Al-Assad will pay heavy price for only showing ‘courage’ to babies in cradle: Turkish PM

Al-Assad will pay heavy price for only showing ‘courage’ to babies in cradle: Turkish PM

ANKARA
Al-Assad will pay heavy price for only showing ‘courage’ to babies in cradle: Turkish PM

'If God permits, we will see this criminal, this murderer, receive his judgment in this world, and we will be grateful to [God] for it,' Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said on Syrias Bashar al-Assad May 5. AA photo

Turkey's prime minister delivered one of his most virulent attacks yet against Bashar al-Assad on May 5, calling the Syrian president a “murderer” and warning that he would be held to account for the deaths of tens of thousands of his citizens. 

“If God permits, we will see this criminal, this murderer, receive his judgment in this world, and we will be grateful to [God] for it,” Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said.
 
"Hear me, Bashar al-Assad. You will give an account for this. You will pay a very, very heavy price for [only] showing the courage you cannot show others to the babies in the cradle with soothers in their mouths. God willing, the lamentations of these children will fall upon you as blessed revenge,” he said during a gathering of his ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) consultation gathering in Kızılcahamam, near Ankara.
 
Erdoğan’s harsh words came a day after a new massacre was reported by activists in a Sunni town near Banias in Syria’s western Alawite enclave.

The prime minister also slammed the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) for having sent a delegation of lawmakers to Damascus two months ago. 

“The CHP, who has posed with this criminal, this murderer in Damascus, should explain the massacre in Banias. These are your fellow travelers. These are the comrades that you posed together with in the same picture. I really wonder if you are proud and refer you to our nation,” he said, expressing condolences for the families of the victims in Banias. 
 
Erdoğan emphasized that Turkey would shy away from asking al-Assad to step down. “We do not resemble other nations. We are not a nation that will keep silent in the name of balances, conjunctures or interests,” he said. “For our Syrian brothers who are asking when God’s help will come, I want to say: God’s help is near.”