• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • msnbc.com sites & shows:
  • TODAY
  • Rock Center
  • Nightly News
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • Morning Joe
  • Hardball
  • Ed
  • Maddow
  • Last Word
  • msnbc tv
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech & science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Pakistan blocks Twitter over 'blasphemous content' -- but fails to stop tweets
  • Recommended: NATO summit prompts little buzz on streets of Kabul
  • Recommended: Death of Lockerbie bomber al-Megrahi 'doesn't close the book'
  • Recommended: 'Massacre': At least 90 killed as bomber targets military parade rehearsal in Yemen
First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from msnbc.com and NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.
  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 10
    May
    2012
    2:02pm, EDT

    Syria urges UN to stop 'terrorism' following Damascus blasts

    Two huge explosions in quick succession shook the Syrian capital of Damascus today. The suicide car bombs killed at least 55 people and wounded over 370. ITN's Paul Davies reports.

    By msnbc.com news services

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon "strongly condemned" two suicide car bombings in Syria Thursday, calling for an end to armed violence on all sides.

    "The secretary-general strongly condemns today's attacks in Damascus," Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters, according to Reuters.

    Photoblog: Twin Damascus blasts

    "It's an urgent call from him on all sides fully to comply with their obligations to cease armed violence in all its forms, and to protect civilians, as well as to distance themselves from indiscriminate bombings and other terrorist attacks," he said.


    Fifty-five people were killed and 372 were wounded when two cars exploded in Damascus earlier on Thursday, Syrian state media said.

    Syria's foreign ministry said the bombing was a sign the country is facing foreign-backed terrorism and called on the United Nations Security Council to take measures against countries or groups supporting violence in the revolt against President Bashar Assad.

    Syria suicide bombers kill 55, truce in tatters

    "Syria stresses the importance of the UNSC taking measures against countries, groups and news agencies that are practicing and encouraging terrorism," the state news agency SANA quoted the ministry as saying in a letter addressed to the Security Council.

    The uprising against Assad began 14 months ago, and the United Nations reported at least 9,000 people have died.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Video: Hunt is on for al-Qaida's master bombmaker
    • City divided over disgraced leader's record
    • 'Frustrated' dad of GI kidnapped by Taliban takes action
    • Russia: Missile terror plot to attack Winter Olympics foiled
    • Bodies found near wreckage of jet that 'fell' from sky
    • In debt or jobless, many Italians choose suicide
    • Video: Murder and corruption scandal rocks China
    • US charity's gift to UK troops: $2 million for 'sanctuary'

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    19 comments

    It's never terrorism when it's your side doing it. The West will use whatever methods it deems necessary, terrorism, torture and assasination included, if it furthers its goals, just as the enemies of the West do. Every side sees itself as virtuous and its enemies as evil.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: syria, united-nations, assad, damascus
  • 3
    May
    2012
    4:36pm, EDT

    4 killed as Syrian forces, students clash at protest

    ITV's Bill Neely reports from both sides of the frontlines in Syria. Each side accuses the other of the same crimes and neither is willing to stop fighting.

    By Reuters

    BEIRUT - Syrian security forces and students armed with knives stormed a protest march at Aleppo University early on Thursday, activists said, killing four and rounding up 200 demonstrators demanding President Bashar Assad step down.

    The pre-dawn raid was an unusually bloody incident for Aleppo, Syria's normally fairly peaceful commercial hub, and prompted condemnation from the White House. It accused Assad of making "no effort" to honor a three-week-old U.N. truce and warned that world powers might do more to bring change to Syria.


    "If the regime's intransigence continues, the international community is going to have to admit defeat and work to address the serious threat to peace and stability being perpetrated by the Assad regime," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

    "Political transition is urgently needed in Syria."

    Western powers back the 14-month revolt but lack appetite for the kind of military intervention seen last year in Libya. Assad has counted on support from Russia and China to block U.N. sanctions. However, Moscow and Beijing backed the ceasefire plan brokered by envoy Kofi Annan and Western states might hope to prevail on them to agree to penalize Assad if it collapses.

    On Thursday, however, the head of the monitoring mission dispatched to Syria under the plan said the team of U.N. observers in the country was having a calming effect.

    Bold move as Syria leader makes time for chess

    Yet a Reuters team in the opposition center of Homs during the day heard continuous gunfire and the occasional sound of shelling, despite a permanent presence of monitors there.

    Video posted on the Internet showed students in Aleppo chanting against four decades of Assad family rule but being drowned out by gunfire. Activists posted images of a dead student, drenched in blood, and what they said was a burning dormitory. Small solidarity protests broke out in other universities across Syria, videos uploaded by activists showed.

    A British-based opposition group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said 28 other students were wounded overnight, three critically.

    Knife-wielding youths attacked fellow students marching from their dormitories, the group said, followed by a security force raid on the latest march of a growing student protest movement.

    "Freedom forever in spite of you, Assad!" chanted the young demonstrators in a video shot in the morning twilight.

    There was no comment from officials and it was not possible to verify the account from the northern city, whose relatively prosperous, business-oriented population has been reluctant to join the 14-month-old revolt against Assad.

    Many members of Syria's middle classes and religious minorities are wary of the uprising dominated by majority Sunni Muslims against Assad and the elite around him, drawn largely from his Alawite minority. They fear it could descend into the kind of sectarian and ethnic bloodbath they have watched destroy neighboring Iraq over recent years.

    Assad says he is fighting foreign-backed "terrorists" and his international friends, including in Moscow, point out that rebels too have mounted attacks in breach of the ceasefire.

    Another truce breach
    From Aleppo, anti-Assad activists uploaded video of a burning residence block, its windows shattered. Dormitory hallways appeared to have been smashed up and men were dragging furniture outside as students screamed.

    Other videos showed crowds of students leaving the campus with suitcases and bundles of clothes. Activists say busloads of security forces had taken over the dormitories, which were where students usually began the protests. Student activists said they had been ordered to move out by Thursday afternoon.

    The truce brokered by former U.N. Secretary General Annan has led to a small reduction in the daily carnage, mostly in cities were monitors are deployed permanently.

    The head of the monitoring mission, Major General Robert Mood from Norway, told reporters during a trip to Hama on Thursday that observers were having a "calming effect" and that state forces appeared willing to cooperate with the truce.

    "There have been steps taken by the government forces on the ground that indicate a better willingness to live up to the commitments made in the agreement," he said, giving no details.

