Manfrag, TAG – With Syria's refugee crisis reaching epic
proportions, actress and U.N. ambassador Angelina Jolie visited displaced
residents Tuesday at a camp in Jordan.
The trip draws
attention to the plight of the hundreds of thousands of Syrians who have fled
their country during 18 months of relentless bloodshed. More than 81,000
refugees have escaped to Jordan, and many more have fled to neighboring Turkey,
Lebanon and Iraq.
"I am grateful
to Jordan and the border countries for saving the lives (of those) who are dying
in Syria. It's an extraordinary thing," Jolie said at the Zaatari Refugee
Camp in Mafraq.
She relayed horror
stories of what children said they witnessed, such as body parts that had been
pulled apart "like chicken."
"We encourage
the international community to support the people here until one day they go
back home," Jolie said.
But the flood of
refugees has tested the capacity of neighboring countries.
"Jordan has
already reached its limit in absorbing the refugee influx, and what is needed
now is to build more refugee camps for the Syrian refugees," Jordanian
Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh said. "We have limited means, but this is
the land of the good people and we will share with them whatever we have, no
matter how little is."
In other
developments:
The new normal in
Syria's civil war involves mass killings, torture and sexual violence, U.N.
human rights chief Navi Pillay said Monday.
"Thousands
have been killed, thousands more injured. As we speak, civilians -- including
children -- are continuing to be injured and killed in Syria virtually every
hour of every day," Pillay said.
More than 2.5
million people across Syria have been directly affected by violence since a
popular uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began in March 2011. The
al-Assad family has ruled Syria for more than 40 years.
What started as
peaceful protests last year led to a fierce government crackdown, an armed
rebel uprising and a civil war with no end in sight.
The crisis is
compounded by the government's escalating use of helicopters and fighter jets
in civilian areas, with indiscriminate attacks on urban areas where civilians
were likely trapped, Pillay said.
But she said human
rights violations have been committed by both the government and rebels and
warned that both parties would ultimately face legal consequences for their
actions.
"Both
government forces and opposition forces deploy snipers who target
civilians," Pillay said. "As time has passed, opposition forces have
also been increasingly implicated in kidnappings and abductions, including of
foreigners perceived as being government supporters."
"Opposition
forces should be under no illusion that they will be immune from prosecution,"
she added, reiterating her call for the U.N. Security Council to refer human
rights violations to the International Criminal Court.
On the
ground
Opposition
activists reported a wave of fresh violence in areas well versed in attacks.
In Hama province,
regimes forces raided and looted homes amid heavy gunfire, the opposition Local
Coordination Committees of Syria said Tuesday.
In Homs, regime
forces renewed heavy shelling by tanks and mortar, the group said.
And in Daraa, the
birthplace of anti-Assad demonstrations last year, the LCC reported "heavy
and indiscriminate gunfire by regime's forces."
State-run media,
meanwhile, reported Tuesday that 30 civilians were killed in a "terrorist
bombing" Monday in front of an Aleppo hospital. The government said
children were among those killed.[]
Source link: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/11/world/meast/syria-civil-war/
Source link: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/11/world/meast/syria-civil-war/
Angelina Jolie Visits Syrian Refugees
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
September 11, 2012
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