Syria Crisis: Aleppo University Raided By Regime, 4 Killed, Say Activists

Syria Crisis

BEIRUT — Syrian security forces stormed dorms at a northwestern university to break up anti-government protests there, killing at least four students and wounding several others with tear gas and live ammunition, activists and opposition groups said Thursday.

Around 1,500 students had been protesting in student quarters next to Aleppo University’s main campus late Wednesday when security forces and pro-regime gunmen swept into their residences, firing tear gas at first, then live ammunition to disperse them.

The raid followed an attack on the protesters by pro-regime students armed with knives, activists said.

Student activist Thaer al-Ahmed said panic and chaos ensued as students tried to flee.

“Some students ran to their rooms to take cover but they were followed to their rooms, beaten up and arrested,” he said. “Others suffered cuts and broken bones as they tried to flee.”

Raids and intermittent gunfire continued for about five hours through early Thursday, he said, adding that dozens of people were wounded, some critically, and around 50 students were arrested.

Aleppo, Syria’s largest city and economic hub, has a population that has remained largely loyal to President Bashar Assad and has been largely spared from the violence that has plagued other Syrian cities.

But university students – many from rebellious areas such as the northern Idlib province – have been staging almost daily protests calling for the fall of Assad’s regime. Al-Thaer, a law student, said the campus and dormitories have been raided before, but Thursday’s raid was the most violent.

The student quarters – known as the University City – comprise 20 dormitories that house more than 5,000 students next to the university campus. Students there often shouted out anti-Assad slogans from their rooms at night, al-Thaer said.

An amateur video showed a large number of security forces apparently storming the dorms Wednesday night. Another showed a students protest earlier Wednesday, during which protesters shouted: “We don’t want you, Bashar!”

The authenticity of the videos could not be confirmed.

The Local Coordination Committees activist group said five students were killed and some 200 arrested in the raids, while the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the death toll at four. The Syrian government has prevented independent reporting in the country, making it impossible to independently verify casualty figures.

“Regime forces demanded through loudspeakers that the dorms be evacuated, then began detaining the students,” the LCC said in a statement.

Al-Ahmed and the Observatory’s director Rami Abdul-Rahman said pro-regime students armed with knives tried to break up the protest before the security forces raided the dorms.

Syria’s persistent bloodshed has tarnished efforts by a U.N. team of observers to salvage a truce brokered by U.N. special envoy Kofi Annan that started to unravel almost as soon as it was supposed to begin on April 12.

The two sides have blamed each other for thwarting the truce, with Assad’s forces trying to repress demonstrators calling for him to step down and an armed rebellion that has sprung up as peaceful protests have proved ineffective against his forces. The U.N. says 9,000 people have died since the uprising began in March 2011.

Despite the violence, the international community still sees the peace plan as the last chance to prevent Syria from falling into civil war – in part because no country wants to intervene militarily.

The head of the U.N. observers, Norwegian Maj. Gen. Robert Mood, visited the central cities of Homs and Hama, where anti-regime sentiment runs high, on Thursday.

He said there is still “a good chance and an opportunity” to break the cycle of violence.

Reporters accompanying the observers Thursday on the government-guided tour interviewed residents who said life was fairly normal during the day but was worrisome at night.

“The situation is calm during the day but scary at night,” said Maher Jerjous, a 53-year-old resident of the Bab al-Quba district in Hama. “Masked gunmen … roam the streets. There are kidnappings on public roads. You will not see anyone (on the streets) after six.”

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Associated Press writer Albert Aji contributed to this report from Homs and Hama, Syria.

A general view shows the Syrian flag flying next to destruction in the Bab Amro neighborhood of Homs on May 2, 2012. (JOSEPH EID/AFP/GettyImages)

Syrian children remove rubble from the entrance of their house in the Bab Amro neighborhood of Homs on May 2, 2012. (JOSEPH EID/AFP/GettyImages)

Syrian President Bashar Assad met with Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, Foreign Policy writes on Wednesday. Ilyumzhinov is the head of the World Chess Foundation and no stranger to high-level meetings. According to the website, the chess master held a long relationship with former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

Check out the full report on Foreign Policy.

Reuters reports opposition fighters killed 15 members of Syria’s security forces in the north of the country on Wednesday. Two colonels are reportedly among the dead.

Russia’s foreign ministry condemned recent attacks in Syria on Wednesday and blamed opposition fighters for hindering the U.N.-brokered peace plan.

Russia “decisively condemns the new terrorist sorties,” the foreign ministry said in a statement according to Reuters. The attacks “in essence unleashed a large-scale campaign to destabilize the situation and disrupt … Annan’s plan,” the statement said.

Read the full report here.


A member of the Syrian security forces opens the trunk of an armoured vehicle loaded with water and food supplies at an outpost in the Al-Waar district of the flashpoint city of Homs on May 2, 2012. (JOSEPH EID/AFP/GettyImages)

Experts warn Syria’s conflict is making one surprising victim: the country’s landmarks. Gunmen have targeted a museum in the city of Hama, attackers looted one of the world’s best preserved Crusader castles and government shells severely damaged the walls of the 12th century al-Madeeq Citadel. “Syria’s turmoil is threatening the country’s rich archaeological heritage,” the Associated Press concludes. Read the full report here.


In this Friday, April 20, 2012 file photo, a Syrian rebel stands inside a damaged historic house that was shelled by the Syrian security forces, at al-Hamidiya neighborhood, in the old city of Homs province, central Syria. The chaos from Syria’s yearlong revolt is destroying some of the country’s most important archaeological sites, and horrified experts warn that some of the Middle East’s most precious sites are at risk of destruction and looting. (AP Photo, File)


In this Saturday April 7, 2012 file citizen journalism image provided by Sham News Network, SNN, a destroyed historic house is seen damaged from the shelling of the Syrian security forces, at Bab Dreb neighborhood, in the old city of Homs province, central Syria. (AP Photo/Sham News Network, SNN, File)

The Al Nusra Front, a little-known Islamist group, claimed responsibility for a bombing targeting the Iranian Cultural Consulate in Damascus earlier this week.

“One of the security battalions of the al-Nusra Front on Tuesday, April 24 2012, monitored an army vehicle belonging to the Nusayri (Alawite) Assad regime and stuck an explosive device to it,” a statement posted on Islamist web forum al-Shamukh said according to Reuters.

Read more from Reuters.

UN peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous announced on Tuesday that the organization is accelerating its deployment of peacekeepers to Syria, Reuters reports. Ladsous said the mission should reach its full strength of 300 peacekeepers by the end of May.



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