icNorthWales - UK 'horrified' by Syria violence
icNorthWales logo
icNorthWales Daily Post Motors Homes Jobs Wales Dating Yr Herald
Search icNorthWales for:


UK 'horrified' by Syria violence

05:05, Feb 23 2012

 

The Government has told Syrian officials it is "horrified" by the ongoing violence in Homs following the death of Sunday Times journalist Marie Colvin, who was killed during a shell attack in the besieged city.

Syrian Ambassador to London, Dr Sami Khiyami, was summoned to a meeting with senior Foreign Office officials after the award-winning war reporter, 56, was found dead in a house targeted by government forces.

Diplomats demanded immediate arrangements be put in place to repatriate Ms Colvin's body and for the medical treatment of Sunday Times photographer Paul Conroy, who was injured in the attack.

FCO political director Sir Geoffrey Adams met with the Syrian representative and "stressed that the British Government was horrified by the continuing unacceptable violence in Homs, which has been under attack for 19 days", a department spokesman said.

The FCO spokesman added: "Our clear demand was for the violence to stop immediately. The Syrian authorities must implement the undertakings they had given to the Arab League, halt all violence against civilians, and start an orderly political transition before a single further death took place."

US-born Ms Colvin was killed after defying an order from her editor to leave the opposition stronghold of Homs because she wanted to finish "one more story", her mother Rosemarie said. She was the only British newspaper reporter in the city, which has become a symbol of the 11-month uprising against Syrian president Bashar Assad.

French photojournalist Remi Ochlik, 28, also died in the attack while French reporter Edith Bouvier, of Le Figaro newspaper, was seriously injured.

Fellow journalists mourned the loss of Ms Colvin, highlighting her huge courage in repeatedly placing herself in danger to bear witness to atrocities around the globe. Sunday Times owner Rupert Murdoch described her as "one of the most outstanding foreign correspondents of her generation".

David Cameron joined the tributes saying the tragedy was "a desperately sad reminder of the risks that journalists take to inform the world of what is happening and the dreadful events in Syria". Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary William Hague said Ms Colvin embodied the "highest values of journalism" and for many years "shone a light on stories that others could not".

The United Nations estimated last month that at least 5,400 people, mostly civilians, had been killed in the Syrian government's crackdown on the rebels.

 

Top Top | Back Back |

E-mail to a friend | Printable version

 
Top North Wales headlines

  • Sickening
  • £100m complex is criticised
  • Labour's control dwindles
  • Man guilty of harassing wife after separation
  • Protest group aim to stop lorry park site
  • Site bid will 'go a long way' to help
  • Anger as arsonists destroy classroom
  • Appeal blow for furious villagers
  • Armed raiders wield knives in pub attack
  • Children's group loses funding
  • Top UK and world headlines

  • Consultant jailed after woman dies
  • Lawyers clash at McAreavey trial
  • Heatwave will last into weekend
  • Ex-detective on misconduct charges
  • '60 stone' woman still in hospital
  • Hunt 'told special adviser to quit'

  •  

    Copyright and Trade Mark Notice
    © 2012 owned by or licensed to Trinity Mirror North West & North Wales Limited.
    icNorthWales™ is a trade mark of Trinity Mirror North West & North Wales Limited.
    Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Statement before using this site.
     

    Choose from 1000's of properties on our database

    Find a car or view the latest Road Tests

    Choose from 1000's of vacancies on our database

    ALL the latest from the world of business

    Farm and Country For farmers and everyone who cares about the countryside

    Welsh National Team Logo ALL the latest news from the Welsh National football team