    Still, the Reuters team could hear mortars exploding in the Khalidiya neighborhood of Homs at a rate of one a minute. They also reported the sound of heavy gunfire but did not know where it was coming from.

    Explosions rocked the rebellious Jabal al-Zawiya area in Idlib and at least one woman was killed by security force fire, the Observatory said. Security forces followed up by raiding the area and arresting several men.

    Clashes between rebels and the army also flared in Palmyra, home to historic Roman ruins in central Syria.

    Mood, speaking in Homs later on Thursday, said that observer mission was growing as a steady pace, with a total of 50 monitors in the country which would be doubled within weeks.

    "We have reinforced our permanent teams in Hama and Deraa with an extra two monitors in each city," he said from the al-Safir hotel in Homs, where six monitors are based permanently.

    Around 300 monitors will be deployed by the end of May.

    In Washington, the White House spokesman expressed doubts at whether the truce would hold, however:

    "It is certainly our hope that the Annan plan succeeds," Carney said. "We remain, based on the evidence, highly skeptical of Assad's willingness to meet the conditions of that plan, because he has so clearly failed to meet them thus far."

    'They have to shoot us all'
    While the city of Aleppo itself has rarely seen clashes, it has not been free of assassinations, apparently by rebels. The Observatory reported the killing overnight of Ismail Haidar, son of the head of a pro-Assad political party.

    Syria's news agency said another state figure, national basketball team player Bassel al-Raya, succumbed to his wounds on Thursday after being attacked by unidentified gunmen a week earlier.

    At Aleppo University, activists said small protests continued to break out sporadically on the campus. "Our anger will breed more hope. If we have to go to the streets, we will," said a student activist called Mustafa. "They can't stop the students, even if they have to shoot us all."

    While most opposition areas in Syria have been overtaken by an armed revolt, peaceful anti-Assad protests had continued almost daily at the university in Aleppo.

    It is hard to assess if those protests reflect widespread sentiment among the younger generation native to the city or whether students living there who come from rebellious hotspots such as Idlib and Deraa might be taking a lead in Aleppo.

    Syria's uprising began in March 2011 with peaceful demonstrations inspired by a wave of Arab revolts against long-ruling autocratic leaders, but it has become increasingly militarized in response to Assad's violent crackdown.

    The U.N. says more than 9,000 people have died in the crackdown, while the Syrian government says it has lost at least 2,600 of its forces to "foreign-backed terrorists".

    Despite the turmoil, Syria plans to hold a parliamentary election on Monday under a new constitution which has allowed the creation of new political parties and formally ended decades of monopoly by Assad's ruling Baath Party.

    Authorities say the election is part of a reform process, but the opposition dismisses it as a sham.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Blind activist Chen Guangcheng: 'I want to leave China on Hillary Clinton's plane'
    • 'A little fixing up'? Philippines hides slum behind wall ahead of poverty conference
    • Sarkozy fails to floor Hollande in France election television debate
    • Has Britain's Prime Minister Cameron lost his gloss? Voters issue their verdict
    • Catholic priest: I've been secretly married for a year
    • Five years on, parents of missing Madeleine McCann cling to hope
    • Bold move as Syria leader makes time for chess
    • N. Korea accused of jamming commercial flight signals

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    5 comments

    Another Obama diplomatic failure. Libya, China, Russia, Egypt, Syria, North Korea, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan, even Mexico....The failures go on and on...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: un, syria, united-nations, kofi-annan, assad, aleppo
  • 26
    Apr
    2012
    2:50pm, EDT

    Syria blames 'terrorist' bombs for deadly Hama blast

     

    By Reuters

    Syria blamed "terrorist" bomb-makers on Thursday for an explosion that ripped through a building and killed 16 people in the restive city of Hama, where hostility to President Bashar Assad runs deep.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based anti-Assad organization tracking the 13-month-old conflict in which the United Nations says at least 9,000 people have died, gave the same death toll but said the cause of Wednesday afternoon's blast was not clear.

    The Local Coordination Committees, a grassroots opposition group, had said earlier that a military rocket had inflicted the carnage and put the death toll at more than 50.


    Whatever its origins, the blast dealt another blow to a two-week-old U.N.-backed truce that has failed to halt violence on both sides of the conflict, one of a string of uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa against autocratic rule.

    An activist said seven civilians and two rebel militiamen were killed in fighting in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor, while a resident of Zamalka on the outskirts of Damascus reported intense gun-battles.

    "There have been heavy clashes today, really heavy over the past couple hours," the man said. "I couldn't get close enough to see. There are checkpoints everywhere."

    Meanwhile the state news agency, SANA, said a school headmaster was blown up in a booby-trapped car in the northern city of Aleppo, and an "armed terrorist group" had shot dead four members of the same family in Erbin near Damascus.

    It also said two members of the security forces were killed in Deir al-Zor.

    Russian monitors
    United Nations monitors charged with checking the ceasefire engineered by U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan are trickling in to and two are now based permanently in Hama, where many thousands of people were killed when Assad's late father, Hafez Assad, crushed an armed Islamist uprising 30 years ago.

    Activists have been dismayed at the pace of the observer deployment, and a senior U.N. official said this week it would take a month to put the first 100 monitors on the ground.

    Only 15 are in place so far out of an envisaged full-strength team of 300 to be led by Norwegian General Robert Mood.

    Sana said four monitors from Russia, Syria's most powerful ally, were on their way.

    The killing of a Syrian Arab Red Crescent volunteer on Tuesday underscores the dangers the monitors may face.

    The International Committee of the Red Cross said three other aid workers were wounded when the clearly marked ambulance in which they were traveling came under fire near Damascus.

    Syria says it has completed withdrawing tanks and troops from populated areas in line with Annan's peace plan, but the former U.N. chief said on Tuesday Damascus had failed to meet all its commitments and the situation remained "unacceptable".

    France, leading Western calls for tougher action against Assad, says it planned to push next month for a "Chapter 7" Security Council resolution if Assad's forces did not pull back.

    Chapter 7 of the U.N. charter allows the Council to authorize actions which can include military force. But Western powers have disavowed any intention to intervene militarily in Syria, as they did last year in Libya.

