Peace envoy Brahimi pushes in Syria for ceasefire - Reuters [getdailynow.blogspot.com]
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1 of 11. UN-Arab League peace envoy for Syria Lakhdar Brahimi arrives for a joint news conference in Amman October 18, 2012.
Credit: Reuters/Ali Jarekji
AMMAN |
AMMAN (Reuters) - The international mediator on Syria will go to Damascus in the next few days to try to broker a brief ceasefire in the war between President Bashar al-Assad's government and rebels during the Islamic Eid al-Adha festival.
Lakhdar Brahimi, the U.N.-Arab League envoy, told reporters on Thursday after meeting Jordan's foreign minister that a respite in hostilities could build confidence and help bring about a longer truce in the 19-month-old conflict.
"Yes I am going to Syria. This appeal we made to our Syrian brothers, whether in the government or against the government, to stop fighting in the three or four days of the Eid next week," Brahimi said.
A previous ceasefire in April collapsed after just a few days, with each side blaming the other. Mediator Kofi Annan resigned his post in frustration a few months later.
Since then the war pitting Assad's troops against a loosely-organized rebel force trying to end his 12-year-old rule has intensified. The daily death toll routinely tops 100 combatants and civilians and fighting rages in cities including Aleppo, the country's commercial center, and the capital Damascus.
The truce would be self-imposed with no monitoring.
"This is an appeal to the Syrians themselves that they stop fighting and observe it themselves. This is not the political process or the solution required to the Syrian crisis," Brahimi said.
The Syrian government guardedly welcomed the proposal but said any initiative must be respected by both sides. Turkey, one of Assad's harshest critics, and Iran, one of his strongest allies, both backed the plan, in rare display of agreement.
Brahimi will meet Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem on Saturday, an official in Damascus said.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi said Damascus hoped Brahimi's talks in the region, including with countries which back the rebels, could herald "something which leads to the success of a constructive initiative".
Brahimi's spokesman Ahmad Fawzi said the envoy, a veteran Algerian diplomat, was working on a new, comprehensive peace plan.
"It's difficult to put a timeline on it but it's all coming together. He has completed the circle with this tour of neighboring countries. He needs to go now to the outer circle, to Moscow and China, and look them in the eye and say this will not work unless you support it," Fawzi said.
Russia, which sold Syria arms worth $ 1 billion last year, and China have vetoed three resolutions favored by Western powers condemning Syrian authorities and opening the way to U.N. sanctions on Damascus.
The Kremlin denies trying to prop up Assad, who allows Russia to maintain a naval supply facility in the port of Tartus that is its only military base outside the former Soviet Union.
Moscow says Syria's crisis must be resolved without foreign interference, particularly military intervention.
The Syrian government, which portrays the war as aggression by terrorists instigated by its international enemies, said on Thursday it had written to the United Nations to protest about foreign support for the opposition.
"Evidence on involvement of foreign countries, including Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, in supporting and arming the terrorist groups in Syria has recently increased," the foreign ministry said in a letter to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council.
GUNS IN DAMASCUS
Violence wracked the country on Thursday, from the eastern desert city of Hassake, where five soldiers were killed when rebels ambushed a military truck, to Damascus, where government forces were bombarding outlying suburbs.
The pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said dozens of people were wounded when warplanes bombed the northern town of Maarat al-Numan, which straddles the main north-south highway connecting Damascus with Aleppo and was captured by rebels last week.
The official SANA news agency said troops were "cleaning villages" in the countryside around Maarat, killing and wounding many rebels. Government forces have been making a strong push to retake Maarat, including using air strikes.
In an extensive report on fighting across Syria, SANA said a large number of insurgents had been killed in attacks in several districts of Aleppo and elsewhere. The Observatory also reported clashes in Aleppo.
Insurgents had blown up a gas pipeline from Deir Ezzor to Palmyra in the central Syrian desert and an oil pipeline from al-Omar field to Atteim field in north of Deir Ezzor on Thursday, SANA said.
