Bashar al Assad Live Blog

An explosion detonated near a team of UN observers in the Damascus suburb of Douma on Sunday, as clashes between Syrian troops and armed rebels raged in and around the Syrian capital, reports the AFP news agency.

No one was hurt in the Douma blast, which detonated some 150m from a convoy carrying UN truce mission head
Major General Robert Mood and peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous. [Photo from Reuters]

Many Sunni Muslims in Lebanon's north sympathise with Syria's Sunni-led uprising against Assad, and say that the Lebanese army is taking orders from Damascus, Reuters reports.

Lebanon's army released a statement confirming Sunday's deaths but did not give any information on who was responsible or what led up to the shootings.

The leadership of the army expresses deep regret for the death of the two victims ... It will immediately form an investigative committee comprised of senior officers and military police under the relevant court.

Two members of an alliance against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad were shot dead by Lebanese soldiers in northern Lebanon on Sunday, security sources told Reuters.

Sheikh Ahmed Abdul Wahid, a Sunni Muslim cleric, and Muhammed Hussein Miraib, both members of the Lebanon-based March 14 political alliance, were shot in their car as they sped through a Lebanese army checkpoint without stopping, the sources said.

Reuters reports that activist video posted online shows bulldozers, which activists say were used to dig mass graves.
Dozens of men stand around the vehicles, purportedly preparing the bodies for burial.

Syrian army shelling and gunfire killed 34 people, including children, on Sunday in the town of Souran in the central province of Hama, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has said.

The group's head, Rami Abdelrahman, citing residents, told Reuters:

The army shelled the town and then stormed it

Ehud Barak, the Israeli defence minister, said on Wednesday that Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, is "doomed".

He told CNN that:

I'm quite frustrated for the slowness of [the Syrian regime's] collapse. I believe that [Assad] is doomed anyhow. I believe that there is a need to raise our voices both for moral reasons and practical ... much more loudly.”

"We are determined to prevent them from turning nuclear. And that no option
except for containment, no option should be removed off the table in order to
achieve this objective."

Violence in Syria killed four civilians on Saturday, one of them a woman, a rights watchdog said, even as a UN mission
charged with overseeing a battered truce neared half its planned strength.

In Idlib province, a stronghold of rebels fighting President Bahar al-Assad's regime, security force gunfire killed a man and a woman during a series of raids, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

A third civilian was killed during pre-dawn shelling of the village of Mork in central Hama province, the Britain-based watchdog said, while a fourth was killed by sniper fire in the northeastern city of Deir Ez-zor.

Troops clashed with rebel fighters in Idlib, in the flashpoint central province of Homs, in southern Daraa province, and in several areas of Damascus province, the Observatory said, without any immediate word of casualties.

The persistent violence came as the UN mission in Syria said it now had 145 military observers on the ground, just shy of half the force of 300 authorised by the Security Council.

They are backed by 56 civilian staff. [AFP]

A video posted online in the name of a shadowy militant group is claiming responsibility for twin suicide bombings in the Syrian capital this week that killed 55 people.

In the video posted late Friday, a group calling itself the Al-Nusra Front says the bombing was in response to attacks on residential areas by the regime of President Bashar Assad.

"We fulfilled our promise to respond with strikes with explosions,'' a distorted voice says.

The video's authenticity could not be independently verified. The Al-Nusra Front has claimed past bombings in Syria through posts on militant websites.

Little is known about the group.

Thursday's bombing in Damascus raised fears that al-Qaida-linked extremists are joining the anti-Assad fight. [AP]


Two Turkish journalists who were detained for two months in Syria are on their way home following mediation by Iran,
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu announced Saturday.

"I have just spoken with Iranian Foreign Minister [Ali Akbar] Salehi. Our two journalists, Adem Ozkose and Hamit Coskun, about whom we had no news since they left for Syria, are on their way to Tehran now," Davutoglu said on Twitter.

"We expect them to arrive in Tehran shortly. At the request of our prime minister we are sending a plane to Iran to pick up our journalists," he added.

The minister did not state whether the pair had been handed over to Iranian authorities.

Coskun, a cameraman, and reporter Ozkose of the newspaper Milat entered Syria in early March to film a documentary on the bloody crackdown on dissent in the country.

They were last seen on March 9 near the rebel stronghold of Idlib, in the northwest near the border with Turkey. [AFP]

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