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Whereabouts of Syria’s Assad a mystery

Aug 2, 2012

Beirut: Syrian President Bashar Assad urged his military on Thursday  to boost its fight against rebels, but his written call to arms only deepened a mystery over his whereabouts two weeks after a bomb penetrated his inner circle.

Assad has not spoken publicly since a July 18 bombing killed four of his top security officials— including his brother-in-law—during a rebel assault on the capital, Damascus.

Bashar al-Assad. Reuters

The president’s low profile has raised questions about whether he fears for his personal safety as the civil war escalates dramatically.

The United States called the Syrian president a coward for marshalling his forces from the pages of the army’s official magazine.

“We think it’s cowardly, quite frankly, to have a man hiding out of sight, exhorting his armed forces to continue to slaughter the civilians of his own country,” said US State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell.

Sausan Ghosheh, the spokeswoman for the UN mission in Syria, said on  Wednesday that international observers witnessed warplanes firing in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city, where intense fighting has been raging for 12 days.

Speaking to reporters in Damascus, Ghosheh said the situation in Aleppo was dire.

“On Wednesday, for the first time, our observers saw firing from a fighter aircraft. We also now have confirmation that the opposition is in a position of having heavy weapons, including tanks,” she said, adding that for civilians, there ”is a shortage of food, fuel, water and gas.”

The UN’s World Food Programme said it was sending enough emergency food aid for 28,000 people in the city of 3 million.

The UN has estimated that some 200,000 residents have fled Aleppo.

As the country delves further into chaos, there are mounting concerns about Syrian rebels carrying out atrocities against regime supporters.

A video posted online, which was impossible to verify independently, appeared to show rebels executing a man they identified as a member of the “shabiha,” or a pro-regime militiaman, in a hail of gunfire.

Such developments pose a serious problem for the opposition, which has tried to claim the moral high ground against an authoritarian regime that has been accused of war crimes.

AP

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