Kafranbel responds to Obama's mild requests asking Iran and Hezbollah to
leave Syria. pic.twitter.com/oKbeOyKUBo <http://t.co/oKbeOyKUBo>




Syria Today: The Fighting Near the Golan
Heights<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/2013/6/7/syria-today-the-fighting-near-the-golan-heights.html>



 inShare

Friday, June 7, 2013 at 6:44 | Scott
Lucas<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/author/scott-lucas>
 in EA Live <http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/category/ea-live>, EA
Middle East and
Turkey<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/category/ea-middle-east-and-turkey>
, Middle East and
Iran<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/category/middle-east-and-iran>

*After the fall of Qusayr to regime forces on Wednesday, the political and
military fronts were quieter yesterday.*
*

There was one significant flutter with wider implications, however:
fighting along Syria's southern border --- notably with the
Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

In the morning, insurgents attacked and briefly held the Quneitra crossing
before regime forces reclaimed it.

Then, in an incident which may or may not have been connected with the
Quneitra skirmish, firing in the demilitarised area between Syria and
Israel injured two United Nations peacekeepers.

The Austrian Government, which contributes 380 of the 900 peacekeepers,
subsequently announced that it is withdrawing its troops.

Israel showed interest in the developments, with its military bringing out
the first news of the Quneitra fighting, but refrained from intervention.
Its Foreign Ministry said in a written statement saying it regretted
Austria's decision and hoped this would not bring further escalation of
violence in the region.
*
------------------------------

*Protest Message of the Day*

>From Kafranbel in Idlib Province:

<https://twitter.com/NMSyria/status/343055911209807874/photo/1>

*Syrian Council Statement*

The opposition Syrian Coalition has released a
statement<http://www.etilaf.org/en/newsroom/press-release/item/485-russia-s-skepticism-towards-the-syrian-coalition.html>
criticising
Russia’s “contradictory statements...that cast doubt on the Syrian
Coalition's position toward the Geneva II Conference.”

The statement also reiterates the Syrian Coalition’s demand that Assad must
step down as a part of preconditions for talks, in order to facilitate “the
fundamental aim of the Geneva agreement, which is to create a democratic
transition and put an end to Assad’s dictatorship.”

*High-Tech Methods to Prevent Arms Going to Wrong People?*

The French government is apparently looking
into<http://m.apnews.com/ap/db_306481/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=F364ngZV>
a
variety of high-tech methods that would prevent arms provided by the West
to Syrian rebels from being used by the ‘wrong’ groups.

Experts and officials say that nothing would be 100 per cent fail-safe, but
techniques such as tracking the movement of anti-aircraft missiles or being
able to disable them from a distance are being investigated.

Western countries, such as France, Britain and the United States, fear that
if they provide arms to the rebels in a bid to assist them in overthrowing
the Assad regime, these arms might end up in the hands of groups who hold
anti-Western views. Both France and Britain have been pushing for a
stronger response to the crisis, recently ending the EU arms embargo and
accusing Syrian government forces of using chemical weapons.

*Lebanon: Future Bloc, March 14 Slam Hezbollah Over Qusayr*
**

Al-Mustaqbal (Future) Bloc MP Khaled al-Daher slammed Hezbollah leader
Hassan Nasrallah on Friday for his group's involvement in fighting in the
Syrian town of Qusayr.

Al-Daher accused Nasrallah of "leading an Iranian armed faction on Lebanese
territory".

Aligned with Lebanon's Sunnis, the Future Bloc is the largest member of
Lebanon's March 14 Alliance and is opposed to Shia Hezbollah, which it has
said "has all the characteristics of a terrorist group".

The views of Lebanon's Sunni politicians have been picked up particularly
in the Kuwaiti press. In aninterview <http://www.alanba.com.kw/newspaper> with
Kuwait's al-Anbaa newspaper, al-Daher
said<http://iraq4allnews.dk/ShowNews.php?id=55311> that
Hezbollah and Assad's victory in Qusayr did not mean that the insurgency
was finished, and added that "those who are laughing and handing out sweets
in Beirut's southern suburbs [a Hezbollah stronghold] will weep tears of
bitterness and sorrow for the fall of Assad and his malignant Safavid
[system] of Velayat Faqih'"

Meanwhile, the general secretary of March 14 Fares Soueid, told Kuwait's
al-Seyassah daily <http://www.al-seyassah.com/> on Friday that Hezbollah
had succeeded in tying Lebanon's future to that of Syria, and said the
Lebanese Shia group wanted to create a Shiite corridor along Lebanon's
eastern borders with Syria, placing the country on a "dangerous path".

