
Hisham was another victim of the terrible program of the armed “opposition” to destroy the national cadres, intellectuals, famous people that Syria can be proud of. The athlete's brother, Walid, told reporters that Hisham had always shown great enthusiasm in sports and was a true patriot, therefore, he was put on the black list of those who want to destroy all honest citizens who love their homeland.
A few days earlier, the famous lawyer Hatem Dib was killed. He was shot dead in his office in the capital. Terrorists kill all famous people who do not want to go to their side.
But their targets are not only famous people, but also simple workers who are working to rebuild the infrastructure they are destroying.
In the suburbs of Damascus Jaraman, gangsters attacked a power substation. One of her employees was killed, two others were injured. Syrian Minister of Electricity Imad Khamis visited the place of the tragedy. He expressed condolences to his relatives and stressed that such cowardly attacks would not break the will of honest people who do their duty, giving people electricity against the will of terrorists and repairing damaged electrical networks. Repair crews work around the clock, despite all the dangers and threats of the militants.
In the metropolitan quarter of Al-Ghasania, a suicide bomber tried to commit a crime against civilians. Fortunately, the mined car, along with the attacker, was blown up in the wrong place, where the “killer and suicide in one bottle” counted. As a result, he went to hell alone.
In the city of Aleppo, gangsters attacked a repair brigade of workers who restored the electricity supply. One person was injured.
In addition, in Aleppo, bandits tried to blow up the hospital and laid several explosive devices around it. The attack was prevented in time, and the sappers cleared 6 "hellish machines".
The bandits, supported by the West and supposedly fighting for "democracy", are famous not only for murder, but also for robbery. The other day, the Syrian Foreign Ministry sent a report to the UN Security Council that more than 1000 factories in the city of Aleppo were looted by the armed “opposition” (the one that the West wants to transfer power to Syria). And how do you think, where are their equipment taken? The answer to this question would clarify who benefits from it.
Equipment flowed to Turkey. And the Turkish authorities know that stolen property of a neighboring state goes to their country. This is an obvious violation of every conceivable and inconceivable law, but Turkey supports it for its own benefit.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs called this practice a real robbery and piracy, aimed at undermining the Syrian economy and leaving the people of Syria without sources of income and worsening the lives of ordinary Syrians. All this, according to the statement of the SAR Ministry of Foreign Affairs, requires international reaction, since the principles of good neighborliness and non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries are violated.
It turns out that by assisting the militants of the so-called “opposition,” Turkey “kills two birds with one stone”: first, it undermines the economy of the neighboring country, and second, it enriches itself.
In addition, the militants steal flour and bread from Syrian bakeries and tons of it are taken to the same Turkey. And then Western “human rights activists” together with the Syrian “oppositionists” squeak about how they feel sorry for the Aleppo residents without bread, and even this fact is used against the Syrian legal government. Which, on the contrary, tries to do everything in order to provide residents with bread and flour. Despite all the difficulties in the country, state bread still costs 15 pounds per kilogram. Yes, he has to defend the queue, and in private stores sell it more expensive, but, nevertheless, the state price remains stable, no matter what. And in Damascus, the militants, in order to cause discontent among the people, often buy up this cheap bread in large quantities, using large families that have been specially bought for this purpose, and who stand in line with all the children. Then this bread is often dumped into the river, but hypocritical "opposition activists" shout that the government, they say, leaves people without bread, and pour fake crocodile tears about the sufferings of hungry children. And in the same areas of the country that are approaching the Turkish border, tons of cheap and tasty Syrian bread flow into the neighboring hostile state.
Even the Western press can not ignore the completely predatory essence of the Syrian pseudo-opposition. A publication appeared in the British newspaper The Guardian telling that many Syrian militants, instead of engaging in a “revolution,” are “distracted” by looting. And even die as a result of fights for stolen property.
This has been repeatedly reported by the Syrian media, but their voice in the West is not heard. And the publication in the Guardian was written with the author’s explicit "faith" in the "revolution" and regret that some of the "revolutionaries" are not morally clean.
The newspaper describes the case of the death of the field commander Abu Lamil, who died not in battle with the Syrian army, but as a result of the fact that his group managed to seize the company, which had a huge warehouse of sheet steel. Because of such a tasty morsel, an “epic battle” broke out between the commanders of the “rebels”, and as a result, Abu Lamil was killed.
Looting has become commonplace in Aleppo, the article notes. And those field commanders who are particularly active in this matter are much more successful, because if other leaders do not feed the militants, they leave for such groups that can feed them satisfyingly - that is, to the most active robbers. Militants who seized a fuel depot change it for bread from the group that managed to seize the bakery.
They steal not only bread and fuel, but the people need it. They steal cars and sell them to former car owners. They steal medicine from hospitals. Naturally, all this cannot but provoke anger against the “liberators” even among those who were initially deceived and supported them. According to the same publication, the militants themselves realize that in this situation it is quite natural that the locals go on demonstrations against them, but they can no longer stop. The newspaper cites a case in which militants plundered a hospital and stole a large supply of penicillin, and then returned it for ransom.
There is a case when in the Seif Al-Dole district of Aleppo, militants broke into the school building. They desecrated it, broke all the furniture, scattered children on the floor and took computers and all the valuable things they liked.
... Reading this, I remembered the school building in Homs, which I saw myself. Textbooks and notebooks were scattered on the floor, holes were made in the burnt walls, along which the militants were climbing from one class to another. All the windows were raised, all that is possible - trampled.
The struggle of life and death continues every day. That life, which was earlier, until the “Arab Spring”, when children could study normally in schools, and the lone traveler could alone spend the night in a tent anywhere in the country. With that mortal force that destroys both schools, and hospitals, and factories, tramples touching children's drawings and sends the bread of the Motherland to neighboring Turkey ...