/ 29 April 2011

Syria braces for ‘day of rage’ protests

Syria Braces For 'day Of Rage' Protests

Activists called for “day of rage” protests across Syria after the Friday weekly Muslim prayers, piling pressure on President Bashar al-Assad as his regime pressed a violent crackdown on dissent.

The looming showdown comes as the United Nations Human Rights Council prepared for a special session on Syria in Geneva, and the European Union was meeting in Brussels to consider a wide range of sanctions against the Arab state.

The call for mass demonstrations was made in a statement on the Facebook page of Syrian Revolution 2011, a motor of the protests in which demonstrators inspired by uprisings elsewhere in the Arab world are seeking greater freedoms.

“To the youths of the revolution, tomorrow [Friday] we will be in all the places, in all the streets … We will gather at the besieged towns, including with our brothers in Dara’a,” said the statement.

It said demonstrations would also be staged in other flashpoint towns such as Homs in the centre of the country and Banias in the north-west.

Information Minister Adnan Mahmud told Agence France-Presse that the crackdown on protesters would continue, setting the scene for violent confrontations later on Friday.

Similar protests after Friday prayers a week ago ended in chaos, with more than 100 people killed when the security forces fired on demonstrators with tear gas and live rounds. Hundreds of people were detained.

“The authorities are determined to restore security, stability and peace to the citizens,” Mahmud said. “In Dara’a, the army intervened at the request of the population to restore security.”

According to the minister, more than 50 soldiers and dozens of police have been killed and hundreds injured since the revolt began.

Rocked by demonstrations
Syria has been rocked since March 15 by increasingly strident pro-democracy demonstrations, which the authorities have tried to crush through violence that rights groups say has killed at least 453 civilians.

In the southern town of Dara’a, epicentre of the protests that have shaken Assad’s once-uncontested rule, water and power have been cut and the death toll has risen to 42 as a military siege enters a fifth day, rights activists said.

A rights activist reached by telephone said the situation was worsening in Dara’a, stormed on Monday by between 3 000 and 5 000 troops backed by tanks and snipers.

“We have neither doctors nor medical supplies, not even baby milk. The electricity is always cut and we haven’t any more water,” Abdallah Abazid told Agence France-Presse in Nicosia by telephone from Dara’a, 100km south of Damascus.

At least 42 “martyrs” have been killed since Monday, Abazid said. Their families, he added, had been unable to bury them because “security forces were firing on anybody visiting the cemetery”, which is controlled by the army.

Draft resolution
In Washington, three key US senators urged President Barack Obama to declare that his Syrian counterpart al-Assad has squandered his legitimacy and must step down.

“We urge President Obama to state unequivocally — as he did in the case of [Libyan leader Muammar] Gaddafi and [Egyptian President Hosni] Mubarak — that it is time for al-Assad to go,” Republican Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham and independent Senator Joe Lieberman said in a joint statement.

The UN Human Rights Council meeting, requested by 10 European nations, the US, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Senegal and Zambia, will open at 9am GTMT.

A draft resolution tabled by Washington calls on the 47-member council to agree to “urgently dispatch an independent, international commission of inquiry … to investigate all alleged violations of international human rights law” in Syria.

The proposal also “strongly condemns the killing, arrest and torture of hundreds of peaceful protesters by the Syrian government” and “stresses the need to investigate … and prosecute those responsible for attacks.”

New York-based Human Rights Watch called on the council to investigate the deadly crackdown on Syrian protesters and to “strongly condemn repression of peaceful protests”.

The European union, meanwhile, is eyeing a wide range of sanctions against Syria, from halting aid to an arms embargo and asset bans on officials involved in a brutal crackdown on protesters, diplomats in Brussels told AFP. — AFP