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South Sudan accuses rebels of massacring 127 hospital patients

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

JUBA — The South Sudanese government has accused rebel troops of committing atrocities against civilians by killing 127 hospital patients in the town of Bor last month.

The United Nations says thousands of people have been killed in more than a month of clashes pitting troops loyal to President Salva Kiir against rebels supporting Riek Machar, who was sacked as vice president in July.

Officials said the killings occurred on December 19 when Peter Gadet, the army commander in Bor, pledged loyalty to Machar. Bor, which has seen some of the worst fighting since the rebellion started, was only retaken by the government last Saturday.

“They went into the hospital and slaughtered all 127 patients,” Ateny Wek Ateny, the president’s spokesman, told a news conference.

The rebels rejected the accusation and instead accused the government of massacring civilians in the capital, Juba, and of flattening the oil-producing Unity state’s capital of Bentiu when they seized it back from the rebels earlier this month.

“That is a complete lie... We don’t target civilians and on the contrary it is the government that targets its own civilians starting with the massacre in Juba,” Lul Ruai Koang, a rebel military spokesman, told Reuters by phone from the Kenyan capital.

Officials of the United Nations humanitarian mission to the country were not immediately available to comment.

The army regained Bor with the backing of Ugandan troops deployed there.

Initially sparked off by a political row, battle lines have increasingly followed ethnic lines with Kiir’s Dinka battling Machar’s Nuer.

Kiir and Machar declined to sign a ceasefire agreement in Ethiopia due to disagreements over the fate of 11 detainees held by authorities in Juba and the involvement of the foreign troops.

Rebels insist the detainees be freed before a deal can be signed while the government maintains that they will only be released when the due process of law has been followed.

A summit of the heads of state of the regional grouping of Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), which initiated the Addis Ababa talks, was postponed from Thursday.

A statement from the South Sudanese president’s office said the IGAD meeting that was scheduled for Juba would now be held alongside the African Union summit in Addis Ababa starting January 28.

Israel says it cracks Palestinian Al Qaeda cell in Jerusalem

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel said on Wednesday it had arrested two Palestinians from East Jerusalem who were planning to carry out attacks for Al Qaeda with the help of foreign suicide bombers posing as Russian tourists.

The men were recruited by another Al Qaeda agent in the Gaza Strip, said Israel’s Shin Bet intelligence agency — the second Israeli report in as many months suggesting the militant network was taking root among Palestinians.

Hamas Islamists governing Gaza rejected the spy agency’s account as “silly fabrications”, saying it was an attempt to justify Israeli military strikes in the territory.

Security experts say Al Qaeda and its global agenda have for a long time had only a fringe appeal among Palestinians as they pursue a more nationalist conflict with Israel.

The two Palestinians, who could travel freely in Israel because of their Jerusalem residency, were recruited over Facebook and Skype, Shin Bet said in a statement, which appeared to be based on confessions by the detainees.

It did not say if they had lawyers or how they might plead in open court. Civil rights groups have often accused the Shin Bet of duress against terrorism suspects.

According to the agency, the Palestinians planned to provide bomb vests to foreign militants posing as Russian tourists for attacks on an Israeli convention centre in Jerusalem and the US embassy in Tel Aviv.

The detainees were further accused of planning to kidnap a soldier and shoot up an Israeli bus in the occupied West Bank. One of the men was arrested as he prepared to travel to Syria, via Turkey, to undergo weapons training, the Shin Bet said.

Third arrest

Israel captured East Jerusalem, along with the West Bank and Gaza, in the 1967 war. It annexed East Jerusalem as its capital — a move not recognised abroad — and says it may cede West Bank territory to the US-backed Palestinian Authority (PA). It quit Gaza in 2005, leading to Hamas’ rise there.

The Shin Bet said that a third Palestinian, from the West Bank city of Jenin, was in custody on suspicion of planning to set up an Al Qaeda cell in his area. Two of the detainees were arrested last month and the third this month, it said.

In November, Israeli troops said they had killed three Palestinian fighters linked to Al Qaeda in a West Bank clash. The Al Qaeda-inspired Majles Shura Al Mujahideen (“Holy Warriors’ Assembly”) claimed the slain men as its own. The PA sought to play down the link.

The Shin Bet said Al Qaeda’s spread in the West Bank was “still at its inception, and possible to stop”.

