Friday, September 23, 2016

Bashar al-Assad blames US for collapse of Syria truce


In Washington, the State Department countered that Assad's assertions were "ridiculous.''

He’s been stigmatized internationally, a contentious figure presiding over a ruinous civil war that seems to slip into further depravity every day. But in his power base in the Syrian capital, President Bashar Assad projected confidence _ conceding nothing to his critics, and accusing the US of derailing a cease-fire and lacking the “will” to fight extremists in his country.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Assad rejected US accusations that Syrian or Russian planes struck an aid convoy in Aleppo this week and that his troops were preventing food from entering the city’s rebel-held areas. He maintained deadly airstrikes by the US-led coalition on Syrian troops last weekend were intentional, dismissing American officials’ statements that they were an accident.

While acknowledging that the war will “drag on” indefinitely as long as his opponents were still receiving external support from countries like Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, Assad said Syria will bounce back as a more unified state, and pledged to rebuild the ruined country and even welcome back refugees if assistance to the insurgents were to stop.

Assad, who inherited power from his father and is now in his 16th year in office, cut a confident figure during the interview Wednesday _ a sign of how his rule, once seriously threatened by the rebellion, has been solidified by his forces’ military advances and by the year-long air campaign by his ally Russia, which has turned the tables on the battlefield. In Damascus, the seat of Assad’s power, where life goes on nearly as normal and the six-year-war feels like a distant inconvenience, many cling to his rule, fearing the alternative.

World leaders, including the United States and Turkey, have quietly walked back their calls for Assad’s immediate departure, focusing instead on fighting the Islamic State group, which flourished in the chaos of the country’s conflict.

The sense of detachment projected by the 51-year-old Assad was striking. While acknowledging some mistakes, he denied any excesses by his troops and claimed the country’s largest city, Aleppo, wasn’t really under siege.

“If there’s really a siege around the city of Aleppo, people would have been dead by now,” Assad said, and questioned how rebels were able to smuggle in arms but apparently not food or medicine.

The ancient city, which has become both a symbol of resistance and the high price that civilians are paying in the war, has been carved into rebel- and government-controlled areas since 2012. It’s eastern, rebel-held neighborhoods are encircled by government forces and there are reports of malnutrition and severe shortages of food and medical supplies.

The UN has accused Assad’s government of obstructing aid access to the city, despite an agreement to allow aid in during the weeklong cease-fire that ended Monday. During the brief truce, trucks carrying aid sat idle on the nearby Turkish border, awaiting permits and safety guarantees.

Throughout the conflict, Assad’s forces have been accused of bombing hospitals and civilians and choking opposition-held cities. Millions have fled Syria, some drowning at sea in the Mediterranean while trying to reach safety.

Assad denied any hospitals were purposely targeted. “They accuse Syria of attacking hospitals, so you have hospitals and you have doctors and you have everything. How could you have them?”

The war has been defined by gruesome photos and video posted in the aftermath of bloody attacks or documenting the plight of children in particular. Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed, and once-thriving cities have been ravaged, with entire blocks reduced to rubble. The images have galvanized public opinion worldwide — but Assad, while acknowledging that the war had been “savage,” said the accounts should not be automatically believed.

“Those witnesses only appear when there’s an accusation against the Syrian army or the Russian (army), but when the terrorists commit a crime or massacre … you don’t see any witnesses,” he said. What a coincidence.”

State Department spokesman John Kirby, commenting on Assad’s assertions, said: “It’s difficult to see how these ridiculous claims deserve a response, except to say they prove yet again the degree to which Assad has lost his legitimacy to govern and how vital it remains for the international community to achieve a political solution that gives the Syrian people a voice in their future.”

Syria and the United States have been at loggerheads since an airstrike by the US-led coalition that hit Syrian troops in the eastern province of Deir el-Zour on Saturday. US officials said the attack _ the first direct hit on Syrian forces since the civil war began _ was accidental and that the warplanes intended to target Islamic State group positions. Russia said the strikes killed more than 60 Syrian troops, and afterward, IS militants briefly overran government positions in the area until they were beaten back.

Assad dismissed the US account, saying the attack targeted a “huge” area for more than an hour.

“It wasn’t an accident by one airplane… It was four airplanes,” Assad said. “You don’t commit a mistake for more than one hour.”

Assad also flatly rejected US accusations that Syrian or Russian planes carried out an attack on an aid convoy on the outskirts of Aleppo that killed 20 people, many of them aid workers.

The strike late Monday hit a warehouse as aid workers unloaded cargo, triggering huge explosions. Footage filmed by rescuers showed torn flesh being picked from the wreckage. Witnesses described a sustained, two-hour barrage that included barrel bombs _ crude, unguided explosives that the Syrian government drops from helicopters.

