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WAR REPORT
Syria vows government jobs for relatives of 'martyrs'
by Staff Writers
Damascus (AFP) Dec 31, 2014


IS publishes 'interview' with captured Jordan pilot
Beirut (AFP) Dec 30, 2014 - The Islamic State group has published what it says is an interview with a Jordanian pilot it captured after his plane crashed in Syria last week.

In the comments attributed to the pilot, he says his plane was hit by a heat-seeking missile, endorsing the jihadist group's version of events, which has been rejected by both Jordan and the United States.

The purported interview published by the IS online English-language magazine Dabiq on Monday is accompanied by photographs of First Lieutenant Maaz al-Kassasbeh, 26.

In it, he is quoted as discussing how the air strikes in Syria are coordinated between the countries of the US-led coalition.

He says his role was to destroy anti-aircraft weapons on the ground and to provide cover for the strike aircraft.

Kassasbeh was captured by IS on December 24 after his F-16 jet crashed while on a mission against the jihadists over northern Syria.

His father, Safi al-Kassasbeh, has urged IS to show "mercy" and treat his son as a "guest".

The crash was the first warplane from the US-led coalition lost in combat since air strikes on IS began in Syria in September, and marked a major propaganda victory for the Sunni extremist group.

Jordan is among a number of countries that have joined the US-led air raids against IS, which has declared a "caliphate" straddling large parts of Iraq and Syria.

Syria will award 50 percent of vacant government posts to relatives of soldiers and government employees killed or paralysed in the country's conflict, according to a law issued on Wednesday.

The law, decreed by President Bashar al-Assad after passing parliament earlier in the week, comes as the death toll among Syrian government troops grows.

More than 44,200 Syrian soldiers have been killed since the conflict began in March 2011, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group.

"With this law, 50 percent of the posts in the public administration will be reserved for the relatives of martyrs," state news agency SANA said.

It added that those eligible would have to pass exams, where necessary.

The law defines as "martyrs" any soldier, policeman, pro-regime militiaman or public servant "if they died during the war, military operations or because of terrorist gangs."

The law will also cover people in those categories who have been paralysed or blinded in the conflict.

Relatives eligible for the government posts include the parents, spouses and children of those killed or wounded.

A total of more than 200,000 people have been killed since Syria's war broke out, including 28,000 members of the National Defence Forces, a pro-regime militia.

The regime's losses have caused growing resentment among government supporters, including in the Alawite community to which Assad belongs.

Majority-Alawite Tartus on the Mediterranean coast has suffered the highest proportional loss of soldiers of any province in Syria.

It has come to be known as "the capital of martyrs" by government supporters.


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Hebron, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Dec 30, 2014
A Palestinian teenager was seriously wounded by Israeli gunfire in the West Bank, his family said Tuesday, with the army saying he had thrown a suspected explosive device at troops. Family members said the incident happened as Mohammed Awwad, 17, was travelling in a car with his 19-year-old brother back to their home in Beit Ummar, between the southern cities of Bethlehem and Hebron. As ... read more


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