Syrian Troops Kill 23 Protesters After Regime's
Acceptance of Arab League Peace Plan
Maan, 05/11/2011 11:01
DAMASCUS (AFP) --
Syrian troops killed at least 23 people Friday when demonstrators
took to the streets denouncing "despots and tyrants," as world powers
cast doubt on the regime's commitment to an Arab peace deal.
Troops raked several residential neighborhoods of Homs -- a city of some
one million people that has been at the front line of protests raging
since mid-March -- with heavy machine guns mounted on tanks, a watchdog
said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 17 people were
killed across Syria, six of them in Homs.
Further north in Hama,
four civilians were shot, while four people were killed in the town of
Kanaker, outside the capital, and a protester was shot dead by security
forces in Damascus.
Two more people were killed, one of them an
army deserter, when troops opened fire on a group of people trying to
slip across the border into Jordan, the Britain-based Observatory said.
Four policemen were also wounded, two critically, in clashes with an
"armed terrorist group" in Kanaker, the state-run SANA news agency
reported, adding that one of the gunmen was killed in the fighting.
The agency also denied reports that dozens of people were arrested
in Banias, quoting the governor of Tartus where the Mediterranean
coastal city is located.
Earlier the Observatory said that "four
children closely related to Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman" were
among those seized in Banias.
Video footage posted on YouTube
showed dozens of demonstrators, some masked, marching through the
historic Midan neighbourhood of Damascus, chanting anti-Assad slogans.
Protesters in Harasta just outside Damascus, described Assad as a
"liar" who has no intention of implementing the Arab roadmap.
Demonstrators also chanted: "Allah will overcome tyrants and despots" --
echoing the slogan of Friday's protests which activists called to
"validate" whether the government was implementing terms of the Arab
peace deal.
The United States and France slammed Syria for
pressing on with its crackdown on dissent and failing to heed to the
hard-won agreement that calls for tanks to be withdrawn from protest
hubs in a bid to end nearly eight months of bloodshed.
Members of
the UN Human Rights Council meanwhile said they seek to "shine a
spotlight" on violations in Syria as a UN commission of inquiry prepared
to file later this month a report on the violence-wracked country.
France said Syria was breaking its commitments to the Arab deal by
continuing a deadly crackdown on protesters, and cast doubt on President
Bashar Assad's dedication to the deal.
There has been enormous
scepticism inside and outside Syria about the regime's readiness to call
off its troops and enter meaningful negotiations with the opposition as
it promised under the deal unveiled on Wednesday.
"The continuing
repression can only strengthen the international community's doubts
about the Syrian regime's sincerity to implement the Arab League peace
plan," French foreign ministry deputy spokesman Romain Nadal said in
Paris.
In Washington US State Department spokeswoman Victoria
Nuland on Thursday said: "We have not seen any evidence that the Assad
regime intends to live up to the commitments that it's made."
On
Friday she also expressed scepticism of an amnesty announced by the
interior ministry to mark the end of the annual Muslim hajj, or
pilgrimage, and the start Sunday of Eid al-Adha feast.
"I
wouldn't advise anybody to turn themselves in to regime authorities at
the moment," said Nuland amid apparent concerns for the welfare of those
who might do so.
State media reported that anyone heeding the
ministry's call to surrender weapons at the nearest police station "will
walk free ... and receive an amnesty."
The interior ministry set
a deadline from Saturday to Nov. 12 but warned the offer was not valid
for anyone having committed "murder."
Syrian authorities have
used forced to crush almost daily anti-regime protests since mid-March,
and more than 3,000 people have been killed according to UN estimates.
Pro-democracy protesters insist their campaign is peaceful while the
government says it has been battling "armed terrorist groups."
The Arab League meanwhile took Syria to task and said foreign
correspondents should apply to Syrian authorities to enter the country,
since unfettered media access was part of the deal Damascus approved.
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