A US official said the US believes with a very high degree of confidence that a Russian-piloted aircraft carried out the strike. The official wasn’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter and asked for anonymity.

Assad dismissed the claims, saying whatever American officials say “has no credibility” and is “just lies.” Like Syria, Russia has denied carrying out the convoy bombing.

Assad also scoffed at the idea that Syria’s “White Helmets” _ civil defense volunteers in opposition held areas seen by many as symbols of bravery and defiance _ might be considered for a Nobel Peace Prize after a nomination earlier this year.

“What did they achieve in Syria?” he said. “I would only give a prize to whoever works for the peace in Syria.”

The group shared this year’s Right Livelihood Award, sometimes known as the “Alternative Nobel,” with activists from Egypt and Russia and a Turkish newspaper, the prize foundation announced Thursday.

Asked about his methods, including the use of indiscriminate weapons, Assad said: “When you have terrorists, you don’t throw at them balloons, or you don’t use rubber sticks. … You have to use armaments.”

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

China probes company accused of North Korea trade violations

Chinese authorities are investigating a company that researchers say sold North Korea materials that can be used by its growing nuclear weapons program in a crackdown that reflects Beijing's growing frustration with its isolated neighbor.

The announcement about Hongxiang Industrial Development Co. In Dandong, a northeastern border city in Liaoning province, was unusually explicit for Beijing, whose dealings with the North are shrouded in secrecy.


Hongxiang is suspected of unspecified "serious economic crimes," according to separate announcements by police in Liaoning and China's foreign ministry. They gave no details but a South Korean think tank said last month it supplied aluminum oxide and other materials that are used in processing nuclear bomb fuel.

Beijing has long been North Korea's main source of aid and diplomatic support but President Xi Jinping's government is showing growing frustration with Pyongyang's pursuit of nuclear weapons in defiance of foreign pressure.

China signed on in March to UN sanctions that limit trade with the North and has tightened controls on cross-border flows of goods. Security Council resolutions prohibit nuclear weapons development by the North and all ballistic missile activity.

The government of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un conducted its fifth nuclear test on September 9. That raised concern abroad it was moving closer to its goal of a nuclear-armed missile that could one day strike the US mainland.

"China will definitely take harsher measures including economic sanctions and more proactive measures to prevent North Korea from developing nuclear weapons," said Lu Chao, director of the Border Study Institute of the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank.

"Although It is rare for China to announce the punishment of its own companies, it shows the firm determination to implement relevant UN resolutions," said Lu.

The Wall Street Journal reported this week US officials suspect Hongxiang and its chairwoman, Ma Xiaohong, of helping Pyongyang evade UN-imposed restrictions on trade.

Ma founded Hongxiang in 2000 and the company has expanded into trade, hotels and tourism.

Washington has pressed Beijing to lean harder on Pyongyang, but Chinese leaders have resisted for fear of destabilizing Kim's government and setting off a flood of refugees or a political collapse that might lead to US and South Korean troops being stationed in the North near China's border.

Phone calls to Hongxiang's headquarters in Dandong were not answered today. People who answered the phone at Dandong police headquarters said they had no information about the investigation. The Liaoning provincial police headquarters didn't respond to questions sent by fax.

Friday, September 16, 2016

Saudi Arabia warns Iran against using force to pursue rivalry

A senior Saudi official, responding to Iranian criticism of Riyadh's management of the haj pilgrimage+ , urged Iran to end what he called wrong attitudes toward Arabs and warned it against any use of force in its rivalry with the kingdom.
Mecca province governor Prince Khaled al-Faisal, in remarks likely to be seen as a reference to Iran, added that the orderly conduct of the pilgrimage this year "is a response to all the lies and slanders made against the kingdom".
The remarks carried by the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) on Wednesday evening follow an escalating war of words between Shi'ite Muslim Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia+ since a crush at the annual haj pilgrimage a year ago in which hundreds of pilgrims, many of them Iranians, died.
SPA quoted Prince Khaled as telling journalists his message to the Iranian leadership was "I pray to God Almighty to guide them and to deter them from their transgression and their wrong attitudes toward their fellow Muslim among the Arabs in Iraq, Syria+ , Yemen and around the world".
"But if they are preparing an army to invade us, we are not easily taken by someone who would make war on us."
"When we desire, and with the help of God Almighty, we will deter every aggressor and will never relent in protecting this holy land and our dear country. No one can defile any part from our country if any one of us remains on the face of the earth."

