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WAR REPORT
Syria warplane hits Damascus as rebels say killed general
by Staff Writers
Damascus (AFP) Oct 30, 2012


Warplane carries out first air strike on Damascus: NGO
Beirut (AFP) Oct 30, 2012 - A Syrian fighter jet on Tuesday carried out the first warplane air strike on the city of Damascus since the start of the country's conflict 19 months ago, a monitoring group said.

"The jet dropped four bombs on the east Damascus neighbourhood of Jobar," said the director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdel Rahman.

An AFP journalist in Damascus said the loud and terrifying noise caused by the bombing was heard across the city.

Jobar is located near the rebel-held town of Zamalka, said Abdel Rahman, who added that fierce combat raged there between rebels and the army on Tuesday.

To date, the army had used only helicopter gunships to strafe areas inside Damascus.

In recent days, the air force has intensified its warplane air strikes on rebel-held areas across the country.

In another air strike, fighter jets bombarded the rebel-held town of Douma in the province of Damascus, killing and wounding a large number of people, the Observatory said.

"Fighter jets bombarded the Douma district of Hajariyeh, causing enormous destruction in the area and the death and injury of dozens of people," the watchdog said, without providing an exact toll.

Rebels claim responsibility for killing Syrian general
Damascus (AFP) Oct 30, 2012 - The rebel Free Syrian Army claimed responsibility on Tuesday for assassinating a Syrian air force general in Damascus.

"In the context of operations against the criminal regime of (President Bashar al-) Assad, the Rukn al-Din Martyrs Battalion assassinated on Monday air force General Abdullah Mahmud al-Khalidi. He was in charge of training in the air force," the FSA said on its Facebook page.

"We also killed air force intelligence official Sergeant Ahmed Abdul Haq," the statement said, adding a threat against "all those who collaborate with the regime."

State television blamed "terrorist groups" for Khalidi's assassination in the north Damascus district.

"As part of their campaign to target national personalities and scientists, armed terrorist groups assassinated... Khalidi in the Damascus district of Rukn al-Din," the broadcaster said.

"He was one of Syria's foremost experts in aviation," it said, adding that he was a father of four children.

The general was a member of the Syrian Air Force command, a security source in Damascus told AFP on condition of anonymity.

He was shot dead on Monday evening as he left a friend's home, the source added.

Assad's regime routinely refers to rebels fighting to overthrow it as terrorists.

Since late July, air force fighter jets and helicopters have played a key role in the war against rebels.

On Tuesday alone, fierce air strikes hit targets in Damascus and its province, the northwestern province of Idlib and the central province of Homs, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

A Syrian fighter jet hit targets inside Damascus for the first time on Tuesday, a watchdog said, as air strikes pounded rebel bastions around the country and an air force general was shot dead.

It dropped four bombs on the east Damascus neighbourhood of Jobar, near the opposition-held suburb of Zamalka, where rebel fighters were locked in fierce clashes with the army, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

There were no reports of casualties in the bombing run, which AFP correspondents said was heard across the capital.

Only helicopter gunships have previously been used to strafe areas inside Damascus, said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.

The strike, and more raids around the country, came as Syrian rebels claimed to have assassinated an air force general in Damascus.

State television said the general, Abdullah Mahmud al-Khalidi, was killed in the northern Damascus district of Rukn al-Din, but gave no further details.

The general was shot dead on Monday evening as he left a friend's home, a security source in Damascus told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) claimed in an Internet statement it had killed Khalidi, who it said was in charge of training, as well as an air force intelligence specialist.

The government has intensified air strikes against rebel-held areas in recent days, with more than 60 raids on Monday, the most in a single day so far, the Observatory said.

On Tuesday, air strikes hit rebel bastions around Damascus including the town of Douma. The Observatory said at least 23 people were killed there, including 18 in jet strikes and bombardment by tanks, and that the toll was expected to rise.

The northwestern town of Maaret al-Numan, seized by rebels earlier this month, was also hit, with seven civilians killed, including four children, it said.

The army has been battling rebels for weeks for control of the town, which is on a key supply route between Damascus and the northern city of Aleppo.

Tuesday also saw clashes between rebels and troops backed by Palestinian fighters at the Yarmuk refugee camp, home to 148,500 Palestinians on the edge of the capital.

Anwar Raja, spokesman for the pro-Damascus Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, said its forces clashed for about an hour with rebels trying to infiltrate the camp but that there were no casualties.

There are more than 510,000 Palestinian refugees living in Syria, and their leadership is largely supportive of President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

At least 123 people, including 57 civilians, 41 soldiers and 25 rebels were killed in fighting on Tuesday, the Observatory said.

-- 'War of extermination' --

With international envoy Lakhdar Brahimi due in China in a bid to revive peace efforts, Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani, a vocal supporter of arming the rebels, said the international community's failure to halt the fighting was making it complicit in the violence.

"What is happening in Syria is not a civil war but a war of extermination against the Syrian people," he told Al-Jazeera television.

The war was being waged "with a licence to kill, endorsed firstly by the Syrian government and secondly by the international community," he said.

On the first day after the Eid al-Adha Muslim holiday, which saw a ceasefire bid collapse in the face of renewed clashes, car bombings and air strikes, the Observatory said more than 500 people had died in fighting over its four days.

Turkey and Syria, whose relations have strained in recent months, lashed out at each other on Tuesday, with Ankara refusing any dialogue with what it said was a Damascus regime carrying out "massacre" even during Eid.

Damascus hit back and said "Turkey and the Gulf countries are responsible for the continued bloodletting in Syria."

Brahimi was to travel to China from Russia. Both are historic Damascus allies and have repeatedly blocked tough UN Security Council action against Assad's government.

Diplomats say the UN-Arab League envoy is to present the council with new proposals in November following the two visits.

The uprising, which began in March 2011 as a peaceful protest movement, has escalated into an armed insurgency. More than than 35,000 people have died according to the Observatory, and at least 20,000 according to the UN.

Most of the rebels are members of Syria's Sunni Muslim majority, while Assad's government is dominated by his Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

Envoy urges China to play 'active role' in Syria crisis
Beijing (AFP) Oct 31, 2012 - UN-Arab League peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi said Wednesday he hoped China would play an active role in helping end the violence in Syria as he met Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi for talks in Beijing.

Greeting Yang at the foreign ministry in front of reporters, Brahimi said he hoped "China can play an active role in solving the events in Syria" without elaborating further.

China is generally suspicious of intervention in the internal affairs of other nations, with state media last month accusing Western powers of hampering efforts to end the conflict.

Both China and Russia have exercised their veto in the UN Security Council to block resolutions aimed at putting more pressure on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Meeting Brahimi on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York last month, Yang reaffirmed this stance, saying that "political dialogue is the only correct way to tackle this issue".

Any political transition must be led by the people of Syria and not imposed by outside forces, he said.

Brahimi, who succeeded former United Nations chief Kofi Annan after he quit over what he called a lack of international support, is due to present new proposals for resolving the conflict to the UN Security Council next month.

His two-day visit to China, which ends Wednesday, came after he met Russia's foreign minister in Moscow and described the conflict, now in its 19th month after a failed four-day truce last week, as going from bad to worse.

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