Syrian
rebels abduct 4 UN peacekeepers near Golan Heights
Syrian
rebels have abducted four UN peacekeepers monitoring a ceasefire line
between Syria and the Israel-occupied Golan Heights, a UN
peacekeeping spokesman has said.
7
May, 2013
A
Syrian rebel group identified as the “Yarmouk martyrs brigade”
claimed responsibility for the act, saying the peacekeepers had been
detained for their own safety after clashes erupted in the separation
zone between Syria and Golan, Reuters reports. They further said the
presence of Syrian government forces threatened the safety of the
peacekeepers, as well as “criminal
elements” in
the area.
The rebel group made the
announcement via their Facebook page, which was accompanied by a
picture of four peacekeepers wearing the signature light-blue UN flak
jackets marked “Philippines.”
The peacekeepers were seized while on patrol near the Syrian village of Jamla, the same area where 21 Filipino observers were taken and held for three days in March, a UN spokesperson said. The Yarmouk martyrs brigade was also responsible for the March abductions.
The peacekeepers were seized while on patrol near the Syrian village of Jamla, the same area where 21 Filipino observers were taken and held for three days in March, a UN spokesperson said. The Yarmouk martyrs brigade was also responsible for the March abductions.
The rebel unit has
suspected UN peacekeepers of shielding Syrian government troops, who
the armed fighters accused of killing civilians during an army sweep
of Wadi Raqat, a town in southern Syria, AP reports.
Kieran Dwyer, a spokesman
for the UN, said “efforts are underway to secure their
release now.”
Abducted
UN peacekeepers (photo from Yarmouk martyrs brigade's Facebook page)
The UN Disengagement
Observer Force (UNDOF) consists of some 1,000 troops and is only
equipped with light arms, though the UN deployed additional armored
personal carriers, security equipment and ambulances following the
March incident.
UN peacekeeping forces
have been in the Golan Heights since 1974.
Israel first captured the
Golan Heights from Syria during the 1967 war. The country agreed to
return the land to Syria in return for a peace agreement that was
rejected by the Arab world.
During the 1973 Yom
Kippur War, Syrian forces crossed the ceasefire line into the Golan
Heights in an attempt to retake the territory. Syria's troops were
repelled by Israeli forces.
Israel annexed the Golan
in 1981, though they returned about 5 percent of the territory to
Syria. The land was merged into a demilitarized zone.
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