Pakistan: At least 16 killed in suicide blast at mosque

At least 16 were killed and 23 inured in a suicide blast during Friday prayers at a mosque in northwest Pakistan, officials told news agency PTI. Rescue teams and police rushed to the site of the blast. The bodies and those injured are being shifted to local hospitals.
The blast reportedly occured in the Payee Khan village near the Afghanistan border. The suicide bomber allegedly screamed “Allahu Akbar” and denoted himself inside a packed mosque, according to news agency Reuters.
“The suicide bomber was in crowded mosque, he shouted ‘Allahu Akbar’ (God is greatest) and then there was a huge blast,” Naveed Akbar, deputy administrator of Mohmand agency, told Reuters.
Shaukat Khan, another official in the northwestern FATA region, said at least 24 people were wounded. “Many people were gathered inside the mosque where a suicide bomber blew himself up,” he said.
Pakistan’s frontier regions, which are deeply conservative and hard to access due to rough terrain, have long been the sanctuary of fighters from al Qaeda, the Taliban and other Islamist groups.

Swedish appeals court upholds detention order for Assange

STOCKHOLM : A Swedish appeals court on Friday upheld a detention order for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, dismissing the latest attempt by the 45-year-old Australian to make prosecutors drop a rape investigation from 2010.
The decision by the Svea Court of Appeal means that the arrest warrant stands for the 45-year-old computer hacker, who has avoided extradition to Sweden by seeking shelter at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012.
Assange, who denies the rape allegation, has challenged the detention order several times. He says he fears he will be extradited to the United States to face espionage charges if he leaves the embassy.
His Swedish defense lawyer, Per Samuelsson, said he would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.
``We are naturally disappointed that Swedish courts yet again choose to ignore Julian Assange's difficult life situation,'' Samuelsson told The Associated Press. ``They ignore the risk that he will be extradited to the United States.''
Swedish prosecutors say they are not in contact with counterparts in the U.S. and that they would also need Britain's permission should a third country seek his extradition.
Upholding a lower court ruling, the appeals court said Swedish prosecutors are actively trying to move the investigation forward and set up an interrogation of Assange at the embassy. Acting on behalf of Swedish investigators, an Ecuadorian prosecutor is set to question Assange on Oct. 17.
``This means that there is at present no reason to set aside the detention order. Julian Assange's claim to that effect shall therefore be refused,'' the court said.
It also brushed aside the findings of a U.N. working group, which described his stay at the London embassy as ``arbitrary detention.'' The court noted that the panel's finding wasn't binding on Swedish courts and that Assange's stay at the embassy ``is not to be regarded as an unlawful deprivation of liberty.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expired. The rape allegation, which involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Ny, the top prosecutor in the case, welcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassy. So this situation is really unusual.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
STOCKHOLM : A Swedish appeals court on Friday upheld a detention order for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assangedismissing the latest attempt by the 45-year-old Australian to make prosecutors drop a rape investigation from 2010.
The decision by the Svea Court of Appeal means that the arrest warrant stands for the 45-year-old computer hacker, who has avoided extradition to Sweden by seeking shelter at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012.
Assange, who denies the rape allegation, has challenged the detention order several timesHe says he fears he will be extradited to the United States to face espionage charges if he leaves the embassy.
His Swedish defense lawyerPer Samuelssonsaid he would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.
``We are naturally disappointed that Swedish courts yet again choose to ignore Julian Assange's difficult life situation,'' Samuelsson told The Associated Press. ``They ignore the risk that he will be extradited to the United States.''
Swedish prosecutors say they are not in contact with counterparts in the U.Sand that they would also need Britain's permission should a third country seek his extradition.
Upholding a lower court ruling, the appeals court said Swedish prosecutors are actively trying to move the investigation forward and set up an interrogation of Assange at the embassyActing on behalf of Swedish investigators, an Ecuadorian prosecutor is set to question Assange on Oct. 17.
``This means that there is at present no reason to set aside the detention orderJulian Assange's claim to that effect shall therefore be refused,'the court said.
It also brushed aside the findings of a U.N. working groupwhich described his stay at the London embassy as ``arbitrary detention.'' The court noted that the panel's finding wasn't binding on Swedish courts and that Assange's stay at the embassy ``is not to be regarded as an unlawful deprivation of liberty.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
STOCKHOLM : A Swedish appeals court on Friday upheld a detention order for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assangedismissing the latest attempt by the 45-year-old Australian to make prosecutors drop a rape investigation from 2010.
The decision by the Svea Court of Appeal means that the arrest warrant stands for the 45-year-old computer hacker, who has avoided extradition to Sweden by seeking shelter at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012.
Assange, who denies the rape allegation, has challenged the detention order several timesHe says he fears he will be extradited to the United States to face espionage charges if he leaves the embassy.