Citing the alleged recruitment work by Al Qaeda in Gaza, the Shin Bet accused Hamas authorities of “allowing Salafis to carry out terrorism as long as it is not against them”.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri fired back by accusing Israel of seeking a “pretext” for its attacks in Gaza. Earlier on Wednesday, an Israeli air strike killed a militant from the Palestinian faction Islamic Jihad blamed for a cross-border rocket salvo last week.

Though the Gaza authorities lack the advanced technologies that would be required to monitor Internet communication, Abu Zuhri scorned the Shin Bet statement as “silly fabrications”, adding: “Facebook is not a Hamas network.”

Hamas, while hostile to Israel, has often observed Egyptian-mediated truces with it and curbed more radical Salafi Muslims aligned with Al Qaeda.

Algerian forces flood desert city to calm violence

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

ALGIERS, Algeria — Algeria has sent thousands of police officers to calm weeks of ethnic clashes in a southern desert city, and seven people have been arrested.

Ghardaia, a picturesque city perched on the edge of the Sahara desert 600 kilometres south of Algiers, was reported calm Wednesday following a weekend of rioting that left one person dead, 10 wounded and dozens of shops and homes burned. The arrests came late Tuesday.

The city is divided between Algeria’s Mozabites, members of North Africa’s original Berber inhabitants and followers of the rare Ibadi sect of Islam on one hand, and Sunni Muslim Arab migrants.

For the past month, there have been intermittent clashes between young men from the two groups and over the weekend, a Mozabite man was stabbed to death. At least 30 shops were also set on fire, the state news agency said.

Around 3,000 policemen were sent Monday to stabilise the situation and the next day, the state news agency announced seven men had been arrested and were being investigated with another 16 in custody.

Hammou Mosbah, a Mozabite member of the opposition Front for Socialist Forces Party, said the attacks were by criminal gangs allowed to exist by the local police forces.

“We have no problems with the Arabs, with whom we have coexisted for centuries,” he Told the Associated Press. “We have always called for the gendarmes (national police) to be deployed, and now with them calm has returned.”

Bouamer Bouhafs, an Arab elder in Ghardaia, told the online Tout Sur Algerie news site the clashes were the fault of Mozabite gangs attacking Arab neighborhoods.

Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal visited Ghardaia on January 14 and met with community representatives in an effort to calm tension, but fighting resumed soon after he left.

Violence between the two communities has erupted in the past. A US State Department cable on the 2009 clashes that left two dead and 100 others injured ascribed the violence to competition between the Arabs and Mozabites over land and resources as the populations swell.

“The slow police response and inability to contain sectarian violence in this recent incident is indicative of the difficulty that state institutions and officials face when trying to work in Ibadi communities,” the cable stated.

Algeria’s Berber, or Amazigh, community, which has its own language and makes up an estimated 30 per cent of the population, is often at odds with the Arab majority, especially in the mountainous Kabylie region near the capital.

The ethnic tensions in Ghardaia, however, are somewhat unique in the country as it is one of the few areas where traditional Arab and Berber communities live side by side.

The country’s impoverished south has, however, been a constant scene of demonstrations calling for more jobs and investment from Algeria’s hydrocarbon wealth, which is largely located there.

Bahrain deadlocked talks saved from brink, some hope for progress

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

MANAMA — Bahrain’s crown prince has pulled reconciliation talks back from the brink by organising a meeting with the Shiite opposition, and the appointment of a royal delegate, and agreed topics for new talks, have raised some hope of progress.

However, mistrust between the Shiite Muslim majority and the ruling Sunni Al Khalifa family is still high three years after the government crushed pro-democracy protests and many Bahraini Shiites regard these reconciliatory gestures with scepticism.

Since 2011 the tiny Gulf Arab monarchy, where the US Fifth Fleet is based and which is caught in the middle of a regional tussle for influence between Shiite Iran and Sunni Muslim powerhouse Saudi Arabia, has seen continuous unrest that political efforts have failed to quell.

Earlier this month, the government said it was suspending talks with opposition groups, who have boycotted the process since September after the arrest of a senior member.

But last week, in a surprise move, Crown Prince Salman Bin Hamad Al Khalifa, seen as a moderate member of the royal family, met with, amongst others, Sheikh Ali Salman, the leader of the main Shiite opposition Al Wefaq group.