*France Calls for Release of 2 Journalists*

French President, Francois Hollande, has called for
the<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-22810357> immediate
release of two French journalists who went missing in the last 24 hours.

Reporter Didier Francois and photographer Edouard Elias were travelling to
the northern city of Aleppo, according to their employer, the radio station
Europe 1.

Meanwhile, Austria has announced that it will withdraw its soldiers, who
make up one third of the UN peacekeeping force there, from the Golan
Heights as fighting has spilled over from the Syrian conflict into the
area. Austria said that the threat to its people had "reached an
unacceptable level.”

*Qusayr: “A city that’s died”*

The BBC’s chief international correspondent, Lyse Doucet, reports
that<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-22809589> the
city of Qusayr, devastated by the war and recently taken over by government
forces, now has a population of only 500, where just 18 months ago it was
30,000.

She observes that “We still don't know how many were killed in the last
three weeks of fighting. But what we have seen is a city that's died.”

A single local family told Doucet that they were now leaving their home,
never to return. One soldier, however, insists that "People will return.
They will come back to a city that will be even better, and their lives
will be even better than before."

Doucet also notes the prevalence of Hezbollah fighters, who supported the
Assad regime’s assaults on the rebels based within the city. When asked
about his views on Hezbollah’s presence in the conflict, one soldier
demanded "Why shouldn't they fight with us? The other side is sending in
fighters from Libya, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Afghanistan. Half the world is
fighting in Syria."

*A First-Hand View from Aleppo*

James Harkin of The Nation, visiting the family of slain fighter Ayman
Kareem, reports alongside insurgents in
Aleppo<http://www.thenation.com/article/174688/battle-aleppo>
:

**

*Very little can prepare you for the epic scale of destruction in
Salaheddine. In the worst-affected streets, barely a house has been left
untouched; a weightless, otherworldly quiet obscures the fact that many
poor Aleppans are still living here among the ruins.

When the car can take us no farther, we get out and stumble through the
wreckage. Just behind the pockmarked dome of the area’s main mosque, Molham
shows me a grassy yard where the rebels bury their dead in shallow graves;
the fighting here is so intense that they have no time to bury them
properly. As the streets narrow, drapes hang on the upper floors to block
the view of snipers. It’s only when we arrive that I realize they’ve taken
me to where Ayham was killed last August.
*

*Molham, standing in the exact spot where it happened, points out the
remains of a makeshift clinic where rebel-friendly doctors had been working
when regime forces stormed the area. As we stand there, another group of
rebels is preparing to go into battle: a white van packed with men wearing
black Islamist bandannas fires itself up with cries of “Allahu Akbar!”
before speeding off toward government lines.*

*Casualties*

The Local Coordination Committees in Syria claim that 73 people were
killed  on Thursday, including 18 in Damascus and its suburbs, 16 in Deir
Ez Zor Province, and 12 in Homs Province.

The Violations Documentation Center reports that 62,849 people have been
killed in the Syrian conflict since March 2011, an increase of 75 from
Thursday. Of the deaths, 48,565 were civilians, a rise of 39 from yesterday.

http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/2013/6/7/syria-today-the-fighting-near-the-golan-heights.html

-------------------------------------
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Analysis: UN Report on Syria lets Assad off easy
<http://pinterest.com/pin/create/button/?url=http://claysbeach.blogspot.com/2013/06/breaking-news-un-report-says-syrian.html>
  <http://pinterest.com/pin/create/button/>

*'filling our heads full of figures and angles and telling us stuff we
already know'*
-- Billy Joe Shaver

*WARNING: The UN is about making peace between governments. It is not about
protecting you from your government.* That is the main take-away from this
report on the Syrian conflict.

