. "
Gerade die Situation in Yarmouk lässt grosse Zweifel an Einsatz FSA, es waren rein strategische Gründe, die Bevölkerung wird vernachlässigt und missbraucht.
"Palestinians at Yarmouk camp are forced to take sides in the Syrian conflict
..
As with any attack in Syria, testimonies give rise to differing stories blaming one side or the other.
Among a puzzle of eyewitnesses, Yannan sums up the most plausible version of the attack.
“Thousands of FSA men flooded into the camps urging us to leave. Then planes appeared and bombed Al-Husseiny Mosque and a nearby school full of refugees. Everything became chaotic, a lot of shouting, and people rushed into the streets.”
As for the logistics of the operation, Mazen, a member of the Palestinian Local Coordination Committee, expresses his disappointment with the FSA.
“They did not coordinate the operation with us, nor did they inform us about it, which put civilians at risk and hindered the success of the whole operation,” he says.
..
Most of the Palestinian refugees complain about looting and brutality from by both sides and, as with displaced Syrians, they only seek a safe haven.
Mazen conceives Palestinians and Syrians living in Syria as one people, but mentions how Palestinians can benefit from the Syrian revolution.
“We are trapped among many sides: Jibril, the Palestinian factions, the Syrian regime, the FSA and the Syrian army. Among the FSA in Yarmouk, there are professionals, but radicals as well as Shabiha [pro-regime paramilitaries].”"
http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/palestinians-yarmouk-camp-are-forced-take-sides-syrian-conflict"On 31 October 2012, the FSA announced that they had helped form a brigade made up of anti-Assad Palestinians, called Liwa al-Asifa (Storm Brigade), who have been armed to take control of Yarmouk. The PFLP-GC leader Ahmed Jibril and his men were accused of harassing Yarmouk's residents and attacking FSA fighters.[11] Many Palestinian men from the camp also joined other FSA units and fought with them in the Damascus districts of Tadamon and Al-Hajar Al-Aswad
Fierce fighting in Yarmouk began on 5 December 2012 and lasted until 17 December. The fighting mainly involved the FSA (along with the Liwa al-Asifa brigade) fighting against the PLFP-GC.
On 16 December, Syrian Army jets bombed Yarmouk, for the first time since the civil war began. Activists reported that a school and mosque sheltering refugees were hit.[13] It was reported that at least 23 were killed, all civilians.[14] About 1,000 Palestinians reached Lebanon less than 48 hours after the bombing. "
Wikipedia: Yarmouk camp fighting (December 2012)