    The U.N. is drawing up a major humanitarian effort for more than a million people affected by the conflict. A report seen by Reuters on Thursday said sewage networks had been damaged and water contaminated, setting the stage for outbreaks of water-borne diseases such as cholera. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • At least three killed as two bombs hit Nigeria newspaper offices
    • Aiding terrorists? Syrian women risk all to help dissidents
    • Murdoch: Hacking scandal cost 'hundreds of millions'
    • Analysts say North Korea's new missiles are fakes
    • Israeli military chief: I doubt Iran's 'rational' leadership will make nuclear bomb
    • Pakistan PM Yusuf Raza Gilani found guilty of contempt by Supreme Court
    • Son of sacked Chinese official fights back
    • Ex-Liberia President Charles Taylor guilty in 'watershed' war-crimes case

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    21 comments

    Interesting logic my turn. When muslims kill christians and burn churches in a middle east country it's our fault. It must be lonely in your world. Strange that the Syrian government being as they are major supporters of 2 of the worlds worst terrorist groups complain when they are targeted. What go …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: syria, united-nations, kofi-annan, assad, hama
  • 21
    Apr
    2012
    11:21am, EDT

    UN Security Council OKs sending 300 more observers to Syria

    Reuters handout

    Moroccan Colonel Ahmet Himmiche, third from left, is leading the first U.N. monitoring team in Syria.

    By Reuters

    Updated 11:48 a.m. ET: The United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution Saturday morning to deploy 300 unarmed military observers to Syria for three months to monitor a fragile, week-old ceasefire in a 13-month old conflict.

    The council's resolution noted that the cessation of violence by the government and opposition is "clearly incomplete."

    The resolution was approved within hours of the arrival of the first ceasefire monitors in the battered Syrian city of Homs and just a day after opposition activists said shelling and gunfire had stopped for the first time in weeks.

    But activists in Homs said that the shelling paused only to make it look as if the government was abiding by a truce, mediated by international Peace Envoy Kofi Annan. They said shelling would resume as soon as the monitors left.


    "It is very clear that the Syrian government can stop the violence whenever it wants at anytime in the country," Walid al-Fares, an opposition activist living in Homs told Reuters.

    Today: Diplomats' wives plea to Asma Assad -- "Stop your husband"

    On Friday, 10 people were killed in Syria's third largest city and epicenter of a year-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad, after heavy bombardment from government forces.

    Syrian authorities say they are fighting "armed terrorist" groups and that they are still allowed to respond to acts of aggression to maintain security despite having agreed to a ceasefire.

    Amateur video posted online on Friday appeared to show heavy shelling and explosions in residential neighborhoods of Homs.

    Meantime, on Saturday near the Syrian capital of Damascus, a "massive explosion" was heard near a military airport.

    "I heard a massive explosion and some smoke rising," said a resident, who lives in the Mezze district of the city near the airport. He said he was not sure what had caused the explosion.

    The pro-government Ikhbariya television channel said there was no gunfire in the area, denying a report by Arabic-language satellite channel al-Jazeera, but did not confirm or deny that an explosion had taken place.

    The advance team of eight U.N. observers had been denied permission by the Syrian authorities to go to Homs last week - purportedly for security reasons.

    Syria: Nation at a crossroads

    On Thursday, Syria and the United Nations signed an agreement setting out the working conditions of ceasefire observers. The agreement stipulates "unfettered access" and freedom for monitors to travel and contact people.

    Top U.N. humanitarian official John Ging said on Friday he hoped Syria would also grant permission in the coming days to send more aid workers to the country, where at least 1 million people are in need of urgent assistance.

    He told reporters in Geneva that Syria had recognized there were "serious humanitarian needs" and that action was required, but logistical issues and visas for aid workers are still being discussed.

    After a month-long shelling campaign in the central Homs district of Baba Amr, the Syrian government prevented the International Committee for the Red Cross from entering the area for several days. Opposition activists living in Homs said the government wanted to remove evidence of war crimes.

    The United Nations estimates Assad's forces have killed more than 9,000 people in the uprising. Syria says foreign-backed militants have killed more than 2,600 soldiers and police.

    The U.N. Security Council is due to vote on a draft resolution on Saturday to authorize the deployment to Syria of up to 300 unarmed military observers.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • American in Cuban prison: 'Get me the hell out of here'
    • Norway's Breivik gives 'terrifying' testimony
    • Escaped bears kill two women in Japan
    • 'Burlesconi' sex scandal comes full circle

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    128 comments

    Oh good, lets hand them 300 hostages.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: syria, united-nations, bashar-al-assad
  • 10
    Apr
    2012
    4:02am, EDT

    Syrian troops shell Hama on cease-fire deadline day

    By msnbc.com news services

    BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Syrian tanks shelled the central city of Hama and parts of Homs came under mortar fire on Tuesday, opposition activists said, on the day President Bashar Assad had agreed to halt the use of heavy weapons and withdraw forces from urban areas.

    Tanks were still present in both cities, activists said.

    A collapse of the truce deal by U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan could move Syria closer to an all-out civil war. A 13-month uprising has turned increasingly violent in response to a brutal regime crackdown.


    "Shelling woke me this morning at 8:30 a.m. (2:30 a.m. ET) and I can now hear one shell every 10 minutes or so," said Waleed Fares, describing what he said was mortar fire striking neighborhoods in the center and east of Homs, the hub of a 13-month-old uprising.

    Syria truce prospects fade; US 'outraged' by new attacks

    In Hama, Manhal Abu Bakr reported hearing shelling overnight and said tanks were still patrolling the city.

    "At 2 a.m. (8 p.m. Monday) we heard two shells fall and the sound of tanks moving around the streets," he said.

    "There is no gunfire now. They shell us at night so that it is hard to film," he said over Skype. Internet video, which Abu Bakr said was filmed in Hama overnight, showed nighttime explosions in a built-up district.

    Colleagues mourn TV cameraman shot dead on Lebanon-Syria border

    The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said most cities were relatively calm on Tuesday after heavy bloodshed in recent days, but reported no clear sign of troop withdrawals.

    Syrian troops' message: 'We are present'
    There were no immediate reports of action by fighters of the rebel Free Syrian Army, whose commanders have said they will order a cease-fire only if they are satisfied that Assad's forces have indeed pulled back and stopped offensives.

    The Observatory said there was an overnight bombardment in the town of Mara in Syria's northern province of Aleppo.

    Syrian troops have fired across the border into Turkey, hitting a refugee camp. It's the latest incident suggesting that a cease-fire meant to take effect this week is unlikely to go ahead. ITV's Richard Pallot reports.

