Russian
Defense Ministry Learns Who Is Behind Syrian
Observatory For Human Rights
The defense
ministry’s representative said over recent five
years the organization’s head and sole employee was
the man called Ossama Suleiman, who moved to the UK
in 2000 after having served three prison terms in
Syria and who took the nickname of Rami Abdurrahman.
By Igor Konashenkov
January 17, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"TASS
" -
General
Konashenkov said the ministry has found out who is
behind the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR),
which distributes information blackmailing the
Russian Aerospace Force grouping in Syria. According
to the official, the man moved to the United Kingdom
after serving three terms in Syria. "The first
throwing-in of false information about claimed
victims in the Russian air strikes appeared in
social networks and some western media well before
our mission in the Syrian Arab Republic began," he
said. "Most information was distributed on behalf of
so-called ‘Syrian human rights activists’."
In "distribution" of the statements made by those
"human rights activists" participate, as a rule,
some foreign media, which use most often the
organisation called the "Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights," with headquarters in the United
Kingdom, he said. The defense ministry’s
representative said over recent five years the
organization’s head and sole employee was the man
called Ossama Suleiman, who moved to the UK in 2000
after having served three prison terms in Syria and
who took the nickname of Rami Abdurrahman.
"In his many interviews with the western media this
mister every time stresses all the information he
publishes comes to him personally on the phone from
trusted sources," the defence ministry’s spokesman
said in conclusion. "Thus, that network of the
so-called reporting human activists is active right
under the nose of Islamic State and other
extremists. At the same time, for some reason, they
would not see the atrocities of those terrorists."
West considers 49 civilian deaths insignificant in
Syria operation planning The spokesman also pointed
out that the Western coalition considers the death
of 49 civilians as insignificant in Syria operation
planning while the Russian military excludes such
risks in its plans. "Our aviation does not even plan
air strikes on such targets in the event of a threat
of civilian deaths. However, the Western coalition
can just allow itself to consider the death of 49
civilians as insignificant," Konashenkov said.
According to the Russian general, CNN Pentagon
correspondent Barbara Starr said that the US
military had told her that the American command made
decisions on delivering such air strikes on
condition that the number of civilian deaths would
not exceed 50 people.
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