More than 140 Syrians were killed on Wednesday, including 62 unarmed civilians, 12 of them children, the Observatory said.
Syrian officials have questioned whether the rebels, who agreed on a joint leadership on Tuesday to encourage supporters to provide them with more powerful weapons, could commit to or honor any ceasefire deal.
But Brahimi said on Wednesday opposition figures had told him any ceasefire by Assad's forces would be reciprocated immediately.
"We heard from everyone we met in the opposition, and everyone (else) we met that, if the government stops using violence, 'We will respond to this directly'," he said.
"We hope this will be a very small step that would save the Syrian people ... because they are burying hundreds of people every day."
The total death toll now stands at more than 30,000 and international players fear that if unchecked, the war could expand into a wider regional conflict between Sunni powers sympathetic to the rebels and Shi'ites who back Assad.
(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi in Amman and Oliver Holmes in Beirut; Writing by Angus MacSwan; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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Question by imrational: What are your thoughts about an "atheist house"? I've been thinking for awhile about buying a large house and renting rooms out to fellow atheists. There would be some ground rules, like chores, must be able to play nice with others, strongly encouraging acceptance of other house members, having group activities (like games, exercise, etc). The idea would be to have a group of rational-minded individuals that would form a type of extended family. 1. Do you think such an idea would work? 2. Would you be interested in such a house? Best answer for What are your thoughts about an "atheist house"?:
Answer by TRUTH Speaker
sounds like it would be a great empty space !!
Answer by Thomas H
You should get a ship. I heard they are on ships.
Answer by John L
I wouldn't be interested. Why would you want to live together? That would be too much togetherness.
Answer by Human
That would be sweet. Since I'm a hippy, I could use it as a place to grow my shrooms and marijuana. I could also relocate my lab their and makes some acid; we could make lots of money.
Answer by RatZ
That would be great for student housing, if you're in a college town.
Answer by Alpha M.O.T.U
LMAO...of course it would work you guy's are the leading cult in the world..seriously the largest true cult...
Answer by Sarah
Uh, hi. Hey.What's up. I actually think that's a really good idea, except it could be for anyone rational minded. You could allow religion people too, but have the rules that there can be no pushing your faith on people, attacking atheists, no big religious ceremonies in the house, etc. If someone stops acting rational-m inded, you can just throw them out. My main point is that I love the rationality thing, but I think that you should allow the same privilege to people with religions, unless they are religious nut-jobs, in which case, out they go. Just please don't judge people with religions, because there are plenty of religious both nutjobs and scientists, and it's a shame to lost the scientists. Anyway, I hope your house-buying works out, and I hope you succeed. Best of luck :)
Answer by â¥Å ÎÒ'İ⥠â¼áº¦â¬ÑÄ¥ÄαÑâ®â®â®â®â®â®â®iâ¼
I don't think it would work, because having roommates sucks, and sharing a single thing, like atheism, is a poor basis for assuming even a friendship might exist. They're going to have all the faults that drive you crazy in other people: Crumbs in the butter, missing food, cooking stinky foods, talking during your favorite shows, talking through movies, not using deodorant, etc. Also, they're going to each have their own backgrounds and interests, and won't necessarily want to participate in your group activities, chores, etc. I would not be interested in such a house. In fact, I live with a bunch of Muslims (my husband & four kids), and I'm pretty happy with that. .
Answer by vernes
It's called a scientific community. And they already exist. Also, a university is a good place.
Answer by PandaYouth
1. As weird as it sounds I do think it would work. I don't think people would move in if they weren't looking for a room to rent in the first place, however if you are going to live around people you mind as well live with people you can openly share ideas and values with. 2. I'm not looking for a place now. Also, realistically, I would move in with a friend somewhere unless I was new to a city or something. note: calling it an atheist house isn't appealing. I think it labels you too much as being an atheist and nothing else. But in the end I guess that is the one requirement making it unique so it makes sense, it's just not appealing to me.
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