Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Footage Yang Menggerunkan: Helicopter Tentera Syria Di Tembak Dan Pilotnya Di Pancung Penentang......
Horrific footage shows Syrian helicopter pilot who was 'shot down by Turkish forces and then beheaded by rebels'
- Footage apparently shows helicopter pilot shot down by Turkish forces
- Body can be seen with head removed and surrounded by a group of men
- Videos also show 'rebels shooting at pilot' as he parachutes from craft
- Turkey confirmed yesterday it did shoot down Syrian helicopter
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A Syrian helicopter pilot who was shot down by the Turkish military was beheaded by rebels, it was claimed today.
Horrific
footage which purports to show a man's headless corpse dressed in
military-style helicopter flight suit and dumped in a ditch has been
circulating online since last night, just a few hours after the aircraft
crashed.
The film also zooms in on a bloody head lying a few yards from the corpse.
WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
Shocking footage apparently shows a Syrian helicopter pilot beheaded by rebels after he was shot down by Turkish forces
The film shows a bloody head lying a few yards from the corpse
The footage shows one a group of men surrounding the body search through the man's clothes
It has been impossible to establish if the disturbing images do indeed show the chopper pilot or if it is rebel propaganda.
According to
website Weasel Zippers, the pilot was beheaded by Syrian rebels after
the helicopter was shot down by Turkish warplanes.
The video, which has been released on LiveLeak, shows one of the men searching through the pilot's pockets
It is believed that the man's head was probably removed after his death.
A further two
amateur videos have also emerged which apparently show Syrian rebels
shooting at the pilot as he parachutes from his stricken craft.
It is unclear
which side of the border the pilot and the helicopter landed on, but the
videos of the shootings are said to have been shot in Lattakia, in the
Al-Akrad mountains, in Syria.
It is believed that the man's head was probably removed after his death
The videos are
the latest in a series of disturbing images to have emerged from the
Syrian crisis which show the brutality from both sides.
Last week,
MailOnline reported on a public execution that took place on August 31
in the town of Keferghan in the north of the country.
The whole barbaric episode is watched by a crowd of jeering men, many of them armed.
Sitting on a low wall only a few feet from where the wretched captive died so violently is a line of young boys.
They were still
there as the dead man’s head was dumped on his body. Another child,
even younger, was led by the hand past the corpse.
The picture
forms part of a set taken by a photojournalist - whose identity has not
been revealed in order to protect him - who was given unprecedented
access to the gruesome proceedings.
Amateur video footage, said to have been taken in Lattakia, in Syria, apparently shows the helicopter
falling from the sky and exploding when it hits the ground
The helicopter can apparently be seen falling from the sky in a ball of flames after it was shot down
Among the other
photos are an executioner lining up his sword before delivering the
final blow as his victim kneels in the village square - and a victim's
head being held aloft by a jubilant fighter.
Although it is
difficult to confirm the political affiliation of those involved, an
eyewitness told Time that the executioners belonged to ISIS - an
Al-Qaeda faction opposed to President Bashar Assad's regime.
The captives,
meanwhile, are understood to belong to the fearsome Shabiha ('ghosts') -
thugs loyal to Assad who are said to roam the country massacring women
and children.
Human Rights
Watch yesterday, meanwhile, released details of a massacre, possibly one
of the deadliest since the start of the conflict in Syria.
The organisation claimed Syrian forces brutally slaughtered 248 people in the coastal towns of al-Bayda and Baniyas in May.
The chilling
accounts are detailed in the 68-page report, 'No One’s Left’: Summary
Executions by Syrian Forces in al-Bayda and Baniyas' and are based on
interviews with 15 al-Bayda residents and 5 from Baniyas.
Syria's army acknowledged the helicopter had strayed into Turkish airspace for a short time
while monitoring 'terrorists' moving across the border into Syria
And in May a
video that appeared to show a Syrian rebel cutting out and eating the
heart of a dead government soldier was posted online in an horrific
propaganda stunt.
Turkey has confirmed it shot down a Syrian helicopter yesterday after it crossed into Turkish airspace.
The government has warned it had taken all necessary measures to defend itself against any further violations.
Turkey said it
scrambled two F-16 jets along the border between its southern Hatay
province and Syria after warning the Mi-17 helicopter it was approaching
Turkish airspace shortly before 2.30pm, the military said in a
statement.
Turkey has confirmed it shot down a Syrian helicopter yesterday after it crossed into Turkish airspace
Syria called the reaction 'hasty' and accused Turkey of trying to escalate tensions along the border.
A voice on the
video of rebels shooting at the pilot as he parachutes from the
helicopter is heard saying: 'Allahu Akbar... Allahu Akbar... Ahfad
ar-Rasoul in the cost, downing an aircraft, downing an aircraft...
Allahu Akbar.'
As people inspected the wreckage, a voice over the video can be heard heard saying: 'Here are Bashar al-Assad aircrafts.'
News agency
Reuters has said it cannot independently verify the authenticity of the
videos which were uploaded on a social media website.
'Turkey
will definitely not allow any violation of its borders ... We will
defend our borders and our people's security to the end'
- Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
The video shows the helicopter falling from the sky in a ball of flames and exploding when it hits the ground.
Deputy Prime
Minister Bulent Arinc said a warplane shot down the helicopter after it
ventured up to a mile into Turkey near the border town of Yayladagi.
'It was repeatedly warned by our air defence elements,' he said.
'Turkey will
definitely not allow any violation of its borders ... We will defend our
borders and our people's security to the end,' Turkish Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters in Paris.
'No one will
have the nerve to violate Turkey's borders in any way again,' he said
after a meeting to discuss Syria with U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry, British Foreign Secretary William Hague and their French
counterpart Laurent Fabius.
Davutoglu said
details of the incident would be provided to U.N. Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon and the U.N. Security Council and fellow members of the NATO
military alliance.
Syria's army
acknowledged the helicopter had strayed into Turkish airspace for a
short time while monitoring 'terrorists' moving across the border into
Syria.
The Syrian military said the helicopter strayed into Turkish airspace by accident and that
the aircraft was on its way back when it was shot down
The Syrian military said it was an accident and that the aircraft was on its way back when it was shot down.
In a statement carried by state news agency SANA, it accused Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan's government of trying to increase tensions
between the two countries.
'The hasty response from the Turkish side, especially as the aircraft
was on its way back and was not charged with any combat missions, is
proof of the true intentions of Erdogan's government toward Syria to
increase tensions and escalate the situation on the border between the
two countries,' it said.
Turkey, one of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's fiercest critics, has advocated military intervention in Syria'
It shares a 560 mile border with Syria and is sheltering a quarter of the 2 million people who have fled the Syrian conflict











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