Eva Bartlett is a freelance journalist and rights activist with extensive experience in the Gaza Strip and Syria. Her writings can be found on her blog, In Gaza.
Faked concern: Haley & corporate media bleating about Idlib civilians, ignore terrorists’ presence
Eva Bartlett
RT : 8 Oct, 2018
Nikki Haley, the hypocritical US Ambassador to the UN,
mistakenly thinks she can dictate – from New York City, far from the
terrorists which her country supports – that the Syrian army cannot
fight and eradicate al-Qaeda in Idlib.
Her, and other American figures' words, come with faked concern over the lives of Syrian civilians.
This is particularly ironic given that the US-led coalition, illegally in Syria, destroyed the Syrian city of Raqqa and killed untold numbers
of civilians along the way, in their fake fight against Islamic State
(IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) – a pretext which has only time and again
strengthened IS in Syria. Raqqa remains uninhabitable, and even today
corpses are still being unearthed.
Haley and the Western corporate
media have been bleating in chorus about Idlib and the civilians there,
deliberately ignoring the presence of Al-Qaeda and affiliated
terrorists occupying the governorate and surrounding areas in Aleppo and
Hama governorates.
They ignore, too, the reality of life in areas which were once
occupied by these terrorists: the torture, imprisonment, maiming,
assassination, and starvation endured by the civilian population at the
hands of these extremists and paid mercenaries.
The other reality
Haley and co-regime change mouthpieces whitewash is that once these
areas are liberated of Al-Qaeda, Ahrar al-Sham, Jaysh al-Islam, and the
myriad other extremist terrorist groups, life gets back to normal,
schools reopen, cities and towns repopulate, ancient traditions resume
as they have for thousands of years in this cradle of civilization.
Occupation, Liberation, Peace and Stability
With
the exception of Deir ez-Zor, and smaller hamlets throughout the Syrian
countryside, I've been to every major city and town liberated by Syria
and allies from Al-Qaeda and co-terrorists. They are all now in peace,
with many of the areas thriving, rebuilding, and the other areas at
least in peace without the sadistic rule of terrorists.
In June 2014, I went to
the old city of Homs just one month after the reconciliation deals that
saw Al-Qaeda and Free Syrian Army terrorists bused out of the city.
This beautiful historic old city and its ancient churches were in
shambles. Some of that was due to the Syrian army fighting the
terrorists, but most of it was due to the terrorists burning, looting,
and booby trapping the buildings they had occupied.
Indeed, a resident of the old city, Abu Nabeel, took me around, showing me
the destruction, vandalization, burning and looting that terrorists did
before leaving Old Homs, including leaving bombs in residents' homes,
to inflict yet more loss of life even after the terrorists had left. But
also while there in June 2014, I saw residents and youth volunteers
scraping the debris, painting hopeful art on walls, beginning the
rebuilding process.
In December 2015, I returned to
Old Homs to find that some reconstruction had occurred. Churches were
partially repaired, a school was fully rehabilitated, shops had opened,
and residents were putting up Christmas decorations.
In June 2017,
when I returned to Homs, I saw a city pulsing with life, and peace.
That June, I also went back to Aleppo, which I'd been to four times
prior to its December 2016 liberation.
I saw eastern areas
that had been occupied by Al-Qaeda, Nour al-Din al-Zenki, IS and other
terrorist factions. The destruction was indeed immense, as terrorists
had holed up underground, including occupying schools and hospitals. The
complex housing the Eye and Children's Hospitals was turned into a headquarters for Al-Qaeda and IS, with basements turned into prisons, prisoners' fates decided by Sharia courts of the extremists.
I returned to Aleppo in May 2018, and spent hours at the ancient Citadel, both filming people
enjoying their time around the Citadel, and later joining them at one
of the cafes encircling this historic site. Talking with Aleppo MP,
Fares Shehabi, we discussed how none of this had been possible under the rule of the extremists.
Indeed, in November 2016, standing near the ruins
of the Carlton Hotel, tunnel-bombed by terrorists in May 2014, and
looking towards the Citadel, I was told to step back due to the risk of
Al-Qaeda snipers. But the Aleppo I saw in May 2018 was likewise pulsing with life, and peace.
In
media campaigns to demonize the Syrian and Russian governments, Western
media mentioned al-Waer, Homs, and Madaya. But few, or none, that I'm
aware of bothered to go to those places after they were restored to
peace. I did, in June 2017,
and unsurprisingly heard what journalists in eastern Aleppo heard when
those areas were liberated: the reason they had been starving was
because terrorists had stolen all the food aid that entered the town and kept it for themselves. Indeed, near a munitions workshop, I found the remnants of one such parcel, a Red Cross package. And like in eastern Aleppo, terrorists in Madaya had imprisoned civilians, and had tortured them.
When in April and May 2018 I went to various areas of eastern Ghouta, I again heard
about terrorist-induced starvation. When I asked whether residents
could access their farmland – as eastern Ghouta is an agricultural
region – I was told that, no, they couldn't, terrorists controlled the
farmland, too, leaving them literally starving.
