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  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    7:33pm, EDT

    Assad swears in new Syrian defense minister

    SANA via Reuters

    General Fahad Jassim al-Freij, left, is sworn in as Defense Minister by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus, Thursday, July 19. Syria's state TV said on Thursday new Defense Minister General al-Freij took his oath of office in front of President al-Assad, who has not appeared in public since a bomb attack killed three of his top security officials.

    By Jonathan Sanger, Associate Multimedia Producer, NBC News

    After losing his previous defense minister to an attack on Wednesday, Syria's President Bashar al-Assad swore in General Fahad Jassim al-Freij as his new defense minister on Thursday, according to Reuters. The recent ceremony closely resembles the swearing-in of the previous defense minister, Dawoud Rajha, who held the post for little over a year.

    Sana via Reuters, file

    Daoud Rajha is sworn in as Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, right, in Damascus on October 9, 2011. Rajha was killed by a bomb which exploded during a meeting of ministers and security officials at a national security building in Damascus on July 18, 2012, state television said.

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  • 23
    May
    2012
    3:06am, EDT

    Inside Syria: War-torn city of Homs scarred by violence, riddled with fear

    NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports from war-torn Homs showing how parts of the city have been ravaged by fighting while others have been spared.

    By Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News

    HOMS, Syria -- Fighting has ravaged Syria over the past 14 months, as evidenced in parts of the Homs neighborhood of Baba Amr. Nearly destroyed, hollow buildings stand on the side of roads seldom traveled by either cars or people. Once a stronghold of the opposition, the city now sits firmly under the control of the Syrian military.

    Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News

    A child rides his bike across the bombed-out main street of Baba Amr. Once the stronghold of the opposition, it's now firmly in the hands of the military and the neighborhood is nearly empty as residents have fled to nearby areas. You can still see the damaged buildings and the mosque along the main street.

    A fragile truce brokered by international mediator Kofi Annan has failed to stop the violence, which has killed more than 9,000, according to U.N. figures. It has also caused a refugee crisis in the region.

    Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News

    One of Syria's Olympic athletes, Raya, trains at a shooting range ahead of the upcoming Summer Games in London. Some have called on the IOC to ban Syrian athletes from participating in the Games, while others have defended the right of athletes to not be punished for their government's actions.

    Just a few hundred yards away from Baba Amr, the neighborhood of Akrema is bustling with activity, as people wander through busy streets and markets. But concern is at an all-time high here, as many people fear a regime change would be dangerous for them.

    A roadside bomb exploded in Douma, Syria this weekend near a United Nations convoy carrying the head of a Syria ceasefire monitoring mission and a senior U.N. Official. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News

    A U.N. vehicle attempting to enter the opposition-held area of Tel Kelakh was swarmed by government supporters who marked the vehicles with pro-Assad slogans. The U.N. observer mission turned back and did not enter the city.

    A resident of Khalidiya shows the wounds he suffered after he was attacked by pro-government thugs, known locally as the as the "Shabeeha" -- which means "Ghosts".

    See more images from inside Syria, taken by NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin (Editor's note: Some of these images are graphic in nature):

    Related: Slideshow: A glimpse inside Syria (by Ayman Mohyeldin)

    Related content: 

    • Inside Syria rebel stronghold: 'The city is on mute'
    • NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin answers Syria questions
    • Report: Syria rebels get better weapons as US quietly boosts support

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 'Nearly empty': A rare glimpse inside Syria rebel stronghold
    • Terror suspect's eye color? UK's flying cameras know
    • Analysis: How Egypt's election can transform the Middle East
    • Portraits of a queen: When the monarch becomes the subject
    • Tokyo Sky Tree takes root as world's second-tallest structure
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    22 comments

    Yea alur . That's what's wrong now e keep arming the wrong people and then it comes back to bite us in th Butttt.

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  • 15
    Mar
    2012
    8:26am, EDT

    From the front line to the front page: Syria's image war

    Handout / Reuters

    People run for cover from smoke after shelling in the Karm al-Zeitoun area of Homs, Syria on March 12, 2012. The image was supplied to Reuters by a network of activists.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    The bloody uprising in Syria, which marked its first anniversary Thursday, has been markedly different to other Arab Spring revolts. It has also been documented in a different way.

    In contrast to the popular protests that toppled leaders in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen last year, the flow of information and images out of Syria has been severely restricted. President Bashar al-Assad's regime has denied visas to many journalists and insists those it does let in be accompanied by government escorts.

    SANA via Reuters

    A handout photo distributed by the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) shows electrical workers at what it says are buildings destroyed by opposition forces in the Baba Amr area in Homs on March 14, 2012.

    To fill this void, photographs have come from a variety of sources. Citizen journalists and activist groups upload videos and reports to YouTube and Facebook. The state-controlled Syrian Arab News Agency distributes photographs. Anonymous photographers work as "stringers" inside Syria, supplying images to foreign news agencies. Finally, a small group of international photojournalists have been smuggled in and out of the country, often with the help of opposition groups.

    One of the latter group, Italian photographer Alessio Romenzi, produced a series of photos showing how activists have used their cellphones and laptops to document the uprising. Their amateur videos, often impossible to verify, have nevertheless become the primary source of images of the year-long conflict.

    At times the same images have been appropriated by both the government and the opposition, each aiming to pin the blame for massacres on the other.

    • Through clandestine network of anonymous contacts, Syrian shop-keeper wages lonely war from England

    AFP - Getty Images

    An image grab taken from a video uploaded on YouTube on March 13, 2012, allegedly shows shelling by regime forces in Maaret al-Numan in the restive Idlib province.

    Khaled Al-hariri / Reuters

    A man puts a picture of President Bashar al-Assad on his chest as he attends a rally at Umayyad square in Damascus on March 15, 2012.

