And,
no doubt this will fall on deaf ears!
Syria
presents foreign fighter list in bid for UN to acknowledge terror
acts
Syria
has presented the UN Security Council a list of 143 foreign citizens
killed in Syria fighting government troops. Damascus hopes the move
will force the UN to declare the presence of foreign nationals in
Syria to be international terrorism.
RT,
22
November, 2012
Syrian
government reportedly presented proof that citizens of 19 different
nations had fought in the country alongside rebel forces.
Bashar
Jaafari, Syria’s permanent representative to the United Nations,
wrote a letter the Security Council requesting they register the list
of mercenaries as an official document on the UN’s agenda of
“measures to combat international terrorism.”
The
UN Security Council has not yet officially recognized Syria as a
country confronting international terrorism. Last month, Syria
delivered a previous version of the list containing 108 names.
The
new list contains the names of citizens from 19 countries accused of
joining Syria’s rebels: Afghanistan, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Chad,
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Pakistan, Palestine,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Tunisia, Turkey, Yemen and Chechnya.
Since Chechnya is not a country, but a republic of the Russian
Federation, the list likely contains names of Russian citizens.
The
list consists of the names of people who were positively identified
through ID or documents found on their bodies that helped establish
their nationality. The bulk of the dead mercenaries in Syria are
apparently still unidentified.
Syrian
officials have frequently claimed that there are a sizable number of
foreign fighters from various Middle Eastern and North African
countries among the rebels. Damascus has alleged that the mercenaries
infiltrated Syria through Turkey.
Syrian
state TV aired several reports in recent months claiming that the
army has captured Al Qaeda-linked mercenaries from Egypt, Libya,
Pakistan, Tunisia and Yemen.
In
July, Dutch photo journalist Jeroen Oerlemans and British
photographer John Cantlie were captured and held hostage in Syria for
a week by rebel militants. They claimed that several of their captors
spoke English with recognizable regional British accents, like
Birmingham and London.
And
in August, Syrian rebel commanders reportedly became concerned over
the numbers of hardline Islamists entering Syria from other
Muslim-majority countries.
Chechen
nationals were also observed fighting alongside rebel forces in
Syria, British media reported. President of the Chechen Republic
Ramzan Kadyrov strongly denied the allegations, saying that no
Chechens were fighting in Syria.
But
last August, 24-year-old Chechen national Rustam Gelaev, son of
notorious Chechen warlord Ruslan Gelaev (known as ‘Black Angel’
and killed in 2006), reportedly died in Syria in unclear
circumstances.
The
ongoing fighting in Syria between the rebels and government forces
started in March 2011 and has already killed over 37,000 people on
both sides.
Syria’s
scattered opposition recently joined together to form a coalition
council, which is now being recognized as Syria’s legitimate
government by major European countries like Italy, France and
Britain.
The
Syrian government is still supported by Russia and China, who provide
diplomatic backing for Damascus and have used their veto power in the
UN Security Council to block several Western initiatives aimed at
ousting President Bashar Assad.
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