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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Violence spreads in Syria; UN urges restraint
2011-03-27
[Arab News] UN Secretary-General the ephemeral Ban Ki-moon urged Syria's leader to exercise "maximum restraint" as violence erupted around the country on Friday, with troops shooting protesters in several cities. Pro- and anti-government crowds clashed on the tense streets of the capital in the most widespread unrest in years, witnesses said.

Human rights group Amnesia Amnesty International said at least 55 people are believed to have been killed since protests erupted in and around the southern Syrian city of Daraa a week ago.

"Security forces again opened fire on protesters in Al-Sanamayn and carried out arrests in Damascus, according to reports on Friday, a day after the authorities pledged to investigate the violence," Amnesty said in a statement.

A statement issued by Ban's office said he told Assad in a phone conversation that "governments had an obligation to respect and protect their citizens fundamental rights."

Ban "urged maximum restraint by the authorities and expressed his hope in a meaningful response to the expression of legitimate concerns," the statement said.

Soldiers shot at demonstrators in the restive southern city of Daraa after crowds set fire to a bronze statue of the country's late president, Hafez Assad, a resident told The News Agency that Dare Not be Named. He said he heard heavy gunfire in the city center and later saw two bodies and many maimed people being brought to Daraa's main hospital.

He said thousands of enraged protesters snatched some weapons from a far smaller number of troops and chased them out of the Roman-era old city, taking back control of the Al-Omari mosque, which has been the epicenter of eight days of protests in Dara.

Two other residents confirmed to The News Agency that Dare Not be Named by telephone that protests had retaken the mosque and surrounding area.

The violence erupted after tens of thousands of Syrians erupted into the streets across the country after Friday prayers, shouting calls for greater freedoms in support of a more than week-long uprising in Daraa, according to witnesses, activists and footage posted online.

The demonstrations and ensuing crackdown were a major escalation of the showdown between President Bashar Assad's regime and the crowds in Daraa who -- inspired by pro-democracy unrest elsewhere in the Arab world -- began protesting conditions in the drought-stricken south last week in demonstrations that have now spread around the country.

After dark, troops opened fire on protesters in Maadamiyeh, a suburb of the capital, Damascus, a witness told the AP. An activist in contact with people there said three had been killed.

Another activist told the AP that witnesses in the National Hospital in the coastal city of Latakia had reported seeing four people rubbed out. Another was reported slain in the central city of Homs, he said.

None of the accounts could be immediately be independently confirmed in Syria, which maintains tight restrictions on the press.

In Damascus, people shouting in support of the Daraa protesters clashed with regime supporters outside the historic Umayyad mosque, hitting each other with leather belts.

An activist in Damascus in touch with eyewitnesses in the southern village of Sanamein said troops there opened fire on demonstrators trying to march to Daraa, a short distance away. He said there had been witness reports of fatalities, some claiming as many as 20 slain, but those could not be independently confirmed.

A video posted on Facebook by Syrian pro-democracy activists showed what it said were five dead young men lying on stretchers as men weeped around them. The voice of a woman can be heard saying "down with Bashar Assad." The White House urged Syria's government to cease attacks on protesters and Turkey said its neighbor should quickly enact reforms to meet legitimate demands.

An unidentified Syrian official asserted that an gang attacked the army headquarters in Sanamein and tried to storm it, leading to a clash with guards.

The official told the state-run news agency SANA said security forces would pursue what it described as armed people who are terrorizing citizens and trying to destabilize the country.

Much of Damascus was tense, with convoys of young people roaming the streets in their cars, honking incessantly and waving out pictures of Bashar Assad and Syrian flags. The convoys briefly blocked streets in some areas.

About 200 people demonstrated after the Friday prayers at the Thawra Bridge, near the central Marjeh Square, chanting "our souls, our blood we sacrifice for you Daraa!" and "freedom! freedom!" They were chased by security forces who beat them some of them with batons and jugged others, an activist said on condition of anonymity for fear of government reprisals.

Thousands flooded Daraa's central Assad Square before the shooting broke out, many from nearby villages, chanting "Freedom! Freedom!" and waving Syrian flags and olive branches, a resident told The News Agency that Dare Not be Named by telephone.

Speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals, he claimed that more than 50,000 people were shouting slogans decrying presidential adviser Buthaina Shaaban, who promised Thursday that the government would consider a series of reforms in response to a week of unrest in Daraa.

A human rights
...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty...
activist, quoting witnesses, said thousands of people gathered in the town of Douma outside the capital, Damascus, pledging support for the people of Daraa. The activists asked to remain anonymous for fear of retribution.

Security forces dispersed the crowd by chasing them away, beating some with batons and detaining others, an activist said, asking that his name not be published for fear of reprisals by the government.

In the city of Aleppo, hundreds of worshippers came out of mosques shouting "with our lives, our souls, we sacrifice for you Bashar" and "Only God, Syria and Bashar!" Residents in Homs said hundreds of people demonstrated in support of Daraa and demanded reforms.

The activist said that in Latakia, more than 1,000 people marched in the streets after Friday prayers. In the northern city of Raqqa, scores marched and several people were jugged, he said.