His Swedish defense lawyerPer Samuelssonsaid he would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.
``We are naturally disappointed that Swedish courts yet again choose to ignore Julian Assange's difficult life situation,'' Samuelsson told The Associated Press. ``They ignore the risk that he will be extradited to the United States.''
Swedish prosecutors say they are not in contact with counterparts in the U.Sand that they would also need Britain's permission should a third country seek his extradition.
Upholding a lower court ruling, the appeals court said Swedish prosecutors are actively trying to move the investigation forward and set up an interrogation of Assange at the embassyActing on behalf of Swedish investigators, an Ecuadorian prosecutor is set to question Assange on Oct. 17.
``This means that there is at present no reason to set aside the detention orderJulian Assange's claim to that effect shall therefore be refused,'the court said.
It also brushed aside the findings of a U.N. working groupwhich described his stay at the London embassy as ``arbitrary detention.'' The court noted that the panel's finding wasn't binding on Swedish courts and that Assange's stay at the embassy ``is not to be regarded as an unlawful deprivation of liberty.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
STOCKHOLM : A Swedish appeals court on Friday upheld a detention order for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assangedismissing the latest attempt by the 45-year-old Australian to make prosecutors drop a rape investigation from 2010.
The decision by the Svea Court of Appeal means that the arrest warrant stands for the 45-year-old computer hacker, who has avoided extradition to Sweden by seeking shelter at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012.
Assange, who denies the rape allegation, has challenged the detention order several timesHe says he fears he will be extradited to the United States to face espionage charges if he leaves the embassy.
His Swedish defense lawyerPer Samuelssonsaid he would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.
``We are naturally disappointed that Swedish courts yet again choose to ignore Julian Assange's difficult life situation,'' Samuelsson told The Associated Press. ``They ignore the risk that he will be extradited to the United States.''
Swedish prosecutors say they are not in contact with counterparts in the U.Sand that they would also need Britain's permission should a third country seek his extradition.
Upholding a lower court ruling, the appeals court said Swedish prosecutors are actively trying to move the investigation forward and set up an interrogation of Assange at the embassyActing on behalf of Swedish investigators, an Ecuadorian prosecutor is set to question Assange on Oct. 17.
``This means that there is at present no reason to set aside the detention orderJulian Assange's claim to that effect shall therefore be refused,'the court said.
It also brushed aside the findings of a U.N. working groupwhich described his stay at the London embassy as ``arbitrary detention.'' The court noted that the panel's finding wasn't binding on Swedish courts and that Assange's stay at the embassy ``is not to be regarded as an unlawful deprivation of liberty.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
STOCKHOLM : A Swedish appeals court on Friday upheld a detention order for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assangedismissing the latest attempt by the 45-year-old Australian to make prosecutors drop a rape investigation from 2010.
The decision by the Svea Court of Appeal means that the arrest warrant stands for the 45-year-old computer hacker, who has avoided extradition to Sweden by seeking shelter at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012.
Assange, who denies the rape allegation, has challenged the detention order several timesHe says he fears he will be extradited to the United States to face espionage charges if he leaves the embassy.
His Swedish defense lawyerPer Samuelssonsaid he would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.
``We are naturally disappointed that Swedish courts yet again choose to ignore Julian Assange's difficult life situation,'' Samuelsson told The Associated Press. ``They ignore the risk that he will be extradited to the United States.''
Swedish prosecutors say they are not in contact with counterparts in the U.Sand that they would also need Britain's permission should a third country seek his extradition.
Upholding a lower court ruling, the appeals court said Swedish prosecutors are actively trying to move the investigation forward and set up an interrogation of Assange at the embassyActing on behalf of Swedish investigators, an Ecuadorian prosecutor is set to question Assange on Oct. 17.
``This means that there is at present no reason to set aside the detention orderJulian Assange's claim to that effect shall therefore be refused,'the court said.
It also brushed aside the findings of a U.N. working groupwhich described his stay at the London embassy as ``arbitrary detention.'' The court noted that the panel's finding wasn't binding on Swedish courts and that Assange's stay at the embassy ``is not to be regarded as an unlawful deprivation of liberty.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''
The investigation stems from Assange's brief relationship with two women he met during a visit to Sweden six years ago. Allegations of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion were dropped last year when the statute of limitations expiredThe rape allegationwhich involves one of the women, will expire in 2020 if Assange hasn't been indicted by then.
Marianne Nythe top prosecutor in the casewelcomed the court's decision and said the interrogation with Assange would go ahead as planned.
``I have handled many rape and sex crimes cases,'' she told AP. ``I have never experienced before that someone sought shelter at an embassySo this situation is really unusual.''