Just a few weeks ago, Sheikh Ali was charged with insulting the interior ministry and “spreading lies”, part of what the opposition has described as a harsh crackdown on its members.

Khalil Marzouq, a senior member of Wefaq, whose arrest in September prompted the opposition to boycott the talks and who is out on bail, said the meeting had made him “cautiously optimistic”.

“We are not overwhelmed with the shift but we are open for a solution and ready for a partnership,” Marzouq told Reuters in Bahrain after an anti-government protest on Friday.

Both the government and the opposition blame each other for the political deadlock.

The opposition accused the ruling family of manipulating sectarian divisions to avoid democracy, while the government charged Wefaq of working for Iran.

Five points

At the new rounds of talks, both sides have agreed on five main issues as the basis for discussions, opposition officials and pro-government sources said.

These include parliament approval of governments appointed by the king, examining the powers and composition of the upper house of parliament, electoral districts, enhancing the independence of the judiciary and police and security issues.

All five points address major grievances of Bahrain’s Shiite population against the Al Khalifah family and the government.

Marzouq said the talks would be bilateral and that senior royal family member, Deputy Prime Minister Sheikh Khaled Bin Abdullah Al Khalifa, was likely to be the government’s representative in future talks.

Information Affairs Minister Samira Rajab, the government’s spokeswoman, confirmed the appointment, saying there was “consensus” over the choice of Sheikh Khaled.

The first bilateral talks between the opposition and the Royal Court Minister took place on Tuesday, Wefaq said.

Marzouq said the overall structure of the talks, with the crown prince overseeing and the presence of Sheikh Khaled, was “accepted by the opposition as a representation of the king”.

Last year’s round table included government officials, members of the opposition and other pro-government parties but no representative of the king, who has the last say in politics. The talks were criticised by the opposition as nothing but a waste of time.

“Unfortunately, last year there were parties who did not want to listen and discuss the real issues. It was all ‘he said, she said’. They could not even agree on an agenda,” said a Bahraini official, who asked not to be named.

The official said the royal court would hold bilateral meetings with the opposition and other representatives to agree on a set agenda.

The royal court is headed by Sheikh Khaled Bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, who is seen by the opposition as a main force in the hardliner wing in Al Khalifa ruling family.

“Having the royal court involved meaning that you are talking to the king directly,” the official added.

“I think this new way of talks is positive.”

‘What dialogue?’

Last Wednesday’s meeting was only a first step in efforts to address a long list of grievances among Shiite Muslims highly sceptical of the government’s sincerity in wanting to end the crisis.

Bahrain’s Shiites have long complained of political and economic marginalisation, an accusation the government denies.

On Friday, hundreds of men and women holding Bahrain’s flags and photos of protesters killed in the security crackdown took to the streets in the Shi’ite village of Diraz. Some shouted “Down with Hamad”, referring to the king.

“We heard about these talks in the past and we have seen nothing out of them,” said Sayed, a protester in his 20s.

“Yesterday, there were arrests in my village. A helicopter was flying over our heads and security forces breaking the doors of nearby houses. What dialogue?”

Israel plans 261 settler housing units deep in West Bank — NGO

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel on Wednesday moved forward with plans for 261 new housing units in two settlements located deep in the occupied West Bank, a watchdog said, drawing strong European condemnation.

It was the fifth such move in just over two weeks and raised to 2,791 the number of new settler housing units announced since the start of the year, threatening to derail faltering US-brokered peace talks with the Palestinians.

Israel’s rapid settlement expansion has angered Palestinian negotiators and drawn condemnation from the international community, threatening peace talks that US Secretary of State John Kerry kick-started in July.

EU envoy to Israel Lars Faaborg-Andersen said continued settlement building would isolate Israel, which he warned would be held accountable for a failure of peace talks.

“If Israel were to go down the road of continued settlement expansion and were there not to be any result from the current talks, I’m afraid that what will transpire is a situation in which Israel will find itself increasingly isolated,” Faaborg-Andersen told journalists in Jerusalem.

“If the talks are wrecked as a result of Israeli settlement announcements, then the blame will be put squarely on Israel’s doorstep,” he said.

