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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
185 Syrians Dead as corpse count hits three digits for the first time
2011-12-21
[An Nahar] Up to 185 Syrians were killed on Tuesday, activists and a rights group said, as Damascus
...Capital of the last overtly fascist regime in the world...
faced demands to halt its bloody nine-month crackdown on dissent a day after signing an Arab peace plan.

The Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
said an advance team of observers would head Thursday to Damascus to lay the ground for monitors overseeing the plan, as Western powers and Gulf monarchs piled the pressure on Syria.

The Local Coordination Committees, the main activist group spurring protests on the ground, said 67 non-combatants were killed across the country, most of them in the northwestern province of Idlib and the central province of Homs.

The LCC published the names of 60 victims, saying 46 non-combatants were killed in Idlib, 10 in Homs, three in the central province of Hama and another in the southern province of Daraa.

For its part, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 100 Syrian army deserters were killed or maimed in festivities with loyalist troops on Tuesday.

"After festivities that broke out this morning with the regular army, 100 deserters were besieged then killed or maimed between the villages of Kafruwed and al-Fatira" in the Idlib district of Jabal al-Zawiya, the rights group said.

"Dozens of civilians, including many activists, are also surrounded by the Syrian army in Kafruwed," the Observatory said in a statement received by Agence La Belle France Presse, quoting activists on the ground.

It also said 14 members of the regime's security forces were killed in southern Daraa province, where the protests broke out in mid-March.

The Observatory reported on Monday that up to 70 deserters were bumped off as they tried to flee their military posts in the Idlib towns of Kansafra and Kafruwed.

It also urged Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi to "intervene immediately to end this eventual massacre."

Arabi's deputy Ahmed Ben Helli told news hounds in Cairo that "an advance team (of observers) will head to Damascus on Thursday."

The team would include security, legal and administrative observers, with human rights
...which are usually open to widely divergent definitions...
experts expected to follow, and would be headed by fellow assistant secretary general Samir Seif al-Yazal.

The Arab bloc has also named General Mohammed Ahmed Mustafa al-Dabi -- former head of Sudanese military intelligence and state minister for security arrangements -- to head the mission, said Ben Helli.

After weeks of prevaricating, Syria on Monday signed a deal at Arab League headquarters in Cairo to allow in observers as part of a broader plan to end months of deadly violence.

Damascus has pledged to cooperate fully with the terms of the agreement.

But the promise seemingly failed to persuade many world powers.

Rulers of the energy-rich Gulf Cooperation Council on Tuesday urged Syria to immediately halt its "killing machine" as well as end the bloodshed and "lift all signs of armed conflict."

The United States also expressed doubt that Syria was genuine in its promise to allow in observers.

"A signature on a piece of paper from a regime like this, that has broken promise after promise after promise, means relatively little to us," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Monday.

The observer mission is part of an Arab plan endorsed by Syria on November 2, which also calls for a halt to the violence, releasing detainees and the withdrawal of the military from towns and residential districts.

But despite signing the accord, Syria has failed to convince either the opposition or Western governments pushing for tough U.N. action that it is willing to follow up its words with action on the ground.

"Violence must immediately end, the military withdraw, political prisoners be released and unhindered humanitarian access be granted," said German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle.

"We will therefore judge the agreement of the Syrian leadership with the vaporous Arab League not by its words but only by actions, namely their immediate implementation," he added.

Chancellor Angela Merkel
...current chancellor of Germany. She was educated in East Germany when is was still run by commies, but in 1989 got involved with the growing democracy movement when the Berlin Wall fell. Merkel is sometimes referred to by Germans as Mom...
was "deeply worried" about the violation of human rights and has called on Damascus to stop violence against civilians as well as against army deserters, the German government said.

The opposition Syrian National Council charged that Damascus's acceptance of observers was merely a "ploy" to head off a threat by the pan-Arab bloc to go to the U.N. Security Council.

"It's all about implementation," said Britannia's U.N. ambassador Mark Lyall Grant.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem pledged his government's full cooperation with the observer mission and expressed hope the bloc would lift sweeping sanctions it imposed on Damascus last month.

"Signing the protocol is the start of cooperation with the Arab League and we will welcome the observers' mission from the Arab League," Muallem said on Monday.

Syria blames the unrest on "armed terrorist groups" -- not peaceful protesters as maintained by Western powers and rights groups -- and Muallem said he expected the observer mission to vindicate that position.

On Monday the U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution condemning human rights abuses in Syria, where the U.N. estimates more than 5,000 people have been killed in the crackdown since mid-March.

Syria meanwhile introduced a law imposing the death penalty on anyone arming "terrorists", state media reported Tuesday.
Posted by:Fred

#3  "corpse count hits three digits for the first time"

That we know of.
Posted by: Barbara   2011-12-21 14:56  

#2  I don't think Syria cares much for world, Arab or US opinion at this point.

The for the regime issue is regime survival.

I wonder how many of the massacred deserters were victims of Hezbollah hard boys working for Assad.
Posted by: Lord Garth   2011-12-21 12:50  

#1  likely figured that they could escalate with the attention on Egypt's protesters getting bonked
Posted by: Frank G   2011-12-21 08:36  

00:00