TRIPOLI, Lebanon — Syria tightened control of its borders with Lebanon and Turkey in recent days, laying fresh fields of land mines and sweeping through areas critical to rebel smuggling, raising questions about how aid, lethal or nonlethal, would reach
TRIPOLI, Lebanon — Syria tightened control of its borders with Lebanon and Turkey in recent days, laying fresh fields of land mines and sweeping through areas critical to rebel smuggling, raising questions about how aid, lethal or nonlethal, would reach the armed opponents of President Bashar Assad.
The Syrian efforts have been helped, anti-Assad activists say, by the militaries of Lebanon and Turkey, which have recently taken steps to obstruct actions of the rebel Free Syrian Army and smugglers operating from their territory.
“We wish the Turks would be softer in allowing the Free Army to operate,” said a Syrian activist in Turkey who uses the pseudonym “Godfather” and helps provide communications and medical aid to activists inside Syria.
He” said the Turkish military was pushing FSA groups inside Turkey farther from what are often ambiguously marked areas along the mountainous border with Syria. He also said Syria 10 days ago placed new land mines along its side of the border.
At a meeting of countries working for Assad’s ouster in Istanbul, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Sunday said the United States was supplying logistical support to the rebels, including communications equipment, and would provide $12 million more in aid to the opposition, nearly doubling its assistance. Representatives of Qatar and Saudi Arabia said their countries would begin paying salaries to FSA fighters.
But “Godfather” suggested that such aid had not been widely distributed, though some supplies were still getting through because of the ruggedness and length of the border with Turkey.
Along the border with Lebanon, opposition activists report that the Syrian military has stepped up its presence in recent weeks as well.
“They are putting more snipers on the border, they shoot at anything that moves,” said Abu Ammar, who is part of a group that transports wounded Syrians to Lebanon for treatment. For many, treatment at government hospitals, where they are in danger of arrest and imprisonment, is no longer an option.
Abu Ammar, who also helps refugees to escape Syria, said any increase of aid would be welcome.
“The refugees need camps, they need blankets, they need medical care,” Abu Ammar said. “The foundation is running out of money to pay for surgeries.”
Smuggling along the Syria-Lebanon border also were seriously hurt last week when the Syrian military, apparently with the assistance of Lebanese intelligence, arrested two Syrian smugglers who had been instrumental in transporting wounded Syrians to Lebanon for treatment along routes that are also used to smuggle people and goods into Syria.
After those arrests, the Syrian military raided the town of Qaa, on the Lebanese side of the border, which was a jumping off point for the smuggling of both nonlethal and lethal aid to the rebels, including the few weapons the FSA seems to be able to smuggle into the country. Journalists who have seen the arms shipments describe them as a relatively small number of assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.
Another Lebanese exit and entry point for goods and people moving clandestinely across the border, Wadi Khalid, has been largely cut off by the Lebanese military, activists said. The Syrian army has shelled the area and conducted at least one raid there in December.
Activists in Lebanon said the Lebanese military recently arrested and tortured suspected Syrian militants in Lebanon.
On Syria’s southern flank, opposition fighters say they have been able to move weapons across the border with Jordan only by bribing members of the Jordanian security forces to look the other way and then only in amounts small enough to be carried in on foot.
Restrictions on moving other supplies from Jordan have become so tight that activists in Amman, Jordan’s capital, said they recently moved shipments of medicine to Lebanon in hopes they’d have better luck moving the supplies from there.
The less hospitable reception refugees say they are receiving in Lebanon has worsened the plight of Syrians fleeing the violence in Homs and elsewhere. Many now are choosing to seek refuge inside Syria, where humanitarian goods are in short supply.
“Since February, we have been receiving people daily,” said Salma, an activist in Damascus who spoke via Skype using a pseudonym. Salma said she is part of an informal group that provides assistance to displaced people seeking shelter near Damascus. She said groups like hers had registered 45,000 people.
“People are coming with only the clothes on their backs,” she said.