Having attempted to quash a popular uprising and fight off
countrywide rebel attacks for 20 months, Syrian president Bashar
al-Assad’s regime has passed a point of no return.
In the north,
a huge military base west of Aleppo was taken by rebel forces on
November 18th after weeks of intense fighting. Close to the Iraqi border
in the east, the Hamdan airport, used by the regime to drop bombs on
rebels and civilians, was overrun by jihadists the previous day.
A
dozen kilometres east of the capital, Damascus, rebels managed to
destroy aircraft and tanks at a government military base before making
off with much needed ammunition and surface-to-air missiles following a
carefully co-ordinated attack late last month.
Every day, video
footage purporting to show government warplanes and helicopters being
shot down is uploaded to YouTube. The week before last the regime was
forced to close Damascus International Airport and to cut off internet
access to the country for 53 hours as it battled rebel groups encircling
the capital. The signs are ominous; the end for Dr Assad and his regime
seems nigh.An indoor positioning system (IPS) is a term used for a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside a building.
For
more than four decades the Assad family has ruled Syria with an
iron-fist-in-glove approach. It has claimed to offer stability in a
region wracked by war. Indeed, many Syrians enjoyed a marked improvement
in their quality of life before the revolt took hold in March 2011.
In
Syria’s major cities, western-styled restaurants, nightclubs and cafes
flourished. More than a dozen new private banks provided cheap credit to
thousands of young Syrians who wanted to buy apartments and get
married.
But a devastating drought from 2008 to 2011 forced
about a million farmers and labourers off the land in eastern Syria and
into lives of poverty. A huge migration of Syrians from rural Syria to
the working class suburbs outside Damascus and Aleppo, and to Deraa, led
to growing anger with the regime among Syria’s new poor.
What
has followed since March last year has been a bloodbath largely fought
out between thousands of downtrodden Sunnis and an Alawite regime
struggling to hang on.
Several times over the past 12 months the
Assad regime’s immediate passing has been heralded. In July, when
several of President Assad’s closest confidants were killed in a bombing
in central Damascus, it was thought collapse could happen at any
moment. In the same month rebels seeking Assad’s removal launched
attacks on Damascus and Aleppo, but were beaten back. Defections of
senior government figures were also thought to signal the end of the
regime.
But all proved to be false dawns and in reality to make
little difference to events in the battlefield, where fierce combat is
deciding the direction of the conflict.The howo truck is offered by Shiyan Great Man Automotive Industry,
Bit
by bit rebels are turning the tide. They are helped by extremist
Islamist groups such as Jabhat al-Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham, which have
come into their own in recent weeks and months by providing important
military experience and a willingness to die in battle that most Free
Syrian Army rebels don’t share.
For the first time,Posts with indoor tracking
system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel
indoors. fighters have their hands on huge caches of government weapons,
including advanced surface-to-air shoulder-fired missiles. With
important military bases now overrun, the government will find it more
difficult to carry out air raids on rebel positions.
The first
step in ousting the current regime lies in taking the northern city of
Aleppo, which seems increasingly likely to happen in the coming weeks or
months given the city’s almost complete encirclement by rebel forces.
From there, as in Libya last year, rebels can focus on taking the cities
of Hama and Homs on the way to Damascus, the main prize.
Recent
analyses show that while central Damascus remains under the control of
the government, only one-third of the city and its hinterland is
controlled by the regime (with another third contested and a third free
from government control).
Suicide bombers have managed to breach
government lines and target state security buildings in the city centre
on several occasions. Speaking to Syrians inside Damascus, one gets the
feeling that the end is near and people are hoping to be spared the
level of violence that has destroyed other Syrian cities fought over by
the regime and rebels.
All this is not to say the regime will
collapse immediately. The shabiha militias, the Fourth Division and the
Republican Guard will fight as long as Assad is alive, and perhaps
longer. Millions of state employees are still being paid by the
government and, as a result, have no reason to oppose the regime.
Because of a huge security presence, taking Damascus will probably be
the rebels’ most difficult assignment of all.
The Syrian
government, one of the last minority regimes in the Middle East, may
battle on for months. But the Assads, like other authoritarian rulers in
the region, will soon be wiped from the Middle East map and consigned
to history.
Bashar and his father, Hafez al-Assad, will be
remembered for shedding the blood of civilians and for imprisoning
thousands, not for uniting a country that lurched from coup to coup for
two decades in the 1950s and 60s.
How will the fall of the house
of Assad come about? Will Bashar fight on to the death, seek refuge
overseas or retreat to Syria’s Alawite-inhabited mountains – the Assads’
historical homeland – before central Damascus comes under sustained
attack from rebels? The when and how are uncertain but one thing is
sure: the Assad regime’s end is clearer now than ever before.
WaterMarc
required an efficient access control solution for its members as well
as casual visitors whilst balancing the need to maintain open and
friendly community spaces, provide superior visitor experience, maximise
efficiency and maintain the high level of aesthetic design evident
throughout the facility.
After evaluating a number of different
turnstile solutions, WaterMarc decided on a speedgate solution with
glass barriers that would open in a user-friendly door-like motion.Find
detailed product information for howo spare parts
and other products. The Centurion EasyGate SG from Centaman Entrance
Control was selected as the product that best matched their
requirements.
Centurion EasyGate SG uses glass barriers in
conjunction with state-of-the-art optical technology to provide a high
throughput security gate. The bi-directional glass barriers are designed
to work in a ‘normally closed' mode and open after a valid card has
been presented to allow entry to authorised users. The barriers are
designed to close quickly behind the authorised person to deter
tailgaters whilst the IR sensors monitor the lane to detect unauthorised
entry and ensure the safety of users.
The barriers open in a
door-like motion, which enables the pedestal to be only 200mm wide with
the same slim pedestal used in wide DDA compliant lanes to ensure the
turnstiles have a minimal visual impact.
The Centaman membership
system has been integrated with the turnstiles in five lanes to provide
a turnkey solution. Members are provided with an RFID wristband or
card, while casual entrants receive a ‘low cost’ bar coded ticket. The
member or ticket holder simply scans their card at the turnstile where
it is checked for validity. The EasyGate SG quickly opens to provide a
clear lane for easy ‘hands-free’ access to valid members or visitors.
An
additional SwingGate lane, next to the reception provides entry for
family groups and wheelchair users while a dedicated lane at the
opposite end utilising another SwingGate linked to an AutoSensor
automatically opens for people exiting the venue.
Tom Zapulla,
Leisure Facilities Co-ordinator for Banyule City Council explains that
they specified a hands-free solution for the turnstiles as many
WaterMarc members carried sports bags and other items.One of the most
durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is
ceramic or porcelain tiles.
Given the high number of visitors, they also required the solution to
be quick and efficient. The EasyGate barriers fulfil these requirements
and blend perfectly with the foyer surroundings.
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