“You are eating away at the cake that you are discussing how to slice up.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week accused the EU of a “hypocritical” attitude toward the Middle East peace process, saying it should be more concerned by Palestinian militancy than Israeli housing construction.

The new plans include 256 housing units in the Nofei Prat settlement, between Jerusalem and Jericho, and another five in the sprawling Ariel settlement in the north, the group said.

“The addition of 256 housing units to the small, isolated settlement of Nofei Prat dramatically changes the settlement, expanding its size and population significantly. In fact, these planned units will nearly triple the size of Nofei Prat,” Peace Now said in a statement.

Construction would be allowed to start “without further political approval or public awareness,” it added.

“Every day that Kerry isn’t in the region, the government announces construction of new settlements,” Peace Now spokesman Lior Amihai told AFP.

Kerry has visited the region 10 times since March to coax the two sides towards a final peace agreement, but the talks continue to falter ahead of an agreed April deadline.

Israel moved ahead on Tuesday with plans for 381 homes for West Bank settlers, prompting Palestinian charges it was more interested in building settlements than reaching a peace agreement.

It also pushed ahead with plans for a second visitors’ centre at an archaeological site in Silwan, a densely populated Arab neighbourhood of annexed East Jerusalem, Peace Now said.

And on January 6, Israel approved plans for 272 new housing uits in various West Bank settlements. Four days later, it unveiled plans for more than 1,877 new units, some in East Jerusalem.

Israel and the Palestinians embarked on nine months of direct negotiations in late July at the urging of Kerry.

But over the past six months, Israel has not slowed its construction on land the Palestinians want for a future state.

Brutality of Syria war casts doubt on peace talks

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

BEIRUT — Syria’s conflict was sparked by an act of brutality — the detention and torture of schoolchildren who spray-painted anti-government graffiti in a southern city. In the three years since, the civil war has evolved into one of the most savage conflicts in decades.

The atrocities have been relentless. Protesters gunned down in the streets. An opposition singer whose vocal cords were carved out. Beheadings and mass sectarian killings. Barrels full of explosives dropped from warplanes onto bakeries and homes.

It will be hard enough to find a political solution to Syria’s crisis at an international peace conference convening in Switzerland on Wednesday, given the vast differences between the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad and the opposition. But in a nation drowning in blood, reconciliation and justice over the atrocities seem even more distant.

“The ethical and moral fabric of this society has been stretched to beyond breaking point,” said Amr Al Azm, a US-based Syrian opposition figure and professor at Shawnee State University in Ohio. “For a country to recover from such a traumatic rupture of the very glue that holds it together is not easy.”

In the latest sign of the brutality, three prominent international war-crimes experts said they had received a huge cache of photographs documenting the killing of some 11,000 detainees by Syrian authorities.

David Crane, one of the three experts, told The Associated Press that the cache provides strong evidence for charging Assad and others for crimes against humanity — “but what happens next will be a political and diplomatic decision”.

In the 55,000 digital images, smuggled out by an alleged defector from Syria’s military police, the victims’ bodies showed signs of torture, including ligature marks around the neck and marks of beatings, while others show extreme emaciation suggestive of starvation. The report — which was commissioned by the Qatar government, one of the country’s most deeply involved in the Syrian conflict and a major backer of the opposition — could not be independently confirmed.

“It’s chilling; it’s direct evidence to show systematic killing of civilians,” said Crane, former chief prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said Tuesday that the United States has focused too strongly on bringing the warring parties into peace talks at the expense of putting “real pressure” on the Assad government to end atrocities and hold to account those responsible. The group also accused Russia and China of shielding their ally Syria from concrete action at the United Nations.

“The mass atrocities being committed in Syria should be a parallel focus of the peace process,” Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, told reporters in Berlin Tuesday.

For Syria watchers, the descent into the abyss was not inevitable, but the result of conscious decisions by a multitude of players.

“From day one, there was a level of violence used initially by the government in its suppression that was unprecedented,” said Nadim Houry, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Middle East and North Africa division. “Since the Balkan wars and Rwanda in the 1990s, we have rarely seen a conflict with that many people killed in such a short amount of time.”

More than 130,000 people have died in Syria’s conflict, and more than a quarter of the population of 23 million now live as refugees, either within Syria or in neighboring countries. Fighters who took up weapons against Assad have turned their guns on each other, trapping ordinary Syrians in the violence of two parallel wars.

