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WAR REPORT
Syria's Qusayr devastated in army takeover: witnesses
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) June 06, 2013


Jordan foils arms smuggling bid from Syria: army
Amman (AFP) June 06, 2013 - Jordanian border guards on Thursday foiled an attempt to smuggle a large haul of weapons from Syria into the kingdom, the army said.

"The border guards arrested a group of people at dawn on Thursday as they tried to smuggle a large amount of weapons from Syria into Jordan," state-run Petra news agency quoted an army statement as saying.

It did not elaborate.

Jordan, which says it currently hosts more than 500,000 refugees from Syria's conflict, has tightened its borders, arresting and imprisoning dozens of jihadists who tried to its the war-torn neighbour.

The government in Amman denies accusations by the embattled regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad that the kingdom has opened up its borders to jihadist fighters.

US evaluating French chemical weapons info
Washington (AFP) June 6, 2013 - The United States is evaluating information received from France which Paris has billed as proof that chemical weapons have been used in Syria, a US official said Thursday.

"I can confirm for you that we have received the information from the French," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters, after French officials said they had evidence that sarin gas had been used in Syria.

"We will take a close look at this, just like we take a close look at any information that's provided, and we always recommend that any country provide information as well to the UN for their full investigation."

But Psaki warned the US did not intend to "evaluate or litigate in public" whatever information it has received from Paris.

"We are still looking into finalizing the facts, looking into confirming the facts," she said, denying that the close inspection of the French information was pouring doubt on its credibility.

"We're doing our own due diligence on this," Psaki stressed.

President Barack Obama has said that any use of chemical weapons in the Syria conflict, now in its third year, would violate a US "red line". But amid mounting reports such arms have been used, Washington has proceeded cautiously.

Amid mounting pressure for the US to act, Secretary of State John Kerry called on France on Wednesday to share its evidence of chemical weapons use.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius personally called Kerry on Monday and informed him that all the information at France's disposal would be transmitted to Washington.

France has described the evidence of sarin use as a development that obliges the international community to act.

But memories remain strong in the United States about the false evidence that former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had stockpiled chemical weapons, which was used to justify the 2003 US invasion of Iraq.

Scores of homes in central Syria's Qusayr are razed to the ground, its shops are smashed, and the smell of gunpowder still hangs heavy in the air.

After Syrian troops and Hezbollah took control of the symbolic insurgent bastion on Wednesday, Qusayr has become a ghost town, a witness told AFP.

In the central square, once a hub for the sale of agricultural and industrial products, bulldozers work to clear away the debris.

Smiling soldiers carry flags imprinted with the image of President Bashar al-Assad.

"By our blood and our souls, we sacrifice ourselves for you, O Assad," they chant, as some fire shots into the air.

Nearby stand groups of fighters from Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah movement, all armed and in military gear.

But Hezbollah loyalists who joined the army's vast assault on Qusayr are not shown in footage broadcast by Syrian state television or the Lebanese party's Al-Manar channel, the first to arrive on the scene after Qusayr's fall.

The regime forces have taken over a dead town.

The once tall municipality building has been shattered, and on the main square the broken leaves of palm trees point to the ground.

The square's watchtower has survived, but its bodywork is now blackened by flames.

As soon as the army claimed victory, its troops raised the flag over the clock.

A vehicle carrying boxes of food marked "Gift of the Syrian army" drives into Qusayr, followed by a pick-up truck carrying two families.

State television broadcast scenes showing a crowd of men arriving at the square. Viewers were told the footage was of "the return of residents to Qusayr".

Most houses have been damaged by the fighting, and trees have been scythed onto pavements.

Shop windows are smashed and goods have been stolen in a town that was under army siege for a year.

On Qusayr's streets, there is no sign of where the residents' furniture or goods have gone.

Roads have been destroyed by army bombardment, gaping holes in the ground bearing witness to the ferocity of the air raids.

A church in the town is pockmarked with bullets, and a bridge at the entrance of Qusayr has been completely destroyed.

In the town's hospital, there are bloodstains on the floor, as well as cotton and gauze used to treat the wounded.

Hundreds of wounded people were treated there, activists say.

"The injured have been evacuated from Qusayr for the (nearby town of) Eastern Bweida," said one activist near Qusayr who identified himself as Jad al-Yamani.

"Some (rebel) groups took charge of evacuating the wounded, but it was hard.

"They evacuated the wounded on foot, and walked all night. The sun rose, and now some are waiting until nightfall to continue the walk," Yamani told AFP by Internet link.

Even as the rebels and civilians fled, the army bombardments did not cease, said the activist.

The final hours before the army and Hezbollah took complete control of Qusayr were "unbearable", said Yamani.

Insurgent "fighters were torn between being on the front lines and taking care of the women and the injured", he said.

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