    In Douma, a suburb of the capital Damascus, an activist said tanks were still on the fringes of town on Tuesday morning.

    Residents of the southern city of Deraa, where the popular revolt against Assad erupted in March 2011, reported sporadic gunfire.

    "Security is everywhere and you feel they have redeployed in key locations," said Nayef Hassan, an engineer.

    Security forces and the army remained stationed in Deraa, said an activist who called himself Abu Firas, and security checkpoints still separated districts of the old city.

    "The troops at checkpoints are appearing in strength to say 'we are present'," he said.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Amid Iran tensions, neighbor becomes den of spies
    • A rare peek inside North Korea
    • Tunnel linked to looming North Korea nuclear test? South Korea thinks so
    • Syria truce prospects fade; US 'outraged' by new attacks
    • Leftist rebels kidnap natural gas workers in Peru

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    28 comments

    I thought Assad wanted guarantees from the wahabi terrorist yesterday? If he is asking for guarantees then there is no agreement and with the western backers providing funding and arms to these jihadist, Assad is right to ask for guarantees.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mideast, peace, syria, annan, united-nations, assad, featured, cease-fire
  • 6
    Apr
    2012
    8:46pm, EDT

    UN chief condemns new Syrian government attacks against civilians

    Violence in Syria continues to escalate despite a UN-backed cease-fire agreement that is scheduled to take effect within days. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    By Gil Aegerter, msnbc.com

    The United Nations' secretary general issued a harshly worded condemnation of Syrian authorities on Friday, saying they were still attacking innocent civilians despite promises to stop using heavy weapons in population centers.

    Earlier this week, the government of President Bashar al-Assad publicly accepted an official deadline of April 10 to begin withdrawing government troops from urban centers and flashpoints such as the battered city of Homs.

    "The 10 April timeline to fulfill the Government’s implementation of its commitments, as endorsed by the Security Council, is not an excuse for continued killing," said the statement from the office of Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.


    The statement said Ban was concerned about reports of growing numbers of refugees arriving in neighboring countries to escape the fighting. It said he had been briefed on the situation by Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu by phone on Thursday night.

    Media reports Friday said thousands of refugees were crossing the border with Turkey. Reuters said 2,800 arrived in Turkish camps on Thursday as violence in bordering Idlib province worsened.

    Ban's statement demanded that the Syrian government "cease all military actions against the Syrian people."

    Reuters reported Friday that rebel activists and a Turkish official at the frontier said Syrian forces are pressing a military offensive and laying mines near the border with Turkey in an attempt to block a flow of refugees and supplies for insurgents.

    Reuters said the Syrian army activity was visible across olive groves from the small Turkish border village of Bukulmez.

    "The whole of northern Idlib has become another Baba Amr," Ahmed Sheikh, a law student and activist, told Reuters, referring to a district of the town of Homs devastated by shelling in the past two months.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Mali legislative head to take power following coup
    • France fears serial killer on the loose
    • US tie could foil anti-American Egyptian candidate
    • Myanmar's Christian minority still fighting civil war

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    23 comments

    Here we go again. Contrary to popular belief at the UN, Assad does NOT consider the UN as a pen pal and is not even reading the scathing letters he is receiving from them -- or anyone else, for that matter. Assad understands ONE THING. That is violence perpetrated against his own countrymen. Until s …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: syria, united-nations, ban-ki-moon
  • 3
    Apr
    2012
    6:21am, EDT

    Be happy, not just rich, says UN chief Ban Ki-moon

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Bhutan's Prime Minister Jigme Thinley (left) and Laura Chinchilla, Costa Rica's presdent, during a United Nations panel discussion Monday on "happiness and well-being."

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    The world needs a new economic model based around “gross global happiness” rather than simply making money, according to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

    Ban, speaking at a meeting organized by the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan called “Happiness and Well-being: Defining a New Economic Paradigm”, said social and environmental factors should be considered, a statement posted on a United Nations website said.


    Follow Ian Johnston

    “Gross National Product has long been the yardstick by which economies and politicians have been measured. Yet it fails to take into account the social and environmental costs of so-called progress,” Ban told at the meeting at U.N. headquarters in New York Monday.

    “We need a new economic paradigm that recognizes the parity between the three pillars of sustainable development. Social, economic and environmental well-being are indivisible. Together they define gross global happiness,” he added.

    Bhutan introduced the idea of “Gross National Happiness” in the early 1970s and in 2011 the U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution noting that using a purely financial indicator “does not adequately reflect the happiness and well-being of people in a country.”

    May 7, 2009: Government policies and programs will be judged by the happiness they produce in the tiny mountain kingdom of Bhutan.

    Ban noted that other countries have become interested in the idea, such as the United Kingdom, where authorities are experimenting with measuring “national well-being,” the statement said.

    The President of the General Assembly, Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser, added that “today’s unprecedented ecological, economic and social challenges have made the achievement of happiness and well-being an unachievable goal for many.”

    “It is imperative that we build a new, creative guiding vision for sustainability and our future -- one that will bring a more inclusive, equitable and balanced approach that will promote sustainability, eradicate poverty and enhance well-being and happiness,” Al-Nasser said, according to the statement.

    With a royal wedding, television in Bhutan comes of age

    In December last year, in a speech to India’s parliament, Bhutan’s Prime Minister Jigmi Thinley outlined his country’s ideas.

    According to an edited version of his speech posted online, Thinley said the world today was “deeply troubled.”

    “Somewhere, along the way, we lost our nobler sense and let our greed take over to engender an obsession for creation of wealth at any cost,” he said in the speech. “Economists or powers behind market forces and their flawed theories fuelled this obsession.”

    According to the CIA Factbook, the first democratic elections in Bhutan were held in 2008. Some 47 percent of the population are literate and its GDP per person is $6,000.

    Its economy is "one of the world's smallest and least developed," the Factbook says. "The industrial sector is technologically backward, with most production of the cottage industry type," it adds.

    The first radio station was launched in 1973 as a private company but is now owned by the state. The first TV station, also state-owned, was allowed by the government in 1999.

    It introduction prompted concern about children copying WWE wrestling moves, pornography, the loss of Bhutanese culture and a rise in crime, according to BBC News.

