AhlulBayt News Agency

source : FNA
Monday

27 February 2012

8:30:00 PM
299478

Saudi Arabia's Role in Unrests in Syria

A prominent political analyst revealed that Saudi Arabia and a number of other countries have been providing financial aids for terrorists in Syria in a bid to enflame unrests and tension in the country.

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - "There is no doubt that Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey and France attempt to keep the situation in Syria disquiet and unstable through their support for armed groups and movements, which includes financial, arms, political and propaganda supports," Riyadh al-Akhras said on Sunday.

He added that enemies of Syria are trying to topple Bashar Assad's government to prepare the ground for the presence of the military forces of foreign countries which seek hegemony over the region.

Syria has been experiencing unrest since mid-March with organized attacks by well-armed gangs against Syrian police forces and border guards being reported across the country. Hundreds of people, including members of the security forces, have been killed, when some protest rallies turned into armed clashes.

The government blames outlaws, saboteurs, and armed terrorist groups for the deaths, stressing that the unrest is being orchestrated from abroad. In October, calm was eventually restored in the Arab state after President Bashar al-Assad started a reform initiative in the country, but the US and Israeli plots could spark some new unrests in certain parts of the country.

Syrian state television has broadcast reports showing seized weapons caches and confessions by terrorist elements describing how they obtained arms from foreign sources. In confessions broadcast on the Syrian TV in September, a captured terrorist revealed the tactics used by armed terrorist groups to stir tension in Syria and the role played by the foreign elements in Syrian unrests.

The terrorist, Ammar Ziyad al-Najjar, confessed that he received foreign aid and instructions from contacts in Saudi Arabia and Jordan to deface Damascus. Al-Najjar stated that he was involved in a group that received instructions on how to kidnap people and blame it on the Syrian government.

The man also confessed to, among other crimes, purchasing firearms and distributing them among outlaws. He also recounted how groups of outsiders, many of whom not Syrians, showed up during the attacks on police stations in Hama.

Najjar said the men would distribute food and drink to demonstrators, sometimes slipping money into the food to encourage protests and adding stimulant powders at other times.

There was another type of pills that made people more aggressive - pills that were given openly to members of the foreign-backed terror squads, he explained.

/106