Protests started in the southern city of Daraa in March 2011 in response to the arrest and torture of high school students who scrawled anti-government graffiti on the school wall. Security forces responded with brute force, beating and opening fire on largely peaceful protesters, who initially demanded reforms and later moved to seeking Assad’s ouster.

Chilling brutality against opposition figures came quickly in the very first months of the conflict. Hamza al-Khatib, a chubby-faced teenager, was arrested at an anti-government demonstration in April 2011 and not seen again until his mutilated body was delivered to his family weeks later.

Popular cartoonist Ali Farzat was severely beaten up and both his hands broken before being dumped on the side of the road after he compared Assad to Libya’s dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

The body of Ibrahim Qashoush was thrown in the Orontes river with his throat carved out for writing poetry and anti-Assad songs that rallied thousands of protesters.

As opponents increasingly took up arms, the government escalated its repression. Warplanes indiscriminately hit rebel-held residential areas with incendiary bombs and crude explosive-filled barrels, often hitting bread lines at bakeries, schools and makeshift hospitals. Government forces have been blamed for an August chemical weapons attack that killed hundreds.

Sectarianism fueled the viciousness. Syria is a patchwork of religious groups, with Sunnis making up the majority and forming the backbone of the rebellion. Assad is a member of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

A May 2012 assault on Houla — a cluster of Sunni villages surrounded by Alawite towns in central Syria — killed about 100 people, including many children under the age of 10. Gruesome video showed rows of dead children with gaping head wounds in a mosque, and the UN called it a massacre by pro-Assad gunmen. In a massacre blamed on rebels, nearly 200 civilians were killed in pro-regime villages in Latakia province.

Islamic militants and foreign Al Qaida-linked fighters joined the war against Assad — and reports of human rights abuses by the opposition soared, including mass killings of prisoners, beheadings and floggings. In Aleppo last year, Al Qaida-linked militants shot to death a 15-year-old coffee vendor in front of his parents, accusing him of being an “infidel” for allegedly mentioning Islam’s Prophet Muhammad in vain.

“I never imagined that this could happen to my country,” said Ibrahim, a 41-year-old former teacher whose brother died in an air raid on the northern town of Al Bab last year. He said his brother — two years his elder — had gone over to a friend’s house to play backgammon when the bomb struck without warning, killing 12 people.

“He has two children and his wife doesn’t speak from the shock,” Ibrahim said in a Skype interview, declining to give his full name for fear reprisals.

Ibrahim fled Al Bab after militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant took it over, terrorising civilians. He is now staying with relatives in Syria until he can leave the country. “There’s no future here anymore,” he said.

Experts say justice and accountability are crucial if the hatred is not to be transmitted to future generations.

In neighboring Lebanon, for example, wounds have still not healed from the 15-year civil war that ended in 1990 with more than 150,000 killed.

The Taif agreement which ended the Lebanese war — brokered partly by Lakhdar Brahimi, the same diplomat who will sit down with the Syrian warring sides in Switzerland — did not mention justice.

“There was a blanket amnesty, which meant that all the warlords and war criminals became respectable ministers, and they just split the pie of the state,” Houry said. “We are still paying the price more than 20 years later.”

Israel hits Gaza as fears rise of new conflict

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

GAZA CITY — Increased violence in and around the Gaza Strip, where an overnight air strike killed a Palestinian fighter, have prompted blunt warnings from Israel as fears grow of another major confrontation.

The latest Israeli raid — one of nearly a dozen this month — comes after cross-border exchanges killed several Palestinians and one Israeli little more than a year after a November 2012 conflict forced Gaza’s Islamist rulers Hamas into a fragile ceasefire.

Israel warned it will use “any means” to stop rocket fire from the besieged Palestinian territory, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holding Hamas entirely responsible for such attacks, and threatening to teach it a lesson “very soon”.

Medics said an Israeli air strike killed two Palestinians including one fighter in northern Gaza early Wednesday.

Ahmad Al Zaanin, 21, and Mahmud Al Zaanin, 23, died when a missile struck their car as they were driving around the northern town of Beit Hanoun, a spokesman for the Hamas-run health ministry said.