    Like the activists, journalists working in Syria face substantial risks. Last month, French photographer Remi Ochlik and American reporter Marie Colvin were killed in army shelling of an opposition stronghold in Homs.

    Syrian journalists and bloggers continue to be arrested, according to Reporters Without Borders, which ranked Syria 176th out of 179 countries in its press freedom index. On Saturday the Syrian Information Ministry issued a warning that journalists who enter the country illegally "are accompanying terrorists, promoting their crimes and fabricating baseless news."

    • Leaked emails: Assad likes country music

    Associated Press photographer Rodrigo Abd, whose pictures of the conflict have been featured on PhotoBlog over the last three weeks, acknowledged the dangers he had faced in taking this path, but said "it was the only way to cover the story properly, without being at the mercy of government minders who try to control what you see and whom you meet."

    Ricardo Garcia Vilanova / AFP - Getty Images

    Members of the rebel Free Syrian Army gather in a mountainous area of the restive Idlib province in northwestern Syria on March 13, 2012. Some 100 fighters are gathered in this region, a hotspot of rebel operations against President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

    Another photojournalist, Zohra Bensemra of Reuters, described how the car she was traveling in came under direct attack:

    Rockets whizzed above our heads and assault rifles rattled in our direction. But we drove slowly, afraid to speed up lest we draw more attention.

    Finally, we stopped in an olive grove, where we lay face down in the mud. We could hear shelling, far away and close by. Dusk was falling and we could make out the red tracer of anti-aircraft fire lighting up the sky. They were firing heavy weaponry at journalists. We were not armed. Nor was our guide.

    Zohra Bensemra / Reuters, file

    A defaced poster of President Bashar al-Assad is seen on the ground after heavy shelling by government forces in Sermeen near the northern city of Idlib on February 28, 2012.

    A year on from the first, daring demonstration held by a few dozen protesters in Damascus, the Syrian uprising has become one of the most protracted and bloodiest of all the Arab revolts. 

    Photographs, which hold the power to shock, outrage and to shift international opinion, will continue to play a pivotal role in the global response to the conflict, a fact of which Assad seems only too aware. The stifling of independent reporting will almost certainly remain a part of his regime's strategy for survival.

    Stringer / AFP - Getty Images

    Syrian children hide behind sand bags on the street in the central town of Rastan, near Homs, on March 13, 2012.

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    6 comments

    As a Vet, not a night goes by that I dont see these images in my head...the children, the sandbags on street corners...the light brown n black sweaters that you see glide past trees and zip across roof tops all day every day.. These young kids out here have no idea what it means to be a killer...no  …

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  • 4
    Feb
    2012
    12:34pm, EST

    UN resolution calling on Syrian president to step down fails as Syrians mourn deaths in Homs; protests in London and Cairo

    Reuters

    Residents attend a burial ceremony for what activists say are victims of shelling by the Syrian army, in the Khalidiya neighbourhood in Homs, Feb. 4. Syrian forces killed more than 200 people in an assault on the city of Homs, activists said, the bloodiest day of an 11-month uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, ahead of a Saturday vote on a U.N. resolution calling for him to cede power.

    From NBC, msnbc.com and news services:

    "Assad must halt his campaign of killing and crimes against his own people now. He must step aside and allow a democratic transition to proceed immediately," Obama said.

    "The Syrian regime's policy of maintaining power by terrorizing its people only indicates its inherent weakness and inevitable collapse," Obama said. "Assad has no right to lead Syria, and has lost all legitimacy with his people and the international community."

    Full story: Russia, China reject UN move to rebuke Syrian president

    Reuters

    Residents gather before a burial ceremony for what activists say are victims of shelling by the Syrian army, in the Khalidiya neighbourhood in Homs, Feb. 4.

    Sang Tan / AP

    Protesters with their hands painted red chant slogans as Syrians protest outside the Syrian Embassy in London, Feb. 4, after a Syrian government forces assault on the city of Homs, Syria, resulted in hundreds of deaths. Syrian forces unleashed a barrage of mortars and artillery on the battered city of Homs for hours before dawn on Saturday, sending terrified residents fleeing into basements and killing more than 200 people in what appeared to be the bloodiest episode in the nearly 11-month-old uprising, activists said.

    Sang Tan / AP

    A protester holds a megaphone and a toy gun among Syrians protesting outside the Syrian Embassy in London, Saturday, Feb. 4.

    Mohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters

    Broken glass is seen in the Syrian embassy after it was ransacked by protesters in Cairo, Egypt, Feb. 4. Syrian demonstrators ransacked their country's embassy in Cairo and broke into the missions in London and Kuwait, part of protests around the world against the worst bloodshed of the 11 month uprising against President Bashar al-Assad. The Cairo crowd smashed furniture and equipment and set fire to parts of the embassy building overnight.

    Mohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters

    An employee at the Syrian embassy looks at damaged items scattered on the floor after the building was ransacked by protesters in Cairo, Feb. 4.

    Mohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters

    The burnt walls of the Syrian embassy are seen after the building was ransacked by protesters in Cairo, Egypt, Feb. 4.

     

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    1 comment

    During an in-depth conversation on US policy in the middle east, approximately 1998, With a very dear old friend of mine ( a Syrian Christian ) who has lived in the USA for decades. I was informed by one of his adult sons and his friends that they in a statement emphatically advised me that most peo …

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Jonathan Sanger

Jonathan is an Associate Multimedia Producer for NBCNews.com in New York. He graduated from the Rochester Institute of Technology in 2012, where he studied photojournalism.

David R Arnott

is NBCNews.com's Multimedia Editor in London.

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