Syria rebels seize 21 UN peacekeepers
Syria rebels seize 21 UN peacekeepers
Syrian
rebels on Wednesday abducted the peacekeepers, who are from the
Philippines, diplomats said, as the frontiers of their war against
President Bashar al-Assad spread further.
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon called for their "immediate" release and
demanded the Syrian government and rebels respect their "freedom of
movement and security".
The
UN said it was trying to negotiate the release of the soldiers, while a
rebel spokesman said the troops would be held until Assad's forces pull
back from a Golan village.
Officials in Manila urged the troops, who are part of a 300-strong Filipino peacekeeping unit, to be released immediately.
Philippine armed forces spokesman Colonel Arnulfo Burgos told AFP the rebels were treating the hostages well.
"They
are being treated as guests, not as hostiles," Burgos said, adding: "We
have high hopes that they are going to be released soon."
Russia's
UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin, who read the Security Council statement
on the situation, said the rebels have made demands directed at the
Syrian government, but gave no details.
The
Britain-based watchdog Syrian Observatory for Human Rights distributed
two amateur videos with statements by the rebel Yarmuk Martyrs Brigade
claiming the capture.
A
man identified as brigade spokesman Abu Kaid al-Faleh said the
peacekeepers would not be freed until Syrian regime forces pull out of
the area.
"If
they do not withdraw, these men (UN troops) will be treated as
prisoners," he said, accusing the UN Disengagement Force (UNDOF) - which
monitors a 1974 ceasefire deal between Syria and Israel - of working
with the army to try to suppress the insurgency.
UN
peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous told reporters after brief ing the
Security Council that negotiations are underway "and the matter is
mobilizing all our teams".
Meanwhile,
UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres warned that one
million Syrians have fled their homeland since the revolt erupted two
years ago.
"With
a million people in flight, millions more displaced internally and
thousands of people continuing to cross the border every day, Syria is
spiralling towards full-scale disaster," Guterres said.
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