Israel’s military said the attack targeted Ahmad Al Zaanin and described him as “a senior operative in the PFLP terror organisation” responsible for recent anti-Israeli attacks and who posed an “imminent threat” to civilian lives.

It said Zaanin was behind rocket fire on January 15 which struck open ground shortly after the funeral of former premier Ariel Sharon, which took place several kilometres from the Gaza border.

A separate Palestinian group, Islamic Jihad, claimed Ahmad Al Zaanin as a member, confirming his death and that of “one of his relatives Mahmud Al Zaanin” in the strike “near his home”.

The PFLP did not immediately claim Zaanin as a member.

Israel has continued to target Islamic Jihad, Hamas weapons stockpiles and training camps since a ceasefire with Gaza’s ruling movement took effect after a bloody eight-day conflict in November 2012.

Netanyahu vowed to teach Hamas a lesson “very soon” if attacks continue, saying that Israel’s policy of retaliating “forcefully” against rocket fire from Gaza had produced “a quiet year in 2013”.

“If Hamas and the terror organisations have forgotten this lesson, they will learn it again powerfully very soon,” he said on Tuesday.

Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon echoed Netanyahu’s remarks, saying Israel would use “any means” against Gaza.

“We will not hesitate to use force to combat those who threaten our security, and we will do this using any means we possess,” he said in a statement, calling Wednesday’s strike “another stage in our fight against rocket fire”.

Yaalon’s deputy Danny Danon said: “Those who engage in terrorism will pay a high price for their actions.”

Israel has insisted that Hamas will be held entirely responsible for any rockets fired from the enclave.

On Tuesday, Hamas said it had deployed forces to “preserve the truce”.

But experts said the Islamist movement might have trouble restraining rocket fire from Gaza, given the pressure it is under not to kowtow to its sworn enemy.

“Israel’s decision to go back to a policy of targeted assassinations, targeting Palestinians who are suspected of launching rockets... will gradually lead to a dangerous escalation between the Gaza Strip and Israel,” said Mkhaimer Abu Saada, a political science professor at Gaza’s Al Azhar University.

“There will be retaliation from other groups, but Hamas will even find it difficult to control its own [armed wing the] Izzeddine Al Qassam Brigades.”

Over the past month, tensions have soared in and around Gaza after more than a year of relative calm.

Since December 20, six Palestinians and an Israeli have been killed in violence in and around the territory, with militant rocket fire sparking retaliatory air strikes.

Fiery exchanges over Assad fate at Syria peace talks

By - Jan 23,2014 - Last updated at Jan 23,2014

MONTREUX, Switzerland — The biggest push yet to end Syria’s bloodshed was marked by fiery exchanges Wednesday as the warring sides and global powers clashed over President Bashar Assad’s fate at a UN peace conference.

After a day of formal speeches set to be followed this week by talks involving the two sides, UN leader Ban Ki-moon urged Syria’s regime and opposition to finally work together to end the bloodshed.

“Our purpose was to send a message to the two Syrian delegations and to the Syrian people that the world wants an urgent end to the conflict,” Ban said in a closing press conference at the talks in the Swiss town of Montreux.

“Enough is enough, the time has to come to negotiate,” Ban said. “We must seize this fragile chance.”

But official statements made by the delegations Wednesday gave no hint of compromise, as the two sides met on the shores of Lake Geneva for the first time since the start of the conflict in March 2011.

Branding the opposition “traitors” and foreign agents, Syrian officials insisted Assad will not give up power, while the opposition said he must step down and face trial.

“Assad will not go,” Syrian Information Minister Omran Al Zohbi said on the sidelines of the conference.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Mouallem wasted no time firing a broadside at the opposition in his opening speech, which went on long beyond the allotted time of less than 10 minutes, forcing Ban to repeatedly ask him to wrap it up.

“They [the opposition] claim to represent the Syrian people. If you want to speak in the name of the Syrian people, you should not be traitors to the Syrian people, agents in the pay of enemies of the Syrian people,” Mouallem said.

Ahmad Jarba, the head of the opposition Syrian National Coalition, called on the regime to “immediately” sign a deal reached at the last peace conference in Geneva in 2012 setting out “the transfer of powers from Assad, including for the army and security, to a transition government”.

He said that would be “the preamble to Bashar Assad’s resignation and his trial alongside all the criminals of his regime”.

