IPT IO N SC R SU B
150 Fils
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2013
RABI ALTHANI 15, 1434 AH
No: 15730
Erdogan blasts Assad, calls him ‘mute devil’ Turkey urges world to stand up to ‘cruelty, aggression’
Max 25º Min 13º
Iraqi faction threatens Kuwait port By A Saleh KUWAIT: An Iraqi faction calling itself “Hezbollah of Iraq” has threatened to bomb Kuwait’s under-construction Mubarak AlKabeer port as well as targets in Saudi Arabia. The threats were made through a statement attributed to a person who identified himself as Wathiq Al-Battat, a self-styled commander of the Al-Mukhtar Army in Hezbollah of Iraq “comprising of nearly a million soldiers”. He also warned Iraqi Kurds from “using the weakness of [Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri] Al-Maliki’s government to expand into Kirkuk and Mosul”. The threat comes amidst reports suggesting that Battat had fled to Syria after a warrant was released for his arrest to bring him to face sectarianism charges. The Iraqi government did not comment on the threat.
Palestinian inmate died of torture RAMALLAH: A Palestinian prisoner who died in an Israeli jail was tortured to death, a Palestinian official charged yesterday, dismissing Israeli accounts of an apparent heart attack. Arafat Jaradat’s autopsy showed torture resulting from fractures in his body and skull while his heart was in good condition, said Issa Qaraqaa, the minister in charge of prisoner affairs, citing a Palestinian doctor who took part in the autopsy. “These results prove Israel killed him,” Qaraqaa told a news conference. Jaradat died on Saturday in an Israeli jail from what prison authorities initially said appeared to have been a heart attack. The 30-yearold man from Sair near Hebron in the West Bank was arrested last Monday for alleged involvement in a November 2012 stone-throwing incident which injured an Israeli, according to Israel’s Shin Bet domestic intelligence service. Arafat Jaradat Palestinians said he was a member of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the armed wing of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas’ Fatah movement. Jaradat’s body was transferred to a hospital in Hebron late yesterday after an autopsy at Israel’s national forensic institute near Tel Aviv in which the Palestinian doctor participated. He was to be buried at noon today. — AFP
ALEPPO: Syrians carry the body of a 6-year-old girl found under the rubble of a building in the Tariq al-Bab district of this northern city on Saturday. Three surface-to-surface missiles fired by Syrian regime forces in Tariq al-Bab have left 58 people dead, among them 36 children, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said yesterday. — AFP SHARJAH: Turkey’s prime minister denounced Syria’s leader yesterday, calling him a “mute devil” for carrying out attacks on his own people but not standing up to Israel’s occupation of Syrian territory. Recep Tayyip Erdogan received several rounds of applause at a government communications forum in the United Arab Emirates, which has joined other Gulf nations in backing Syrian rebels seeking to topple President Bashar Al-Assad. “We will not remain silent in the face of the cruel dictator, the mute devil, who mercilessly carried out massacres against his own people, but who has remained silent and unresponsive toward those who have occupied his own territories for decades,” Erdogan told the gathering in Sharjah, just north of Dubai. Israel captured the strategic Golan Heights plateau in 1967. Despite hostility between the two countries, Israel and Syria have not gone to war since 1973 and the border region has been generally without major tensions for decades. Erdogan, whose nation watches over teeming Syrian refugee camps, urged
world leaders to denounce attacks on civilians by the Syrian regime, saying “we must to stand up to cruelty and aggression”. The comments came just hours before the new US Secretary of State John Kerry was scheduled to begin his first official overseas trip that will include talks with NATO allies, including Turkey, on ways to end nearly two years of bloodshed in Syria that has claimed at least 70,000 lives. The US and Western allies have resisted rebel appeals to supply heavy arms, fearing the weapons could escalate the civil war and possibly fall into the hands of Islamist militant factions that have joined the fight against Assad. “We cannot remain silent,” said Erdogan, a keynote speaker at the conference to examine government media strategies and outreach. Early in the revolt against Assad’s regime, Turkey broke ties with Damascus and led international calls for his ouster. Ankara has since backed the uprising against Assad by offering shelter to defectors from Assad’s army and hosting oppo-
sition meetings, while some 200,000 Syrian refugees have fled to Turkey, many of them living in squalid camps. On Feb 15, Assad’s government sent a letter to the United Nations blasting Turkey’s “destructive” role in the Syrian conflict. Damascus has systematically blamed foreign powers, key among them Turkey, the West and Gulf countries, for the war in Syria. Erdogan’s statement came as the French foreign ministry confirmed that freelance photographer Olivier Voisin, who was seriously wounded in Syria on Thursday, died of his wounds after surgery in Turkey. A spokeswoman confirmed that Voisin, 38, had died, after he suffered head and arm injuries from shrapnel when a shell exploded near the northwest Syrian province of Idlib. Turkish surgeons has operated on the photographer on Friday in the border city of Antakya. His pictures have been published in major French and British newspapers and he collaborated with AFP in January, providing about a dozen pictures from Aleppo. — Agencies