    223 comments

    HERE IS WHAT OFFICIALS AT THE UNITED NATIONS CAN DO: 1. DONATE 1/2 their Salaries to Poor African Families 2. DONATE 3/4 of the Moneys they STEAL from the United Nations Charities to poor Asian Families. 3. Sell 4 of their 6 Homes/apartments they illegally got from funneling UN moneys, and donate th …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: united-nations, happiness, bhutan, featured, ban-ki-moon
  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    1:05pm, EDT

    Syria agrees to UN's April 10 peace plan deadline

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Syria's President Bashar Assad has agreed to an April 10 deadline to start implementing the peace plan proposed by Kofi Annan, the UN-Arab League envoy told the UN Security Council on Monday.

    Annan's six-point plan, which the Security Council has endorsed, focuses on a UN-supervised ceasefire, withdrawal of heavy weapons and troops from population centers, granting access to humanitarian assistance, release of prisoners, freedom of movement and access to journalists.

    The partial implementation of Annan's plan would include a complete ceasefire within 48 hours of the deadline, diplomats who attended the closed session told AFP, according to Al Jazeera.


    Syria's ambassador to the UN confirmed that Damascus has accepted the deadline, according to Al Jazeera, but said he expects the same commitment from the opposition.

    "The Syrian government is committed, but we are expecting Mr. Kofi Annan and some parties in the Security Council also to get the same kind of commitments from the (opposition). A plan wouldn't be successful unless everybody is committed to it," said Bashar Ja'afari.

    U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice said past experience would lead the United States to be skeptical about Assad's commitment and to worry that violence will escalate instead of diminish.

    "We certainly hope that is not so, we hope Syrian authorities will implement fully commitments they've made without any conditions," Rice said. "Should they do so, we would expect the opposition to follow suit within 48 hours as specified by Annan."

    Syria accepted the peace plan last week, but the diplomatic breakthrough was swiftly overshadowed by intense clashes between government soldiers and rebels that sent bullets flying into Lebanon.

    One diplomat said Annan confirmed to council members that there had been "no progress on the ground" toward halting the violence, which continues with daily reports of army shelling and shooting, and clashes with the rebel Free Syrian Army.

    "Today doesn't feel much different than yesterday or the day before, or the day before that," opposition activist Waleed Fares said from inside Homs. "Shelling and killing."

    Clinton tells Syria at Istanbul peace summit: 'The time for excuses is over'

    On Sunday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton ramped up her pressure on the Syrian regime in a stern speech to a summit in Istanbul, Turkey, warning of “serious consequences” if Assad fails to implement Annan's ceasefire plan.

    She told the 60-nation Friends of Syria conference that "the time for excuses is over."

    "Nearly a week has gone by, and we have to conclude that the regime is adding to its long list of broken promises," she said.

    Clinton added that the United States is adding $12 million to its non-lethal aid to the opposition, bringing the total to $25 million, and for the first time, is also providing communication equipment to the rebels "to help activists organize, evade attacks by the regime, and connect to the outside world.”

    The BBC reported that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states are creating a trust fund with millions of dollars to pay rebel troops. Those who defect from Assad's army would be paid to encourage defections.

    The UN says more than 9,000 people have been killed in clashes in Syria this past year.

    NBC News and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

  • Plane carrying 43 crashes in Siberia, Russia
  • 86-year-old does cartwheels and headstands
  • UK slams Argentina 'harassment' over Falklands
  • 675 fishermen rescued from runaway ice floe in Russia
  • Shark cull demanded after fatal attacks in Australia
  •  

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

     

    27 comments

    if there is anyone who believes him, please contact me directly. I have several bridges i would like to sell you at a very reasonable price

    Show more
    Explore related topics: syria, united-nations, kofi-annan, assad
  • 27
    Mar
    2012
    6:31am, EDT

    Syria accepts Annan peace plan, but clashes continue

    Syrian state television broadcast footage of President Bashar-al-Assad making a rare public appearance in the Baba Amr neighborhood of Homs, the heart of the uprising and where his crackdown has been most brutal. ITN's John Ray reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Syria accepted a cease-fire drawn up by U.N. envoy Kofi Annan on Tuesday, but the diplomatic breakthrough was swiftly overshadowed by intense clashes between government soldiers and rebels that sent bullets flying into Lebanon.

    Opposition members accuse President Bashar Assad of agreeing to the plan to stall for time as his troops make a renewed push to kill off bastions of dissent. And the conflict just keeps getting deadlier: The U.N. said the death toll has grown to more than 9,000, a sobering assessment of a devastating year-old crackdown on the uprising that shows no sign of ending.

    Annan's announcement that Syria had accepted his peace plan was met with deep skepticism.


    "We are not sure if it's political maneuvering or a sincere act," said Louay Safi, a member of the opposition Syrian National Council. "We have no trust in the current regime. ... We have to see that they have stopped killing civilians."

    British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Assad's decision to accept the plan was only a first step. "We will continue to judge the Syrian regime by its practical actions, not by its often empty words," he said.

    Fmr. National Security Adviser to President Carter Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski joins Morning Joe to discuss America's relationship with Russia, the war in Afghanistan, and reports that Syria has accepted a U.N.-backed peace plan.

    In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Assad must act quickly to convince the world he is serious about peace by "silencing his guns and allowing humanitarian aid to get in."

    On a two-day visit to Beijing, Annan told Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao that he faced a long and difficult task in his mission to end fighting in Syria, but global cooperation with China and other countries was the only way to do it.

    "I indicated that I had received a response from the Syrian government and will be making it public today, which is positive, and we hope to work with them to translate it into action," Annan told reporters in Beijing after meeting Wen.

    "I have a six-point plan which the Security Council has endorsed, dealing with issues of political discussions, withdrawal of heavy weapons and troops from population centers, humanitarian assistance being allowed in unimpeded, release of prisoners, freedom of movement and access to journalists to go in and out," he said. "So we will need to see how we move ahead and implement this agreement that they have accepted."

    Finally, UN reaches agreement over Syria efforts

    However, the U.S. ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, expressed skepticism about the development, saying it would be best to look for action, not words from Assad.

    Ford told lawmakers in Washington that he had no information beyond the press reports of the development.

    "We will see now in the days ahead what exactly Assad has said,'' Ford said at a hearing on human rights in Syria.

    The diplomat, who left Syria last month because of the violence there, added: "I have to tell you that my own experience with him is you want to see steps on the ground and not just take his word at face value."

