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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Marking 6 Months of Syria Uprising, Protesters Say 'Won't Stop until Regime Ousted'
2011-09-16
[An Nahar] As Syria on Thursday marked six months since anti-regime protests erupted, protesters vowed to hit the streets again, undaunted by a brutal crackdown in which more than 2,600 people have died.

Looking to Friday, the Mohammedan day of weekly prayer when demonstrations tend to be the heaviest, people were called to turn out under the slogan "we advance toward the fall of the regime."

"Six months. More than ever determined to (continue) the March 15 uprising," activists wrote on Facebook page The Syrian Revolution 2011, one of the main engines of the revolt.

"We have been massacred and we are more determined than ever; we have been thrown in prison and are more determined than ever," the page said. "The revolution has burst forth and will not stop until the regime is tossed.

"A new generation has been born in Syria during the six months of the revolution, a generation that refuses to be servile and to prostrate itself before images of the tyrant," the page added.

The latest events follow another day of killings, with human rights
...which often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless...
activists saying security forces rubbed out eight people, including a child, in a huge sweep on Wednesday against anti-regime protesters in northwestern Syria.

Armed with heavy machine guns, the forces cut off roads leading to the Jabal al-Zawiya villages of Baliun, Marayan, Ihsem, al-Rami and Iblin, setting up checkpoints and arresting several people, said the Britannia-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Four people were killed and dozens more maimed in the operation, it said, and 100 people were jugged, including the family of Riad al-Assad, a soldier who defected.

Elsewhere, a child was killed when security forces opened fire to disperse a demonstration in the village of Janudiya near the Turkish border, and three people were rubbed out in the central provinces of Hama and Homs, the Observatory said.

And a Red Islamic Thingy ambulance driver maimed recently as he was rescuing people in Homs died on Thursday, said the Local Coordination Committees (LCC), an opposition group with people on the ground.

In other violence, state news agency SANA reported a bus driver was ambushed in the city of Hama by an "armed terrorist group," while five soldiers and a guard rubbed out by a similar group were buried in Aleppo
...For centuries, Aleppo was Greater Syria's largest city and the Ottoman Empire's third, after Constantinople and Cairo. Although relatively close to Damascus in distance, Aleppans regard Damascenes as country cousins...
and Homs.

And there were shootings and arrests in the Damascus
...The City of Jasmin is the oldest continuously-inhabited city in the world. It has not always been inhabited by the same set of fascisti...
suburbs of Harasta, Zabadani and Madaya, the LCC said.

Iblin is the hometown of Lieutenant Colonel Hussein Harmoush, the first military officer to publicly declare his desertion in early June in protest against the repression of the protest movement.

Harmoush managed to leave Syria and had been leading the "Brigade of Free Officers," a group of dozens of officers who have deserted the regime.

According to opposition sources in Damascus, he was recently captured in Turkey by Syrian intelligence agents and brought back to Syria.

State television said it would broadcast the colonel's "confession" at 1730 GMT on Thursday.

A week ago, three other military defectors were killed in Iblin when security forces raided the home of the colonel's brother, Mohammed, the Observatory said.

Mohammed Harmoush was kidnapped during the raid and "his body was returned to his family," said the Observatory's head, Rami Abdul Rahman.

The United Nations
...a lucrative dumping ground for the relatives of dictators and party hacks...
estimates the Syrian government crackdown on protests has killed 2,600, mostly civilians, since March, while rights groups say thousands of people have been jugged in the crackdown.

The Observatory's Abdul Rahman says more than 70,000 people have been jugged since the protests began, with more than 15,000 still in jug, with "schools and sports grounds turned into detention and torture centers."

Damascus has consistently maintained the protests are the work of "armed gangs," rejecting reports by Western embassies and human rights groups that the great majority of those killed have been unarmed civilians.

Posted by:Fred

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