‘Terrorist crimes in Syria’

Syrian state television broadcast Jarba’s speech in a split screen alongside footage of death and destruction under the heading “Terrorist crimes in Syria”.

Leading a series of sharp US accusations against the Syrian regime, Secretary of State John Kerry insisted Assad cannot be part of any transitional government.

“There is no way, not possible in the imagination, that the man who has led the brutal response to his own people could regain legitimacy to govern,” Kerry said.

US officials also slammed the Syrian delegation for its incendiary remarks and claims of improved aid access as “laughable”.

Damascus ‘chose inflammatory rhetoric’

“Instead of laying out a positive vision for the future of Syria that is diverse, inclusive and respectful of the rights of all, the Syrian regime chose inflammatory rhetoric,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

Expectations are very low for a major breakthrough at the conference, but diplomats gathered here believe that simply bringing the two sides together for the first time is a mark of some progress and could be an important first step.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned the talks will “not be simple, they will not be quick” but urged both sides to seize a “historic opportunity”.

About 40 nations and international groups were gathered, but no direct talks are expected until possibly Friday — when opposition and regime delegations will meet in Geneva for negotiations that officials have said could last seven to 10 days.

The UN-Arab League envoy for Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, told the closing press conference he would meet on Thursday with both sides to discuss the next step in negotiations.

“Tomorrow I am going to meet them separately and see how best we can move forward,” Brahimi said.

“Do we go straight into one room and start discussing or do we talk a little bit more separately?... I don’t know yet.”

Erupting after the regime cracked down on protests inspired by the Arab Spring, the civil war has claimed more than 130,000 lives and forced millions from the homes.

Recent months have seen the conflict settle into a brutal stalemate — with the death toll rising but neither side making decisive gains.

With no one ready for serious concessions, world powers will be looking for short-term deals to keep the process moving forward, including localised ceasefires, freer humanitarian access and prisoner exchanges.

Notably absent from the table was crucial Assad backer Iran, after Ban reversed a last-minute invitation when the opposition said it would boycott if Tehran took part.

Pitting Assad’s regime, dominated by the Alawite offshoot of Shiite Islam, against largely Sunni Muslim rebels, the conflict has unsettled large parts of the Middle East.

There were stark reminders of the conflict’s impact in the run-up to the talks, with continued fighting on the ground and new evidence in a report alleging that Assad’s forces have systematically killed and tortured 11,000 people.

The opposition called at the conference for an international inquiry into the allegations.

“We have to stop this spiral of violence. We do call for an international inspection to visit places of detention and see the facts of torture that our citizens face every day,” Jarba said.

Supporters urge Sisi to run for president

By - Jan 21,2014 - Last updated at Jan 21,2014

CAIRO — Thousands of supporters of Egypt’s powerful army chief rallied in a Cairo stadium on Tuesday, urging him to run for president and saying the third anniversary of the country’s uprising should be used as an occasion to thank him and security forces for overthrowing the former Islamist president.

The former security officers and army loyalists organising the campaign called “complete your good deeds”, aim to boost popular support for Defence Minister Gen. Abdel Fattah Al Sisi, the man who removed president Mohamed Morsi from power in a July 3 coup.

The general has yet to announce his intentions. A referendum that last week approved the country’s new constitution saw an unexpectedly modest turnout, denying him the robust popular mandate he allegedly sought as a rationale to make a run for office.

“At the top of our priorities is to choose a nationalist leader,” former interior minister Ahmed Gamal Eddin told the crowd at Cairo Stadium, where banners read: “Egypt calls upon you.”

Standing next to him on the tribune, Coptic Priest Bolous Awida described Sisi as “the soaring eagle” and led chants of “Al Sisi is my president”. Further down, former grand Imam Ali Gomaa said: “The army, the police and Egypt order you to complete your good deed.”

Presidential elections are the second phase of the military’s transition plan, introduced upon Morsi’s ouster after millions demanded he step down for alleged abuse of power and subservience to his Muslim Brotherhood group.

Some 98 per cent of voters endorsed the draft constitution, drawn up by a panel of mostly secular-minded politicians and experts after the military suspended the Morsi-era 2012 charter during the coup. But turnout was only 39 per cent.

Interim President Adly Mansour will decide whether Egyptians vote first for their president or for parliament.