    The United Nations said on Tuesday that more than 9,000 civilians have been killed in the Syrian government's year-long assault on protesters opposed to Assad, an increase of nearly 1,000 over its previous estimate.

    "Violence on the ground has continued unabated, resulting in scores of people killed and injured," Robert Serry, the U.N. special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, told the 15-nation Security Council.

    "Credible estimates put the total death toll since the beginning of the uprising one year ago to more than 9,000," he said. "It is urgent to stop the fighting and prevent a further violent escalation of the conflict."

    The Syrian opposition, meanwhile, welcomed the government's acceptance of a U.N. peace plan, a member of the Syrian National Council said.

    Syria's rebel fighters are desperate for arms and ammunition. Members of the Free Syrian Army were forced from Idlib - one of the last rebel strongholds. ITN's John Irvine reports from outskirts of Idlib, the north western city which rebels surrendered last week.

    Bassma Kodmani told The Associated Press by telephone that "we welcome all acceptance by the regime of a plan that could allow the repression and bloodbath to stop."

    She is a Paris-based member of the opposition Syrian National Council.

    "We hope that we can move toward a peace process," she said.

    Incursion into Lebanon
    Meanwhile, Syrian troops advanced into north Lebanon on Tuesday, destroying farm buildings and clashing with Syrian rebels who had taken refuge there, residents told Reuters.

    "More than 35 Syrian soldiers came across the border and started to destroy houses," said Abu Ahmed, 63, a resident of the rural mountain area of al-Qaa.

    Another resident told Reuters that the soldiers, some traveling in armored personnel vehicles, fired rocket-propelled grenades and exchanged heavy machine-gun fire with rebels.

    Regional English-language news channel Al-Jazeera has previously reported an escalation in tensions along the border. It said residents claimed the Syrian military planted landmines close to inhabited areas while, in early October, a Syrian army tank reportedly fired shells at Lebanese military targets inside Lebanon's borders.

    Any movement into Lebanese territory would escalate a conflict that already is spiraling toward civil war. There are concerns the violence could cause a broader conflagration by sucking in neighboring countries.

    Officials: Iranian arms used against Syria protesters

    Annan called for Beijing's support and advice, according to a pool report.

    "And I know you've already been helpful but this is going to be a long difficult task and I am sure that together we can make a difference," Annan told Wen.

    Annan's trip to China followed a similar one in Russia, where he asked Moscow to back his mission to end fighting in Syria.

    Russia and China have shielded Assad from U.N. Security Council condemnation by vetoing two Western-backed resolutions over the bloodshed, but approved a Security Council statement this week endorsing Annan's mission.

    Report: Syria leader's wife says she's 'real dictator'

    However, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Syrian people, not foreign powers, should decide their own fate.

    Russia has said Annan has its full support and that his mission could be the last chance to avoid a protracted and bloody civil war but would need more time.

    "I would like the decision on the fate of the Syrian state, society, political system and people to be taken not by the respected leaders of world powers, even by those acting in good faith, but by the Syrian people themselves, by all the levels of the Syrian society," Medvedev said at the end of a nuclear security summit in Seoul.

    Reuters and msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report. Follow Alastair Jamieson on Twitter.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Bomb plot foiled: Cache of suicide vests found in Afghan defense ministry
    • In Brazil, 'Gang of Blondes' kidnapped women, emptied their bank accounts
    • Strauss-Kahn hit with preliminary sex-ring charges
    • Syria responds to Annan's peace proposal; Homs shelled again
    • Expert: Al-Qaida web forums crippled in suspected cyber-attack

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world 

    230 comments

    I give it a couple of weeks and they will find a reason to start killing again.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: lebanon, world, peace, syria, united-nations, beirut, assad, featured
  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    2:40pm, EDT

    Syria responds to Annan's peace proposal; Homs shelled again

    Amateur videos from Syria were released online on Monday, purportedly showing shelling by government forces in the city of Homs. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

     

    By msnbc.com news services

    Turkey and Norway closed their embassies in Syria on Monday, further isolating President Bashar Assad whose forces bombarded the battered city of Homs with mortars in an effort to quell unrest.

    Video showed towering flames and thick black smoke billowing from at least two locations in Homs, Syria's third largest city, which has become the epicenter for the year-long revolt. Residents accused the army of indiscriminate shelling.


    "Every day the shelling goes on. The regime is wiping out the city," said Waleed Faris, an activist who lives in Homs.

    Sixteen people died in clashes around the country, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, with eight dying in the central city of Homs, a rebel stronghold that has become the epicenter of the year-long uprising.

    Two of the dead were children, the group said.

    Syria has formally responded to a peace plan put forward by U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan, his office said on Monday, but gave no details about the message.

    "Mr. Annan is studying it and will respond very shortly," his spokesman Ahmad Fawzi said in a statement from Geneva.

    Following the example of many Arab and Western states, Turkey said it had suspended all activities at its embassy as the security situation worsened.

    Norway also announced it was closing its embassy.

    Iranian weapons help Bashar Assad put down Syria protests, officials say

    Once a close ally of Assad, Turkey has denounced his efforts to crush the rebellion and has thrown its weight behind his opponents, announcing on Sunday that it would work with Washington to provide "non-lethal" aid to the Syrian opposition.

    Annan, who presented Damascus with his peace proposals earlier this month, said on Monday the crisis could not carry on forever, but added that he had not set any deadline for a resolution of the conflict.

    "It is not practical to put forth timetables and timelines when you haven't got agreement from the parties," Annan told journalists in Moscow, where he met on Sunday with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

    "This cannot be allowed to drag on indefinitely and, as I have told the parties on the ground, they cannot resist the transformational winds that are blowing," he added before flying off for top level meetings in China on Tuesday.

    Annan's six-point peace proposal calls for a ceasefire, political dialogue between the government and opposition, and full humanitarian access for aid agencies.

    Both Russia and China have previously vetoed U.N. Security Council resolutions highly critical of Damascus, drawing accusations from critics in the West that they were giving Assad a license to kill.

    However, Moscow and Beijing have given full public backing to Annan's mission and the veteran diplomat is seeking assurances from both capitals that they will bring pressure to bear on Assad to comply with his demands.
     
    Syria says it is battling foreign-backed terrorist groups and the official news agency Sana reported on Monday that troops had foiled an attempt by a group of armed infiltrators trying to enter across the Turkish border near the village of Darkoush.

