Social Media Monitor: Who’s behind the Quweiq River massacre?
Aleppo witnessed a horrifying scene on Tuesday, January 29; more than 80 dead bodies of men of different ages were pulled out from the Quweiq River in the rebel-controlled Bustan Al-Qasr area. Most of the bodies were hand-tied with a single shot in the head, which led to the belief that they were executed. The government accused the Al-Nusra Front of carrying out the killings, while the opposition accused regime forces, saying they threw the bodies in the river in an area they control and then the bodies moved downstream. The Telegraph interviewed a man who said his three sons, whose bodies were found in the river, had gone missing after heading to an area controlled by the regime.
The Facebook page The Syrian Revolution 2011 issued an urgent call, asking people to help in organizing the process of body identification.
Activist Bassam al-Khouri insinuated that members of the regime carried out the massacre in order to eradicate any possible negotiations with the opposition.
Regime retaliates to Israeli airstrike against Syrians
Syrian officials declared that Syria reserves the right to retaliate for the Israeli airstrike was subject to sarcastic comments by Syrian opposition supporters. Israeli aircraft hit military targets inside Syria on Wednesday, January 30. Similar declarations have been made by Syrian officials after similar attacks in the past few years and were not followed by real action.
Lebanese journalist Fidaa Itani, who covers the events in Syria and was previously kidnapped near Aleppo commented on Facebook, saying:
Syrian cartoonist Saad Hajo played on the different meanings of the Arabic verb hafatha which could be used in the sense of “to reserve” and “to store”.
Pro-opposition actor Fares Helou wondered if bombing Al-Ansari quarter was in Aleppo is the regime idea of avenging the Israeli airstrike:
Controversy about negotiations with the regime
The head of the National Coalition, the umbrella that gathers the main opposition forces, Moaz al-Khatib, declared last week that he is willing to initiate negotiations with representatives of the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Khatib had two conditions: freeing the some 160,000 detainees held by the regime and allowing Syrians abroad to renew their passport.
The ex-member of the Syrian National Council Kamal al-Labwani talked live on Al-Arabiya channel, asking Khatib to resign. On Facebook, activist Mustafa al-Jarf wrote that Khatib’s proposal is merely an attempt to gain legitimacy in the eyes of the international community.
A comment published on Al-Mundassa Al-Souriyya blog saw that Khatib’s move comes as a response to Assad’s call for dialogue, not the more positive initiative made by UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, which stipulated the formation of an interim government.
“In principle negotiations and concessions are not always wrong, especially if they come with a give-and-take approach; let us take whatever we can from Brahimi’s initiative in order to carry on with the revolution later,” the comment read.
“Many people successfully did the same – the Kurds are one example. Refusing certain gains they are only partial, however, could result in losing everything. ”
Activist Massoud Akko, a member of the League of Syrian Journalists, tweeted the following:
Khatib finally commented on the on-going debate through Facebook, saying he is happy with hearing criticism.
Khatib met the Russian Foreign Minister Serguei Lavrov and his Iranian homologue Ali Akbar Salihi on the margins of a conference on global security in Berlin on Saturday, February 2. Lavrov said that he invited Khatib to visit Moscow.
So many conferences, so few solutions
Several conferences on Syria were organized last week. In Geneva, members from National Coordination Board, which is based in Syria, met with independent opposition figures who live abroad. The board is often accused by the radical opposition of being close to the regime. The closing statement called for negations with the regime and remained ambiguous on the fate of Assad.
Columnist Subhi Hadidi, who writes in the London-based Al-Quds Al-Arabi, criticized the outcomes of the conference:
In another tweet, the Syrian program presenter at Al-Arabiya channel quoted Loay Hussein, the head of the Movement to Build the Syrian State, who participated in the conference:
Another conference was simultaneously taking place in Paris, where representatives from 50 countries met with members of the National Coalition, who asked for financial support.
This was an occasion for some to remind France that it should intervene in Syria as it did in Mali:
A conference was held in Kuwait to raise donations for countries hosting Syrian refugees. Donors pledged to raise $1.5 billion, something that writer Mustafa Hadid saw as “pouring water into a sieve” since these countries are “corrupt.”