Syrian Rebels Seize U.N. Peacekeepers Near Golan Heights
By REUTERS
Published: March 6, 2013 at 1:07 PM ET
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syrian rebels have seized a convoy of U.N.
peacekeepers near the Golan Heights and say they will hold them captive
until President Bashar al-Assad's forces pull back from a rebel-held
village which has seen heavy recent fighting.
The capture was announced in rebel videos posted on the Internet and
confirmed on Wednesday by the United Nations in New York, which said
about 20 peacekeepers had been detained.
The seizure, the most direct threat to U.N. personnel in the nearly
two-year-old uprising against Assad, came on the day that Britain said
it would increase aid to the opposition forces and the Arab League gave a
green light to member states to arm the rebels.
The regional Arab body also invited the opposition Syrian coalition to
take Syria's seat at a League meeting in Doha later this month. Syria
was suspended in November 2011 in response to its crackdown on protests
which since spiraled into civil war.
The peacekeepers of the UNDOF mission have been monitoring a ceasefire
line between Syria and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, captured by
the Jewish state in a 1967 war, for nearly four decades.
Israel has warned that it will not "stand idle" as Syria's civil war spills over into the Golan region.
The United Nations in New York said its peacekeepers had been detained by around 30 fighters in the Golan Heights.
"The U.N. observers were on a regular supply mission and were stopped
near Observation Post 58, which had sustained damage and was evacuated
this past weekend following heavy combat in close proximity at Al
Jamla," it said, referring to a village which saw fierce confrontations
on Sunday.
It did not say the nationality of the observers but the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group which is in contact with
the rebel brigade said they were Filipino.
In one rebel video, a young man saying he was from the "Martyrs of
Yarmouk" brigade stood surrounded by several rebel fighters with assault
rifles in front of a two white armored vehicles and a truck with "UN"
markings.
"The command of the Martyrs of Yarmouk...is holding forces of the United
Nations Disengagement Observer Force until the withdrawal of forces of
the regime of Bashar al-Assad from the outskirts of the village of
Jamla," the man, who was wearing civilian clothes, said.
At least five people could be seen sitting in the vehicles wearing U.N. light blue helmets and bullet-proof vests.
"If no withdrawal is made within 24 hours we will treat them as
prisoners," he said, accusing them of collaborating with Assad's forces
to push the rebels out of Jamla.
Nearly two years since the uprising started, rebels are distrustful of a
United Nations that they say has failed to support their cause.
ONE MILLION REFUGEES
Earlier on Wednesday the United Nations said the number of refugees who
have fled Syria had reached 1 million, part of an accelerating exodus
from a conflict which is approaching its second anniversary with no
prospect of an end to the bloodshed.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague, pledging support for Assad's
opponents, said the civil war had reached catastrophic proportions and
that international efforts to stem the violence had been an abject
failure.
Senior U.S. and Russian diplomats will discuss the conflict at a meeting
in London on Thursday, Russia said, the latest in a series of meetings
aimed at seeking an end to the bloodshed.
But Hague said the chances of getting an immediate political solution to
the crisis were slim and that diplomacy was taking too long. However,
he played down the prospect of direct Western military intervention.
"If a political solution to the crisis in Syria is not found and the
conflict continues, we and the rest of the European Union will have to
be ready to move further, and we should not rule out any option for
saving lives," he said, though he added that no Western government
advocated military intervention.
At a registration centre for Syrians in the northern Lebanese city of
Tripoli, a 19-year-old mother of two registered on Wednesday as the
millionth refugee to flee her country.
"The situation is very bad for us. We can't find work," said the teenage
mother, wearing a green headscarf and holding her daughter as she spoke
to reporters.
"I live with 20 people in one room. We can't find any other house as it
is too expensive. We want to return to Syria. We wish for the crisis to
be resolved."
Syrians started trickling out of the country 23 months ago when Assad's
forces shot at pro-democracy protests inspired by Arab revolts
elsewhere.
The uprising has since turned into an increasingly sectarian struggle
between armed rebels and government soldiers and militias. An estimated
70,000 people have been killed.
Around half the refugees are children, most of them aged under 11, and
the numbers leaving are mounting every week, the United Nations refugee
agency said in statement.
"With a million people in flight, millions more displaced internally,
and thousands of people continuing to cross the border every day, Syria
is spiraling towards full-scale disaster," U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees António Guterres said in a statement.
(Additional reporting by Dominic Evans and Laila Bassam in Beirut and
Jonathon Burch in Anakara; Editing by Michael Roddy) COPY http://www.nytimes.com/
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