    Heavy clashes in the province of Hama also continued, activists said. They uploaded footage of grey smoke billowing out of an old castle amid the crackling sound of gunfire in the town of Qalaat al-Madyaq, believed to be in rebel hands.

    Videos and reports from inside Syria are impossible to verify as the government has restricted access to journalists and human rights workers.

    Sana news agency said soldiers had killed "six of the most dangerous wanted terrorists" in a raid in the southern province of Deraa. They also thwarted a bid to blow up the al-Najih Bridge on the Damascus-Deraa highway, it said.

    Security appears to be fraying in many parts of Syria despite repeated army offensives to regain rebellious territory. Activists said the government was struggling to hold such areas for long, with rebels swiftly re-emerging, as they have in Homs.

    Travel restrictions
    In a sign of growing anxiety about the security situation, the Syrian authorities have banned men of military age from leaving the country, Lebanese officials said on Monday.

    The restrictions, issued on Saturday, require men between the age of 18 and 42 to get permission from military recruitment and immigration departments before travelling, the sources said, adding that border traffic at the main crossing between Beirut and Damascus had fallen by 60 percent since the regulation.

    The move may impact the flow of thousands of Syrian workers who go to Lebanon for agricultural and construction projects, a major source of income in rural areas already hit by economic hardship as unrest grows.

    The United Nations says more than 8,000 people have died in the revolt and there is little prospect of a quick resolution.

    Syria is expected to be the top item on the agenda of Arab leaders meeting in Baghdad for a three-day Arab League summit, which begins Tuesday. The crisis in Syria is seen by Iraq's suspicious Arab brethren as a litmus test of whether Baghdad is with them or with their top rival, Shiite-led Iran.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Wife of Staff Sgt. Bales: 'I just don't think he was involved'
    • Delicate dance for Pope Benedict in Cuba
    • Jews protest Hitler shampoo ad in Turkey
    • Military: Fetus not one of 17 Afghan victims
    • Hot mike alert! Obama's missile chat with Medvedev
    • Venice sinking five times faster than thought?
    • Cash-for-access scandal leaves UK government reeling

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    8 comments

    Read this, they seemed to have forgot about this story ??? http://www.cnn.com/2012/03/26/world/meast/israel-human-rights/index.html

    Show more
    Explore related topics: un, syria, annan, united-nations, assad, homs
  • 23
    Mar
    2012
    5:07pm, EDT

    Syrians brave tear gas, gunfire in anti-Assad protests

    Reuters

    Demonstrators gather during a protest against Syria's President Bashar al-Assad after Friday prayers in Binsh, near Idlib, on Friday.

    By msnbc.com news services

    Tens of thousands of Syrians braved tear gas and gunfire to protest across the country Friday, vowing to storm the capital Damascus to oust President Bashar Assad as the European Union ramped up pressure on the regime by imposing sanctions on his wife and other close relatives.

    Security forces deployed in many cities to disperse protests, but opposition groups reported fewer protester deaths than in past weeks. Activists said more than 20 people were killed nationwide in army attacks on opposition areas or clashes with armed rebels.

    International condemnation and high-level diplomacy have failed to stop the year-old Syria crisis, which the U.N. says has killed more than 8,000 people, many of them civilian protesters.


    Friday's sanctions bring to 13 the sets imposed by the EU to try to compel the regime to halt its violent crackdown on dissent. The U.S. and others have also imposed sanctions. Previous measures were aimed at Syrian companies and Assad himself.

    EU bans Assad's wife from traveling and shopping within its territories

    Those imposed Friday targeted Asma Assad, Syria's British-born first lady, banning her from traveling to EU countries and freezing any assets she may have there. They also included the president's mother, sister, sister-in-law and eight government ministers.

    French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said sanctions were weakening the regime.

    "Their economic situation becomes ever more difficult. Syria has few reserves," he said. "We think its economic situation will become untenable."

    The new sanctions came on a day of renewed violence across Syria, with the army raining mortar rounds into the rebellious city of Homs, killing civilians, opposition supporters said.

    Live television feeds from around Syria showed a slew of anti-Assad rallies, including in the Damascus district of Barzeh, in the northwestern city of Hama, in Qamishli in the Kurdish east, and in the southern province of Deraa.

    "Damascus here we come," read several placards held up by the relatively small crowds. Activists said eight people were wounded after demonstrations near five Damascus mosques were broken up by security forces.

    The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 13 civilians were killed in government attacks Friday. Government troops and armed rebels clashed in a number of places, with at least seven soldiers and one rebel fighter killed, the group said.

    Another group, the Local Coordination Committees, said government troops killed 36 civilians on Friday. It did not provide details on each civilian killed.

    On the diplomatic front, the U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan, who is leading international efforts to stop the relentless mayhem, planned to travel to Moscow and Beijing this weekend for talks on the crisis, his spokesman said.

    At least 500 children killed in conflict
    While sanctions have hurt Syria's economy, they appear to have had little effect on the regime's actions.

    In Geneva, the U.N. Human Rights Council blasted Syria's crackdown and extended the mandate of a U.N. expert panel tasked with reporting on alleged abuses in the country.

    A resolution passed by the 47-member body condemned "widespread, systematic and gross violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms perpetrated" by Syrian authorities, including summary executions, torture and sexual abuse of detainees and children.

    Also Friday, UNICEF said at least 500 children have been killed in the conflict, while hundreds more have been injured, detained or abused. The U.N. children's agency said schools have closed and health centers have shut down or become too dangerous for many families to reach.

    Throughout the conflict, China and Russia have protected Syria from censure by the U.N. Security Council, fearing a strongly worded resolution condemning Assad could pave the way for military intervention, as happened in Libya last year.

    Russia, however, softened its stance Thursday by calling for Assad to pull his troops out of Syrian cities. The U.N. has been trying to secure a cease-fire so all parties could hold a dialogue on a political solution to end the conflict. So far, both sides have refused talks.

    Rami Abdul-Rahman, head of the Observatory, said Friday evening that he had yet to confirm the death of one protester during the day, saying this is unusual because many more protesters are often killed by security forces.

    "We hope it happens like this every time because we don't want anyone to die," he said.

    The Syrian government has barred most media from working in the country, and activist accounts could not be independently verified.

    Syria's state news agency said hundreds marched in a pro-Assad demonstration in the capital Damascus and published photos of them carrying Syrian flags and Assad photos.

