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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Protests Continue All Over Syria Demanding Regime Change, Despite Assad's Promise of Reforms

April 17, 2011

News Summary by Hassan El-Najjar


Syrian protesters have continued demonstrating all over the Syrian cities demanding freedom and regime change, despite promises of reform by the Syrian dictator, Bashar Al-Assad.

The Syrian regime has kept pan-Arab and international media, including Al-Jazeera TV, away from the country in an attempt to stop the spread of protests in various cities. However, in this information age, educated Arab youngmen and young women have been capable of reporting everything instantaneously, using the internet, youtube, facebook, and twitter, showing videos and publishing news about the revolution all over the country.

The brutality of the security forces has sparked more protests, the most recent videos came from the village of Al-Baida, near Banyas, in which security forces were shown stepping over tied protesters, humiliating and insulting them.

The city of Dara'a has kept the lead in protests, as more protesters are killed, then more protests erupt in condemnation of the killing.

The protests have continued in the capital, Damascus, and in almost all of the Syrian cities.

Syrians are no longer afraid of the dictatorial regime's brutal security forces. They have claimed their position in the train of Arab people's revolutions against the dictatorial regimes imposed on them by the rulers of the Zionist Empire, for the benefit of Israel, the headquarters of the Empire.

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Vow to end emergency rule fails to appease protesters

By News Wires (text)  

France 24, April 17, 2011

AFP -

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's pledge to lift almost 50 years of emergency rule was rejected by the opposition as not being enough on Sunday, as activists called for more anti-government protests.

A pledge by Syria's embattled president to lift almost 50 years of draconian emergency rule within a week was brushed aside as not enough on Sunday, as activists called for more protests. 
              
President Bashar al-Assad's long-awaited announcement came Saturday, on the eve of Independence Day, after a month of bloody protests and a global outcry for change in the autocratic country.

But protesters took to the streets within hours of his speech, which was followed by calls for more demonstrations on Sunday posted on social networking website Facebook, a motor of the pro-reform movement.
              
"The day of independence is the day of liberty across Syria," the Syrian Revolution 2011 Facebook page said of the 65th anniversary of the end of French rule.
              
"The juridical commission on the emergency law has prepared a series of proposals for new legislation, and these proposals will be submitted to the government, which will issue a new law within a week at the most," he said.
              
In a televised address Saturday to a new cabinet tasked with launching reforms, Assad also expressed his sorrow over the deaths of an estimated 200 people in a month of protests demanding greater freedoms.
              
"We are sad for all the people we have lost and all the people injured, and consider them all martyrs," he said.
              
Assad also addressed the broad spectrum of complaints that have sparked countrywide protests for more than a month, including joblessness, corruption and a crisis in agriculture.
              
"Corruption is a threat to morality and to the country's potential for development," he said.
              
The president also called for a national dialogue, saying there was a deep divide between the people and the institutions of the state.
              
"Citizens need security and services, but also dignity. We want to engage in dialogue with everyone... the unions and national organisations," he said.
              
Assad said demonstrations were "allowed by the Syrian constitution" although he added "there is no law in place to regulate them" and "police must first be trained and equipped to handle them."
              
He told the new government unveiled on Thursday to act quickly and "take responsibility" and be "transparent" in their action.
              
"We and the people are on the same side, we are not two separate sides," he said.
              
But within hours of his speech some 2,000 protesters staged a sit-in in the suburb of Douma north of Damascus, demanding the release of relatives arrested Friday during a major day of nationwide protests, activists said.
              
The official SANA news agency also reported around 2,000 people demonstrated in the southern protest hub of Daraa late Saturday, chanting slogans for "freedom" and the lift of the emergency law.
              
The notorious law in force since 1963 restricts public gatherings and movement, authorises the interrogation of any individual and the monitoring of private communications and imposes media censorship.
              
Top human rights lawyer Haytham Maleh told AFP on Sunday that Assad's pledge to end emergency law was "not enough."
              
"It must be accompanied by reform of the judicial system which is corrupted," said Maleh, who was released from jail on March 8, benefitting from a presidential pardon.
              
Maleh also called on the authorities to release political prisoners and said "interference by the security services in the lives of the citizens must stop."
              
"Demonstrators must be allowed to protest," said Maleh, 80, who had been serving a three-year sentence for "publishing false information that could weaken national morale."
              
Maleh also insisted for scrapping Article 8 of Syria's constitution which stipulates the ruling Baath party is the sole leader of society and the state.
              
The party's newspaper, Al-Baath, meanwhile hailed Assad's speech and his call for a national dialogue.
              
"The speech is a new and broad approach to the concerns of the Syrian people who are trying to improve their lives and hope for across the board reforms," the newspaper said.
              
On Saturday Assad also told the new cabinet to study a draft law on political parties and said that an updated press law was on the cards, as was new legislation governing municipal elections.
              
British Foreign Secretary William Hague welcomed Assad's call for emergency law to be lifted, in the first reaction by a Western leader.
              