And in the western city of Zabadani, near the border with Leb, several people were jugged after protesting, he said.

Journalists who tried to enter Daraa's Old City -- where most of the violence took place -- were escorted out of town Friday by two security vehicles.

"As you can see, everything is back to normal and it is over," an army major, standing in front of the ruling Baath party head office in Daraa, told journalists before they were led out of the city.

Security forces appeared to be trying to reduce tension in Daraa by dismantling checkpoints and ensuring there was no visible army presence on the streets for the first time since last Friday, when the protests began.

Rattled by the unrest, the Syrian government Thursday pledged to consider lifting some of the Mideast's most repressive laws in an attempt to stop the weeklong uprising from spreading and threatening its nearly 50-year rule.

But the promises were immediately rejected by many activists who called for demonstrations around the country on Friday in response to a crackdown that protesters say killed dozens of anti-government marchers in Daraa.

"We will not forget the martyrs of Daraa," a resident told The News Agency that Dare Not be Named by telephone. "If they think this will silence us they are wrong." Assad, a close ally of Iran and its regional proxies, Hezbullies and Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason,, has promised increased freedoms for discontented citizens and increased pay and benefits for state workers -- a familiar package of incentives offered by other nervous Arab regimes in recent weeks.

Shaaban, the presidential adviser, also said the Baath party would study ending a state of emergency that it put in place after taking power in 1963.

The emergency laws, which have been a feature of many Arab countries, allow people to be incarcerated without warrants and imprisoned without trial. Human rights groups say violations of other basic liberties are rife in Syria, with torture and abuse common in cop shoppes, detention centers and prisons, and dissenters regularly imprisoned for years without due process.

The corpse count from the weeklong crackdown was unclear and could not be independently confirmed, although activists say it was in the dozens before Friday and could have been as high as 100. Shaaban said 34 people had been killed in the conflict.
Posted by:Fred

#13  Forget Dribble. The guy we really need to hear from now is the LEVANT. You remember the guy who was so defiant when the Israelis had their last little dust up with the Hezebullies? LEVANT! Are you out there? Calling LEVANT. Come in, LEVANT. Tell us what Pencil Neck is gonna do about this. Tell us what his Iranian masters are gonna do about it. Unlike Dribble, LEVANT was actually fairly coherent...er...for a troll anyway.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2011-03-27 16:01  

#12  "I just thought Dribble forgot the sarcasm tag."

I don't think he she it has any, DV.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2011-03-27 14:42  

#11  I blame Bush.-NS

I'd have to agree to the point that this is what part of the goal of putting a quasi-democratic regime in Baghdad was about. The neighbors can't ignore it. There is an alternative.

The Animal Planet Channel had an interesting program on a pride of African lions. The females were being harassed by a pack of hyenas. Whenever a female made a kill, the pack would hound the lioness resulting in her chasing several of the hyenas, but allowing others to steal her kill. They kept this up with all the lionesses since the female lions were not strong or fast enough to run the hyenas down. Finally, the old man returned from his territorial jaunt and surveyed the situation as it unfolded. He identified the matriarch of the hyena clan and took right after it, swiftly running it down and breaking its neck. The effect was to throw the entire pack into pandemonium since it then had to sort out its hierarchical pecking order. This gave the female of the pride the time to hunt and provide for their cubs.

The jackals are a bit too busy watching their own posteriors at the moment to dabble in other peoples affairs.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2011-03-27 14:30  

#10  I just thought Dribble forgot the sarcasm tag.
Posted by: DarthVader   2011-03-27 14:28  

#9  Speaking only for myself, I haven't decided if Dribble is a moby or just a dick.
Posted by: lotp   2011-03-27 12:23  

#8  per this report, the fatality count is well over 100

Latakia, which is on the coast of the Med and Tafas which is south central have also had anti Assad protests.
Posted by: Lord Garth   2011-03-27 12:15  

#7  Dribble if we wanted to hear from you we would visit the sink trap.
Posted by: Thromotch Bonaparte7517   2011-03-27 11:28  

#6  verbose keyboard diarrhea
Posted by: Frank G   2011-03-27 08:59  

#5  Dribble? You're as verbose and off-topic as anon1. Jeeeebus
Posted by: Frank G   2011-03-27 08:57  

#4  I blame Bush.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2011-03-27 07:48  

#3  This has nothing to do with a Middle Eastern world conditioned by widespread Moslem Values, right? Saying things like that would be SO wrong.

Too much Western television is responsible for all this. Its ALL OUR FAULT! The death and reminiscences of Elizabeth Taylor drove them to it.
That and the good life shown on the Sopranos. Every Big Mustache under a big nose aquiver to be "Free". Everybody wanted to BE KhaDaffy or Assad themselves, why let only one man have all the fun, they ALL want to have shoes and stand out there on the balcony and BE Al-Duce.

I know, lets build a Mosque at Ground Zero and all just be friends
Posted by: Dribble2716   2011-03-27 07:15  

#2  Don't bother us now---we are busy replacing Qadaffy with Al Qaeda.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-03-27 03:34  

#1  Damn, it really is getting bad. They're burning pictures of Andy Kaufman!
Posted by: tu3031   2011-03-27 01:58  

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