    In Jordan's capital Amman, blind Syrian cleric Ahmad al-Sayasneh called on a congregation of 1,000 Syrians to "remain steadfast until our tyrant leadership is ousted."

    It was the cleric's first public appearance since fleeing Syria two months ago. Al-Sayasneh rose to prominence though his fiery sermons calling for civil disobedience at a mosque in the southern Syrian town of Deraa, considered the uprising's birthplace.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Landmark case: Nigerian villagers sue Shell over oil spills
    • Not Chinese enough in China? Americans' dilemma
    • Democracy icon his the campaign trail in Myanmar
    • Graphic video may answer whether French gunman acted alone
    • Top commander: US can win in Afghanistan, needs 'combat power' in 2013
    • Auditor: Indian government may have lost $210 billion in 'mother of all scams'
    • Bin Laden widow's wound worsening, brother says
    • PTSD: Having the courage to ask for help

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    36 comments

    no shortage of people to gather in the streets to protest something.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: un, russia, china, syria, united-nations, assad
  • 21
    Mar
    2012
    11:20am, EDT

    Finally, UN reaches agreement over 'extremely dangerous crisis' in Syria

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    The U.N. Security Council, including Russia, agreed on Wednesday to a statement endorsing efforts by Kofi Annan to end the Syrian uprising, providing a rare moment of global unity in the face of the year-long crisis.

    The statement, which threatens Syria with unspecified "further steps" if it fails to comply with a six-point peace plan drawn up by Annan, will be formally adopted in New York later in the day, diplomats said.


    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Wednesday praised the move as a "positive step".

    "To President Assad and his regime we say, along with the rest of the international community: take this path, commit to it, or face increasing pressure and isolation," Clinton told reporters after a meeting with Afghanistan's foreign minister.

    Although the original Western-drafted statement had to be diluted at Russia's demand, editing out any specific ultimatums, the fact that all major powers signed up to the proposal represented a blow to President Bashar Assad, who is fighting for his survival.

    Activist: Assad's deadly crackdown turning peaceful Syrians into terrorists

    At least 8,000 people have died in the revolt, according to U.N. figures, with the violence intensifying in recent weeks as pro-government forces bombard rebel towns and villages, looking to sweep their lightly armed opponents out of their strongholds.

    U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon said on Wednesday that the crisis was alarming and had "massive repercussions" for the entire world.

    "We do not know how events will unfold. But we do know that we all have a responsibility to work for a resolution of this profound and extremely dangerous crisis," Ban said in a speech in the Indonesian capital Jakarta.

    Syria lies in a pivotal position at the heart of a web of regional conflicts in the Middle East, comprising a mix of faiths, sects and ethnic groups, and diplomats fear the rebellion is degenerating into a full-blown civil war.

    Assad's forces have chalked up a string of gains as they turned their firepower on areas held by rebels, but the fighting shows no sign of abating and analysts expect the insurgents to change their tactics and adopt guerrilla warfare.

    Opposition activists said the army used tanks, artillery and anti-aircraft guns on the Damascus suburbs of Harasta and Irbin early Wednesday, which were retaken from rebels two months ago but have seen renewed insurgency in recent days.

    From university campus to torture chamber: A Syrian refugee's fight for freedom

    Elsewhere, the army fired mortars into the Khalidiya district of Homs, while artillery targeted the rebel town of Rastan, north of Homs city, in central Syria. Video also showed shelling of the ancient Apamea castle at Qalat Mudiq, near Hama.

    Reports from Syria cannot be independently verified because officials have barred access to rights groups and journalists.

    Russia and China have vetoed two previous U.N. draft resolutions that would have condemned Damascus and have resisted calls from Western and Arab states for Assad to stand down.

    But faced by growing global outrage at the bloodshed, the two countries agreed to a so-called "presidential statement", which are generally non-binding documents that nonetheless require unanimous support in the Security Council.

    Speaking after the UN agreement was reached, Britain's Foreign Secretary, William Hague, said: “I strongly welcome the Security Council’s full and unanimous support for the work of Kofi Annan as joint UN-Arab League envoy, expressed in today’s Presidential statement.

    "I urge the Syrian authorities to take this chance to stop the bloodshed and show their commitment to implementing Kofi Annan’s six point plan, including by immediately pulling back the military from in and around population centers."

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    56 comments

    The United Scum-bag Nations is a dog & pony show...... The constant collaborated failures haven't gone unnoticed by me.... Rwanda ring any bells..... Countless lives have been lost unnecessarily due to inaction. Go ahead and pat your collective worthless shoulders for making a decision based on  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: middle-east, syria, deal, united-nations, assad, featured
Older posts

Browse

  • featured,
  • world-news,
  • europe,
  • syria,
  • afghanistan,
  • china,
  • iran,
  • pakistan,
  • russia,
  • middle-east,
  • israel,
  • north-korea,
  • africa,
  • military,
  • britain,
  • france,
  • environment,
  • egypt,
  • uk,
  • london,
  • protest,
  • al-qaida,
  • assad,
  • nuclear,
  • terrorism,
  • mexico,
  • japan,
  • italy,
  • iraq,
  • economy,
  • crime,
  • human-rights,
  • asia,
  • us,
  • taliban,
  • nato,
  • election
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Archives

  • 2012
    • May (293)
    • April (404)
    • March (427)
    • February (347)
    • January (283)
  • 2011
    • December (357)
    • November (3)

Most Commented

  • Lockerbie bomber al-Megrahi dies in Libya after long battle with cancer (698)
  • 800-year-old tree at Vancouver Island park falls to illegal loggers (491)
  • Greeks withdraw $894 million in a day: Is this beginning of a run on banks? (528)
  • In China, English teaching is a whites-only club (415)
  • Beer-swilling bride sparks controversy in New Zealand (290)
  • Queen Sofia of Spain snubs Queen Elizabeth II in diplomatic spat over Gibraltar (317)
  • Obama, NATO leaders chart path out of Afghanistan (361)
  • Iran hangs 'Israel spy' over nuclear scientist killing (523)

Other blogs

  • The Body Odd
  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • PhotoBlog
  • Gadgetbox
  • Technolog
  • Daryl Cagle's Cartoon Blog
  • Open Channel
  • InGame

msnbc.com top stories

3147,10
© 2012 msnbc.com
  • World news on msnbc.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Terms & Conditions
  • MSN Privacy
  • Legal
  • Advertise
Advertise | AdChoices