The push for Sisi to run comes as Morsi’s Brotherhood calls for mass protests to mark January 25, 2011, the first day of an 18-day uprising that forced longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak to step down.

Liberal and secular-minded activists have also made similar calls but said they will not join forces with rival Islamists in their rallies.

The Brotherhood and its supporters have held near daily protests since Morsi’s ouster but over the past weeks, the cumulative weight of a tough security crackdown that killed hundreds and jailed top leaders has left the group deeply weakened.

The government confiscated assets of hundreds of the group’s leaders and charities, and more recently labelled it a terrorist organisation responsible for a string of assassinations, suicide bombings and attacks mostly on security forces. An Al Qaeda inspired group, based in the Sinai Peninsula, has claimed responsibility for most of the violence, however.

On Tuesday, Cairo Appeals Court set February 16 as the start date for one of four trials of Morsi and top Muslim Brotherhood leaders. This one is on charges of conspiring with militant groups such as Palestinian Hamas and Lebanese Hizbollah, as well as with Iran, to destabilise Egypt. Morsi is also accused of orchestrating an insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula to avenge his ouster.

Morsi’s supporters have called the conspiracy accusations implausible. The ousted president was most recently referred to court over insulting the judiciary. Charges in the other three trials, including inciting the killing of his opponents and organising jailbreaks, carry the death penalty.

Of the four, only the one for incitement charges has started. It is to resume next month.

Morsi allies were also swept away in the crackdown.

On Monday, one of his top allies, an ultraconservative Islamist and former presidential hopeful Hazem Salah Abu-Ismail was sentenced to one year in prison for insulting the judiciary, during a trial in which he stood accused of allegedly trying to conceal that his mother was a US citizen in order to qualify for his 2012 presidential bid.

Abu-Ismail had told judges: “The court is void... This is not a real judiciary in the first place.” His trial was held in a venue adjacent to Cairo’s Tora prison where he and a large number of Brotherhood members are being held.

UAE convicts 30 Emiratis, Egyptians over Brotherhood ties

By - Jan 21,2014 - Last updated at Jan 21,2014

DUBAI — Thirty Emiratis and Egyptians were convicted of setting up an illegal branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and sentenced to up to five years in jail in the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday, in a case reflecting the state’s deep mistrust of political Islam.

The UAE, a US ally and major oil exporter, was rattled by the rise of Islamists in the aftermath of the uprisings that rocked the Arab world from 2011.

It watched with relief as Egypt’s army toppled Islamist president Mohamed Mursi, who is from the Brotherhood, in July after mass protests against his rule and has poured in billions of dollars to support the army chief who deposed him.

The Federal Supreme Court in Abu Dhabi handed the men sentences ranging from three months and five years in prison, state news agency WAM said on Tuesday, without elaborating.

Twenty Egyptians, six of them tried in absentia, and 10 Emiratis, had been charged with setting up an illegal branch of the Muslim Brotherhood in the UAE, stealing and airing state security secrets and collecting funds illegally.

The defendants had denied all the charges, a family member of one of the detainees told Reuters after the opening of the trial in November.

The relative added some of the Egyptians had said they were physically abused in custody and their confessions were obtained under coercion.

The UAE denies using torture. In November, WAM said the court had ordered medical tests for some of the defendants.

On Monday, Amnesty International called on the UAE to end the “downward cycle of unfair political trials”.

The London-based group said it considered at least three of the defendants — Mohammed Al Mansoori, Hussain Alhammadi and Saleh Al Dhufairi — to be “prisoners of conscience”.

A source close to the UAE government told Reuters: “The trial took place in a transparent manner. The proceedings went according to the legal and juridical laws and regulations in the UAE.”

The 10 Emiratis who were convicted on Tuesday are among 61 Islamists convicted by a UAE court in July of plotting to overthrow the government, activists said.

Many of the jailed Islamists are members of Al Islah group, which the UAE says has links to the Brotherhood. Al Islah denies any relationship.

Thanks to its state-sponsored cradle-to-grave welfare system, the UAE has largely avoided the unrest that has unseated long-serving Arab rulers elsewhere in the region.

But it has shown little tolerance towards dissent. Dozens of people have been detained since 2011 and most were tried and convicted of planning to overthrow the government.

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