The United Nations Commission on Inquiry into the Syrian conflict issued a
report on Tuesday that has been widely reported to blame both sides for the
increasing brutality. This NY Times
article<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/05/world/middleeast/un-panel-reports-increasing-brutality-by-both-sides-in-syria.html?_r=0>
is
typical:

U.N. Panel Reports Increasing Brutality by Both Sides in SyriaBy NICK
CUMMING-BRUCE
Published: June 4, 2013
GENEVA — Reporting “new levels of brutality” in Syria’s more than
two-year-old conflict, United Nations investigators said on Tuesday that
they believed that chemical weapons and more indiscriminate bombing had
been used in recent weeks and urged world powers to cut off supplies of
weapons that could only result in more civilian casualties.
More...<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/05/world/middleeast/un-panel-reports-increasing-brutality-by-both-sides-in-syria.html?_r=0>

The 29 page UN 
Report<http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/HRBodies/HRCouncil/CoISyria/A-HRC-23-58_en.pdf>
doesn't
consider that this is a war of choice for the regime and a war of necessity
for the people. It considers both sides responsible for the conflict.

Certainly this report doesn't see a just side to this war, although the
government of Syria has a certain amount of legitimacy because it is after
all, the legally recognized government of Syria. This comes through clearly
in their correspondence with the Assad regime in the appendix. This is how
they consider what many might see as a war crime carried out in suppressing
the uprising:

On 4 August, the house of the Elbaw family was hit around 6:00 by a *"barrel
bomb"* dropped from a fighter jet, killing seven persons, including women
and children. The commission was unable to ascertain whether the aerial
bombardment of the Elbaw family house was excessive in relation to the
concrete and direct overall military advantage of attacking the nearby
school, which was used by the FSA, and thus unable to find sufficient
grounds that the attack was disproportionate.

So in the view of the UN Commission, the Assad regime has every *"right"* to
carry on its war against the insurgency, and is even entitled to a certain
amount of *"collateral damage"* while doing so.

This should be born in mind when considering their report. It has a strong
bias in favor of the government, because after all, it is a government and
the UN is an organization of governments. That being said, most of the
report is about documenting the war crimes of the government because
overwhelmingly, that is who is committing them. For example:

Government forces and affiliated militia have committed murder, torture,
rape, forcible displacement, enforced disappearance and other inhumane
acts. Many of these crimes were perpetrated as part of widespread or
systematic attacks against civilian populations and constitute crimes
against humanity. War crimes and gross violations of international human
rights law–including summary execution, arbitrary arrest and detention,
unlawful attack, attacking protected objects, and pillaging and destruction
of property–have also been committed. The tragedy of Syria’s 4.25 million
internally displaced persons is compounded by recent incidents of IDPs
being targeted and forcibly displaced.

But it also strives, in every category, to balance the scales by showing
that Assad's opposition is also guilty of war crimes.

Anti-Government armed groups have also committed war crimes, including
murder, sentencing and execution without due process, torture,
hostage-taking and pillage. They continue to endanger the civilian
population by positioning military objectives in civilian areas. The
violations and abuses committed by anti-Government armed groups did not,
however, reach the intensity and scale of those committed by Government
forces and affiliated militia.

Even though they acknowledge the government is the worst actor in the
conflict, they oppose military, or frankly any support, for the people
fighting him since their hands are also dirty.

There is a human cost to the increased availability of weapons. Transfers
of arms heighten the risk of violations, leading to more civilian deaths
and injuries.

A diplomatic surge is the only path to a political settlement. Negotiations
must be inclusive, and must represent all facets of Syria’s cultural mosaic.

Nothing in this report is likely to slow the flow of weapons to the
government of Syria, from Russia and Iran, or the flow of fighters from
Hezbullah, but it may influence the *"good"* UN citizens not to supply arms
to the Syrians in need of self-defense.

While the report does find the Assad regime guilty of horrendous war
crimes, including mass murder, against the Syrian people, it seems to imply
that Bashar al-Assad should be a part of any political settlement. This is
how it sees the path forward:

Syria remains engulfed in an escalating civil war. The Syrian National
Dialogue Forum, launched 24 March by the Government and the
domestically-based opposition to promote national reconciliation, has not
shifted the momentum toward a political solution.

