More Assassinations Reported in Syria’s Daraa

Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)
Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)
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More Assassinations Reported in Syria’s Daraa

Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)
Smoke rises above areas of the city of Daraa on July 5, 2018. (AFP)

Instability has reigned in Syria’s southern Daraa province with more than ten assassinations reported in the past two months, the Houran Free League said Tuesday.

Since the 2018 agreement reached between the opposition and the regime in the South, the group has registered 415 operations and assassination attempts in the province, including 277 against civilians and 133 against former leaders and members of the opposition, who struck “settlements and reconciliations” with the regime. These figures later became members of regime security services.

The group reported 48 attempts against former opposition members who refused to join the regime settlements and seven against former ISIS operatives.

The latest assassination took place Sunday when unidentified gunmen targeted two people in the city of Jassim in the Daraa countryside. The victims were Yasser al-Duneyfat (aka Abu Baker al-Hassan), a member of the Central Committee and former spokesman for the Revolution Army faction, and his cousin, Adnan.

Local sources said Duneyfat had survived an assassination attempt in 2019 when unknown gunmen tried to blow up his car while he was traveling along the Jassim-Ain al-Tineh highway in the northern Daraa countryside.

Also, unidentified gunmen opened fire on Mohammed al-Rifai, a soldier who had defected from regime forces, in the town of Um Walad in the Daraa countryside, killing him instantly.

On July 11, Rabih Faraj Abu Oreymesh, a Hezbollah member who hails from the Golan Heights, was found dead and his corpse dumped in Al-Yadoudah town in western Daraa.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said from June to date, the number of attacks and assassination attempts in various forms and methods by detonating IEDs, mines, booby-trapped vehicles and shootings has exceeded 559 attacks.



US Announces $200 Mn Additional Aid for Sudan

The war in Sudan has killed tens of thousands and displaced more than 11 million. AFP/File
The war in Sudan has killed tens of thousands and displaced more than 11 million. AFP/File
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US Announces $200 Mn Additional Aid for Sudan

The war in Sudan has killed tens of thousands and displaced more than 11 million. AFP/File
The war in Sudan has killed tens of thousands and displaced more than 11 million. AFP/File

The United States on Thursday announced $200 million of new funding for the humanitarian crisis in Sudan, bringing Washington's commitment to $2.3 billion, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Thursday.
Sudan has been ravaged by 20 months of fighting between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), and the African country has been identified as one of the world's worst humanitarian disasters, AFP reported.
The World Food Program warned Thursday that Sudan risks becoming the world's largest hunger crisis in recent history, with 1.7 million people across the country either facing famine or at risk of famine.
"We see too many Sudanese faces hunger, despair," Blinken said at a UN Security Council meeting on Sudan.
He lamented that political and military crises have "derailed Sudan's transition to democracy and unleashed what is the worst humanitarian crisis in the world."
"The United States has worked intensively with partners to provide relief to Sudan... today we are announcing another roughly $200 million," he added, noting that in some parts of Sudan, people are forced to eat grass and peanut shells to survive.
OCHA operations director Edem Wosornu told the Security Council $4.2 billion would be needed to support the needs of Sudan's people next year.
Fraction of aid need met
"The volume of humanitarian aid reaching people in need remains a fraction of what is required," Wosornu told the Council.
"Ultimately, the only way to end this cycle of violence, death and destruction is for this Council to rise to the challenge of delivering lasting peace in Sudan."
Nearly all of the vast Darfur region of western Sudan is now controlled by the RSF, which has also taken over swathes of the neighboring Kordofan region as well as much of the center of the country.
The regular army retains control of the north and east, while the capital Khartoum and its surrounding cities are a battleground between the warring parties.
As fighting rages on the ground, 10 Sudanese civilians were killed and 20 wounded in paramilitary shelling of North Darfur's besieged capital El-Fasher that hit the city's main hospital and other areas on Wednesday.
The war has killed tens of thousands and displaced more than 11 million, creating what the United Nations describes as one of the worst humanitarian disasters in recent memory.
Both the army and the RSF have been accused of indiscriminately bombing medical facilities and civilians, as well as deliberate attacks on residential areas.
"Footage abounds of forms of brutality that defy human consciousness and no person should have to bear witness to," Shayna Lewis, a Sudan expert at the non-governmental group Preventing and Ending Mass Atrocities, told the council.
"But this Council must demonstrate through action that the imperiled lives of 49 million Sudanese will not be abandoned to the whims of armed men."