"We call on the Syrian government to lift the state of emergency next week as proposed by President Assad and to ensure that those responsible for the deaths of civilians are held to account," Hague said in a statement."

Anti-regime protests reach Damascus for the first time
By News Wires (text)
 

REUTERS -

Protests against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad swept into the capital Damascus on Friday for the first time since a growing wave of pro-democracy unrest began to put pressure on his 11-year rule.

Thousands of protesters marched elsewhere across the country despite a fierce crackdown and some political concessions announced by Assad in an attempt to quell spreading unrest.
 
Shouting "God, Syria, Freedom", protesters repeated the same demand for democratic reform and freedoms across many cities.
 
In Damascus, security forces used batons and teargas to prevent thousands of protesters marching from several suburbs from reaching the main Abbasside Square.
 
"I counted 15 mukhabarat (secret police) busloads," one witness said.
 
"They went into the alleyways just north of the square chasing protesters and yelling 'You pimps, you infiltrators, you want freedom? We will give it to you'."
 
A witness who accompanied marchers from the suburb of Harasta said thousands chanted "the people want the overthrow of the regime" and tore down posters of Assad along the route.
 
In Barzeh, another district of Damascus, rights campaigners said at least 20 people who marched in a separate protest were hospitalised from injuries sustained when secret police and irregular Assad loyalists attacked them with batons.
 
Assad's use of force, mass arrests and accusations that armed groups have instigated the unrest, mixed with promises for reform and concessions to minority groups and conservative Muslims, have not placated protesters inspired by popular uprisings which toppled the leaders in Tunisia and Egypt.
 
On Thursday, he unveiled a new government, which has little power in the one-party state, and ordered the release of some detainees, a move one human rights lawyer said was a "drop in the ocean" compared to the thousands of political prisoners still held.
 
Nevertheless, protesters gathered in even larger numbers on the Muslim day of prayer.
 
Defiance
 
Rights activists reported protests in the city of Deir al-Zor near the Iraqi border, the restive coastal city of Banias and the southern city of Deraa, where the first demonstrations began against the detention of teenagers who had scrawled revolutionary graffiti on school walls.
 
Protests also broke out in Latakia and Homs, where the authorities said one policeman was killed by demonstrators. Human rights campaigners said they did not have information about any deaths but security forces had attacked protesters.
 
In Deraa, "demonstrations came out from every mosque in the city, including the Omari mosque... The number of people is above 10,000 protesters so far", an activist said by phone.
 
Rights groups say at least 200 people have been killed since the protests started. Authorities blame "infiltrators" for stirring up unrest at the bidding of outside players, including Lebanon and Islamist groups.
 
Syrian state television reported what it said were relatively small, peaceful demonstrations in several cities. Emergency law in force since the Baath Party swept to power in a coup in 1963 bans public gatherings of more than five people.
 
The protests entered their fifth week following a familiar pattern. The biggest gatherings -- and the most bloody -- have taken place after Friday prayers, often in defiance of concessions announced by authorities the day before.
 
The protests would have been unthinkable in a state known for its pervasive security apparatus before the wave of uprisings which have shaken the Arab world.
 
Al-Jazeera channel aired footage on Friday showing Syrian security forces beating with sticks, kicking and walking over detained protesters in the coastal city of Baida. It said the pictures were shot a few days ago.
 
'This is not 1982 Hama'
 
Some of the tension has sectarian overtones in the mostly Sunni Muslim country ruled by minority Alawites, members of an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam. Irregular forces loyal to Assad, known as "al-shabbiha", killed four people in Banias on Sunday.
 
Assad has said Syria -- which is at the heart of the Middle East conflict -- was the target of a foreign conspiracy to sow sectarian strife.
 
His father used similar language when he crushed a leftist and Islamist challenge to his iron rule in the 1980s.
 
"This is not 1982 Hama. The uprising is not confined to a single area," a leading opposition figure said, referring to an attack by Hafez al-Assad's forces to crush an armed revolt by the Muslim Brotherhood in Hama that killed up to 30,000 people.
 
The younger Assad's promises of reform, including a salary increase for public workers and a reconsideration of emergency rule in place for 48 years, has been dismissed by protesters hungry for change.
 
His decision last Thursday to grant citizenship to tens of thousands of stateless Kurds, as well as announcements about lifting a ban on veiled teachers and closing Syria's sole casino, failed to prevent protests erupting the next day.
 
The West, which had been trying to coax Syria away from its anti-Israeli alliance with Iran and support for militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah, has urged Assad to refrain from violence.
 
A panel drafting anti-terrorism legislation to replace emergency law is expected to complete its work by April 25. But critics say the new law will probably grant the state much of the same powers contained in the current legislation.

Click here to find out more!


SYRIA Assad speaks – and crushes hopes of Damascus Spring
 
SYRIA Syria’s Assad vows to end 50 years of emergency rule

SYRIA Anti-regime protests reach Damascus for the first time

SYRIA Q&A 'The regime in Syria is not as strong as it seems'


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