What the UN commission is referring to as the *"domestically-based
opposition"* is not the thousands of defectors from Assad's army but the
phony government sanctioned opposition that could still operate openly and
meet with the regime in Damascus. Amidst all this Assad created carnage,
the UN commission is promoting these*"company unions"* as the basis
for a *"political
solution!"*

Their report continues:

Similarly, Presidential Decree 23 of 16 April 2013, hailed as the most
comprehensive amnesty to date, has fallen short of achieving demobilisation
of the Government’s opponents.

Are they actually proposing that this amnesty be believed? Even in the face
of the lying, murdering ways they themselves document the Assad regime has
been treating its people?

Here finally they reveal their end game - *"demobilisation of the
Government’s opponents"* but not the demobilisation or disarming of the
government.

But this whole thing began because the government started the wanton
slaughter of people demanding a change in their government. So where does
that leave people who want to overthrow a fascist government willing to use
military power to suppress them?

The report does make it clear the Assad regime is doing that:

Brutal tactics adopted during military operations, particularly by
Government forces, led to frequent massacres and destruction on an
unprecedented scale.

And they continue:

In regions held by armed groups in northern and eastern governorates,
Government forces resumed their brutal and often indiscriminate campaign of
shelling, using a wide variety of weaponry. Besides the continuous use of
aerial bombardments, they have fired strategic missiles, cluster and
thermobaric bombs. This appears to be part of a broader strategy aimed at
eroding civilian support for anti-Government armed groups and at damaging
infrastructure. The majority of these attacks targeted towns and
neighbourhoods controlled or infiltrated by armed groups, rather than
targeting those groups’ military bases.

22 . Defections and casualties affected Government forces’ strength and
cohesion. To generate combat power, the Government increasingly relied on
militia recently transformed into the National Defence Army, a paramilitary
force. Drawn mainly from pro-Government communities, these self-defence
forces have been systematically engaged in combat operations alongside army
units.

23. Recently, Hezbollah fighters are openly supporting the Syrian military
during operations conducted near Al-Qusayr along the Lebanese border while
members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine –General
Command have done the same around Yarmouk camp in Damascus.

They oppose the introduction on new weapons to either side even though they
acknowledge the extremely inequality in weaponry:

28 Armed groups are still equipped mainly with small arms and light
weapons, but with an increase in anti-tank and anti-aircraft systems, as
well as indirect fire assets, provided predominantly by supporting
countries and armed groups in the region.

How do they know that? The Syrian opposition receives weapons from abroad
and they take weapons from Assad. Defecting soldiers also bring weapons.
The FSA claims, and many observers believe, that the opposition gets most
of their weapons from raiding government arsenals.

This report never mentions captured weapons and doesn't try to support its
claim that the opposition is using weapons *"provided predominantly by
supporting countries and armed groups in the region,"* a conclusion which
would draw no objection from the Assad regime as it fits their narrative.

While the commission report does spend the most time on the crimes of the
Assad regime, it strives very hard to show both sides are guilty. It would
appear that this report is driven by a philosophy similar to the one
promoted by commission member Carla Del Ponte when she was with the ICTY
and discussed in my blog
here<http://claysbeach.blogspot.com/2013/05/syria-sarin-blame-game-is-carla-del.html>
and 
here<http://claysbeach.blogspot.com/2013/05/carla-del-ponte-in-wikileaks-cablegate.html>
.

That philosophy sees all war as bad and both sides always in the wrong and
so strives to attach blame to both sides. This has been the main take-away
that the MSM has gotten from the report as we can see from the NY Times
headline above.

This is a very convenient view for those in the West who would rather not
get involved and just let the Syrian people and their well-armed fascist
government fight it out. This is the view that this report strives to
create, so rather than repeat what this report had to say about the
horrendous crimes of the Assad regime, for the reminder of this blog post,
I will focus on what the report considers the war crimes of Assad
opposition because, in contrast to their verdict as to the fate of the poor
Elbaw family, I think you will see a real striving to pin the badge of war
criminal on Assad's opposition.

