Rebel fighter commander Khaled al-Zamel, or Abu al-Walid
(C). (AFP Photo)
Source: Russia Today
http://rt.com/news/syria-fsa-defected-officers-081/
A group of Syrian rebels from the Free Syrian Army (FSA)
defected and joined pro-government forces on Wednesday. The troops’ commander
announced that “the road is open,” and called on to other rebels to abandon
their uprising.
Eleven rebel troops – three officers, two warrant
officers and six civilians – defected from the FSA and now support President
Bashar al-Assad, AFP reported.
"We have decided to return to the army and cooperate
with the Ministry of National Reconciliation," Lieutenant-Colonel Khaled
Abdel Rahman al-Zamel said during a conference of non-combatant Syrian
opposition groups.
“We are all Syrians, we reject a revolution that starts
with the shedding of blood,” al-Zamel said, eliciting applause from the
audience.
"The solution can't be achieved through holding
weapons, blasts, sabotage or killing the innocent, but repenting from the
wrongdoing and through political means,” Xinhua quoted al-Zamel as
saying. He previously served as a captain in the Syrian Army, before joining
the FSA months ago. He was reportedly the head of the FSA’s leadership in
southern Syria, and acted as the deputy chief of the rebels' military council.
The appearance of al-Zamel and his men came as a surprise
to the Damascus conference, organized by some 30 Syrian opposition groups with
the aim of opening peaceful dialogue with the Syrian government to resolve the
ongoing crisis in the country. The gathering was attended by ambassadors from
Russia and Iran, and China’s temporary charge d'affaires for Syria – three nations
who consistently supported the Assad regime over the past 18-month uprising.
Al-Zamel’s statement sparked debate among anti-regime
activists – some argued that al-Zamel was forced to make his statement; others
claimed that they had no idea who he was.
Yaser al-Abed, another FSA officer who attended the
conference, formerly commanded a rebel group in Aleppo province. During the
conference, al-Abed called on other insurgents to disarm and surrender: “Work
your minds and know that holding weapons is nothing but a violation to the
minds and freedom alike.”
“Syria is our home and honor, but they wanted to burn it.
The most targeted things are our religion, nation and land,” al-Abed said.
“I have known all that, and that is why I have decided to lay down my weapon to
be a loving person who seeks the good and the humanity.”
The conference of opposition groups in the Syrian capital
of Damascus called on both the Syrian authorities and the rebels to
“immediately” end violence in the country though an international peace plan.
On Wednesday, twin car bombings by rebels targeting
military command headquarters in Damascus, and a separate rebel attack killed
four Syrian security officers and injured another 14.
That same day, rebel snipers killed a journalist with
Iran’s Press TV, Syrian national Maya Nasser, as he reported on live TV
about the bombings at the army headquarters.
Russia and the US continued to clash in the UN Security
Council over the ongoing Syrian crisis: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
condemned Western nations for their stance on Syria. "The states that
encourage the opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to give up on the
ceasefire and dialogue and to demand that the regime capitulate, bear
responsibility for the continuing bloodshed," he said. "Such an approach is
unrealistic and encourages terrorism, which is used by the opposition.”
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton accused Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad of “murdering of his own people,” and argued
that the UN is paralyzed by Russia and China’s vetoing of Western-backed
resolutions on Syria.
Rebel fighter commander Khaled al-Zamel, or Abu al-Walid at a conference
organised by opposition groups tolerated by Assad's regime, Damascus, September
26, 2012. (Screenshot from AFP video
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