A few weeks ago I returned to Daraa City. I'd been there in May 2018,
at a time when terrorists in Daraa al-Balad and outskirts were heavily
shelling the city. At great risk, I was able to go to the state
hospital, with snipers just 100 metres away from the sole route leading
there. The hospital was severely damaged,
with entire wards destroyed. The Children's Hospital wing was damaged
and off limits due to the proximity of terrorists roughly 50 metres away
– as I would learn when I returned a few weeks ago.
In Daraa this September, there was no bombing, just the scraping of rubble as bulldozers and residents cleaned up the remnants of this foreign war on Syria.
On September 11, I went to Mhardeh,
a town in northern Hama, where 13 civilians were killed by terrorists
missiles targeting the town on September 7. Most of the dead were killed
right away, others died slowly of critical injuries. One man lost his
wife, three young children and mother to the terror attacks. He lost everything.
When I asked him how the situation of Idlib – occupied by at least 70,000 terrorists, a modest estimate – impacted him and Mhardeh, he replied that Idlib is the cause of their suffering.
The
September 7 attacks on Mhardeh weren't the first. To the contrary, the
town has been relentlessly targeted for the past 7 years, its local
defense commander, Simon al-Wakil, told me.
So did the Presbyterian Church's Reverend Maan Bitar, who said: “The
gunmen, the terrorists, they are in all the region of Idlib, not just
Idlib city. They are also two kilometers from here (in northern Hama).
We’ve received more than 7,000 missiles, rockets, and mortars these past
eight years. Every time the terrorists feel they are in a critical
situation, militarily speaking, from the government, they shell
civilians. Nobody spoke about that. For eight years, Mhardeh town is
being shelled, and civilians killed, but nobody spoke of that.”
Nearby
al-Skalbiyye has also been relentlessly targeted, including with 10
Grad missiles fitted with cluster bombs, as noted by British journalist
Vanessa Beeley who visited the town.
Idlib Reality: an al-Qaeda safe-haven
With the Nikki Haleys and laptop media now droning incessantly about “3 million civilians” in Idlib prone to being massacred by the Syrian and Russian armies, it's time to reflect on a number of points.
First
of all, there is no accurate figure for the number of civilians in
Idlib, much less the number of terrorists. Given that when we heard the
same cries before the liberation of Aleppo, with the UN itself chiming
in to claim that 300,000 civilians were trapped in Aleppo's eastern areas – the actual number was less than half that figure – we can at least be sceptical about the current claims of 300,000 in Idlib.
Moreover,
among the population in Idlib, how many are terrorists? How many are
being held against their will by terrorists? How many are Syrians?
Al-Qaeda's
presence in Idlib isn't a conspiracy theory, it's an established fact
that even US State Department's Special Envoy, Brett McGurk, made clear
when he said: “Look,
Idlib province is the largest Al-Qaeda safe-haven since 9/11. Idlib now
is a huge problem, is an Al-Qaeda safe-haven right on the border with
Turkey.”
Yet, outlets like CNN whitewash their presence.
While there are no definitive figures for the number of non-Syrians
among those terrorists, it is a fact that there are extremists from around the world.
What
Western leaders and media fail to address is the reign of terror the
different extremist gangs inflict on Syrian civilians. This includes
their kidnapping of untold numbers of civilians, particularly children.
Vanessa Beeley wrote this
just weeks ago, noting that in a liberated area of eastern Idlib, she
was told that over 600 children and adults had been kidnapped by “both the terrorist groups and the #WhiteHelmets” in the last 12 months there.
Further,
it is from positions within Idlib governorate that terrorists continue
to fire on Aleppo. So in spite of the liberation of Aleppo from these
extremists, areas closest to them are routinely bombed.
Fares Shehabi tweeted in September about a rocket attack on Aleppo believed to have originated from Idlib.
In
all of the areas I mentioned, the Syrian and Russian governments worked
to offer amnesty and reconciliation to Syrians holding arms, and indeed
these reconciliations enabled the return to peace in many of these
areas.
The Syrian and Russian governments have again opened humanitarian corridors for civilians to leave Idlib, and as with corridors opened in Aleppo, terrorists have attacked the corridor, to prevent civilians from leaving. Some updates state that Syrians have been able to exit when the corridor wasn't being targeted, and other updates note that terrorists are preventing civilians from leaving, or demanding money from civilians who want to leave.
Syria and Russia have again offered reconciliation and amnesty. It is terrorists within Idlib who refuse this, refuse a political process, and instead continue to hold civilians hostage and occupy Syrian territory.
On September 28, Russia's Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, addressed media
the day of a General Assembly meeting, noting the US-led destruction of
both Raqqa and Mosul, Iraq, also noting that Russia and Syria prevented
this in Aleppo and in Eastern Ghouta.
These are all points to
keep in mind the next time Nikki Haley shrilly performs for the cameras.
It is time to liberate Idlib, by military or political means, and bring
peace to Syria.
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