The UN Commission says that massacres were committed by both sides and of
course they list Sanamayn, Baniyas, Abel village, Al-Burj, Tartous, Homs
highway and Jdeidat Al-Fadel, all massacres in which the Assad regime, what
the UN Commission still recognizes as the legitimate government of Syria,
was implicated and all in which women and children were slaughtered. To
balance the scales, they list one incident they consider to be a massacre
perpetrated by Assad's opposition:

Dayr Al-Zawr
Eleven men appear to have executed by gunshot to the back of the head on an
unknown date. A known Jabhat Al-Nusra leader from Saudi Arabia, Qassoura
Al-Jazrawi, reportedly shot the men who were kneeling in front of him,
hands tied and blindfolded. Al-Jazrawi claimed to be carrying out a
sentence from the *“Sharia Court for the Eastern Region in Dayr Al-Zawr.”*

The UN has a very high standard of justice and while it would likely find
the court marshal of Bradley Manning and the imprisonment of a large
portion of the former slave population in the US perfectly legal, it is not
likely to countenance any kind of justice made necessary by the practical
requirements of revolutionary war.

Their definition of torture is certainly *"inclusive"* enough for them to
say both sides use torture:

90. Severe ill-treatment for any reason based on discrimination of any
kind, amounts to torture and is a violation of international humanitarian
law. The war crime of torture and cruel treatment has been perpetrated by
Jabhat Al-Nusra fighters and other anti-Government armed groups.

After documenting the widespread use of rape as a weapon of war by the
Assad regime in detention, at checkpoints and during house searches, the UN
commission attempts to balance the scales by documenting sexual violence
from the opposition:

94. A limited number of interviews describe women being segregated during
house searches in Aleppo city, in joint operations by armed groups, with an
implication of possible sexual violence.

One interviewee stated she had been the victim of a sexual assault in
Yarmouk, Damascus, in April.

They also document war crimes committed by Assad's opposition against
children:

98. Children were killed in attacks by armed groups. In April, a
two-year-old boy died after being shot by a sniper firing from an
opposition neighbourhood while on a street in Sayda Zaynab, Damascus. A
12-year-old boy in Nubul, Aleppo, was killed during rocket attacks in April
by armed groups besieging the town. Child malnutrition increased in Nubul.

This is all you got? Really? Because the Assad regime has been responsible
for the deaths of thousands of children, wantonly and by the meanest
methods, like slitting throats and shelling playgrounds.

While the deaths of even two children at the hands of those claiming to be
fighting for them is a tragedy, accidents do happen, and it must be
recognized that as surely as lives will be lost in the construction of
bridges, once the decision is made to meet the state's armed suppression
with the people's armed resistance, the possibility that children will die
at the hands of revolutionaries must be taken on and weighed against the
effects on the children of the triumph of the dictatorship.

The question at the heart of this UN Commission report is whether it is
ever correct to meet the state's armed suppression with a people's armed
resistance, given that *"war crimes,"* as defined by this commission, will
almost certainly be committed by the people in the course of the struggle.

One of the most widely circulated charges against Assad's opposition in the
report has been their use of child soldiers:

101. Some armed groups recruit and use children for active participation in
hostilities. A 14-year-old boy from Homs underwent training in use of
weapons with the Abu Yusef Battalion, which then used him to keep track of
soldiers’ movements in Al-Waar. Other groups reject underage volunteers.
Commanders in Dayr Al-Zawr refused to accept a 15-year-old boy, calling his
parents to collect him.

Well those Commanders in Dayr Al-Zawr have a higher standard than the US
Marine Corp. The youngest US Marine killed in the Vietnam War was a
15-year-old boy. He was black, Surpise! Surprise! His name was Dan
Bullock<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Bullock>
.

102. Casualty statistics indicate 86 children were killed in hostilities as
combatants. Of those, nearly half died in 2013. These figures suggest the
use of children in combat is increasing.

The problem is the Assad regime is killing children armed or not, and since
the UN is not about to saddle up any little blue helmets and ride off to
protect the children of Syria, I would be for arming any teenager that
wanted to be armed. They have a right to self-defense too, especially when
their parents are being pressed to the wall and the adults at the UN are
refusing them a defense.

104. Government forces conduct their military operations in flagrant
disregard of the distinction between civilians and persons directly
participating in hostilities. Extensive aerial and artillery capabilities
continue to be deployed. Increasingly even less precise weaponry such as
surface-to-surface missiles, thermobaric bombs and cluster munitions are
being used. There is a strong element of retribution in the Government’s
approach, with civilians paying a price for *“allowing”*armed groups to
operate within their towns.

They recognize *"a strong element of retribution in the Government’s
approach"* and yet they are striving for a*"demobilisation of the
Government’s opponents."* And then what? What is the UN willing to do to
protect the disarmed population?

Is it possible that some of those civilians have actually been forming
armed groups to defend themselves from the regime attacks, or did they all
materialize from somewhere else and just set themselves up among civilians?

109. Armed groups continue to operate within civilian areas. This endangers
the civilian population and violates international legal obligations to
avoid positioning military objectives within or near densely populated
areas. Some armed groups take precautions to safeguard the civilian
population.

Its a Catch 22: Naturally civilians have the right to self-defense but once
they take up arms, they cease to be civilians. Furthermore, the UN says
that since by exercising their right to self-defense, they have made
themselves *"military objectives"*, they have an *"international legal
obligation"* to vacant the very communities they are seeking to defend and
must leave them defenseless before the state's assault. Nice.

133. In Yarmouk, Damascus, armed groups have either stolen cars and trucks,
or coerced residents into giving them up. In Aleppo, groups at checkpoints
steal from Alawite or Shi’a civilians.

134. The *“Islamist Sharia Commission”* in Aleppo and Jabhat Al-Nusra in
Yarmouk and in Idlib have attempted to curb such theft, arresting or
expelling members of some of the groups involved.

Sounds like Sharia courts and even the terrorist blacklisted al-Nursa have
a silver lining.

It has been widely reported in the media that the report claims that
chemical weapons have been used but a) they don't know who used them or b)
they have been used by both sides. That's not quite what the report says:

137. The Government has in its possession a number of chemical weapons. The
dangers extend beyond the use of the weapons by the Government itself to
the control of such weapons in the event of either fractured command or of
any of the affiliated forces gaining access.

138. It is possible that anti-Government armed groups may access and use
chemical weapons. This includes nerve agents, *though there is no
compelling evidence that these groups possess such weapons or their
requisite delivery systems.* (my emphasis)

139. Allegations have been received concerning the use of chemical weapons
by both parties. The majority concern their use by Government forces. In
four attacks – on Khan Al-Asal, Aleppo, 19 March; Uteibah, Damascus, 19
March; Sheikh Maqsood neighbourhood, Aleppo, 13 April; and Saraqib, Idlib,
29 April – there are reasonable grounds to believe that limited quantities
of toxic chemicals were used. It has not been possible, on the evidence
available, to determine the precise chemical agents used, their delivery
systems or the perpetrator. Other incidents also remain under investigation.

They apparently didn't interview any of the
defectors<http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/04/28/Syrian-army-ordered-to-use-chemical-weapons-says-defected-general-.html>
from
Assad's chemical weapons division that said his army had used
them<http://claysbeach.blogspot.com/2012/12/breaking-defecting-general-confirms-use_6391.html>,
or the French 
report<http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/un-report-more-evidence-needed-on-syria-chemical-weapons-allegations/2013/06/04/a07c5530-cced-11e2-8573-3baeea6a2647_story.html>
on
the sarin gas canisters dropped from a helicopter that was unquestionably
delivered by the Assad regime.

159. We thus reiterate the following concerns. While the nature of the
conflict is constantly changing, there remains no military solution. The
conflict will end only through a comprehensive, inclusive political
process. The international community must prioritise a de-escalation of the
war and work within the framework of the 2012 Geneva Communiqué.

Fine, the UN should begin the de-escalation of the war by stopping Assad's
Scuds from striking neighborhoods and his air force from bombing
communities as those are definitely war crimes and cause tremendous
civilian causalities, and since one UN Special Envoy after another has
failed to talk Assad into stopping, it is high time he is made to stop.
That requires the use of military power. There *"remains no military
solution"* because there is no will in the international community to stop
the slaughter, so the *"political solution"* proposed by this report is to
let the slaughter roll into a third year while the UN schedules more
conferences.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:laamn-unsubscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:laamn-subscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:laamn-dig...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:laamn-ow...@egroups.com?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:la...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/laamn@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    laamn-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    laamn-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    laamn-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to