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#Syria truce largely holds but 6 killed in protests


ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY and ZEINA KARAM
Published: 55 minutes ago


This image made from amateur video and released by Douma Revolution in Syria Friday, April 13, 2012 purports to show a large anti-government demonstration in Douma, Syria. (AP Photo/Douma Revolotion in Syria via AP video) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUT

BEIRUT (AP) - Syrian forces used live fire, tear gas and clubs to beat back tens of thousands of protesters who took to the streets across the country Friday in powerful and often jubilant displays of defiance. But a U.N.-brokered truce largely held up without the widespread, bloody offensives that have pushed the nation toward civil war.

Activists said security forces killed at least six people, a lower-than-usual toll. The rallies, described as some of the largest in months, stretched from the suburbs of Damascus to the central province of Hama, Idlib in the north and the southern province of Daraa, where the uprising began in March 2011.

“Come on, Bashar, leave!” the crowd shouted in Daraa, linking arms and stomping their feet to the beat of a drum in a traditional Arab folk dance, according to a video posted online by activists.

The protests might have been far larger had President Bashar Assad’s regime not violated a key aspect of the truce by keeping troops, tanks and snipers in population centers instead of pulling them back to barracks. The presence of plainclothes agents of the feared Mukhabarat security service also had a chilling effect on some of the gatherings in Damascus, the capital, and elsewhere.

The demonstrations were a critical test of the cease-fire, which went into effect at dawn Thursday, because they challenged the government’s commitment to avoid the kind of attacks that have made Syria one of the bloodiest conflicts of the Arab Spring revolts.

Regime forces tried to block protesters from occupying main squares out of fear they will form a sit-in akin to Cairo’s Tahrir Square, where hundreds of thousands of people camped out for days in an extraordinary scene that drove longtime Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak from power.

Many world leaders expressed doubt that the truce would endure in a country where 9,000 people have been killed during the 13-month uprising, according to U.N. figures.

“I don’t believe Bashar Assad is sincere,” French President Nicholas Sarkozy told French television station i-Tele on Friday. Observers must be sent to find out what’s happening.”

A team of U.N. observers was on standby to fly into Syria and monitor the truce, but the mission still needed approval from the Security Council. Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin told reporters the text was more complicated than he expected and that more negotiations would be needed, but he said his government also wanted to act quickly to get observers on the ground.

Russia has been one of Syria’s strongest allies, shielding Assad from international condemnation at the U.N. out of fear that it would open the door to possible NATO airstrikes like those which helped topple Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi.

President Barack Obama has ramped up U.S. aid, including communications equipment and medical supplies, to Syria’s opposition in hopes of accelerating Assad’s downfall of Assad, officials said Friday.

The president signed off on the package last week, U.S. officials said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation. They declined to outline all forms of American assistance because of the danger anti-Assad protesters have faced over the last year.

Despite the hitches in the cease-fire plan, Syrians poured into the streets Friday. A particularly large protest of many thousands was reported in the sprawling Damascus suburb of Douma, where the regime conducted sweeping arrest raids in the days before the truce.

“It was an example of what a large peaceful protest can be like when the government does not intervene and fire on people,” said local activist Mohammed Saeed.

But there were violent eruptions, as well, as security forces fired live rounds, tear gas and beat protesters with clubs in some areas.

Activist Adel al-Omari said security forces opened fire at protesters in the southern village of Nawa as they gathered in a central square, killing at least two.

“Once they gathered in the village’s main square they came under fire,” al-Omari said.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of sources on the ground, said the dead also included two marchers who were in a crowd trying to reach the main Assi Square in Hama, an opposition stronghold.

Troops and pro-government militiamen known as shabiha beat protesters chanting anti-government slogans as they tried to leave a mosque in the Damascus neighborhood of Qadam, said the Local Coordination Committees, an activist network. In Syria’s largest city, Aleppo, troops fired tear gas at marchers gathering outside the Grand Mosque, the group said.

The LCC put the nationwide death toll at 13 protesters, while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least six were killed. Late Friday, both groups said explosions and gunfire were heard in districts of the central city of Homs but that it was not immediately clear what was happening.

The regime restricts access of foreign observers, including journalists, making it difficult to verify death tolls and other claims independently.

The uprising began last year with mostly peaceful protests against the Assad family dynasty, which has ruled Syria for more than four decades. But the government’s violent crackdown fueled an armed insurgency as army defectors and protesters began fighting back.

The rebel Free Syrian Army, which includes army defectors, has said it will observe the cease-fire. But the opposition is not well organized, and there are growing fears of groups looking to exploit the chaos.

Syria’s state-run television said gunmen shot and killed Army Maj. Moussa Tamer al-Youssef while on his way Friday to his unit in Hama, saying the assassination was proof the opposition was not interested in a political solution to the crisis.

The truce is at the center of international envoy Kofi Annan’s six-point plan to stop the bloodshed and launch talks between the regime and the opposition.

Western powers have condemned the violence, but they have few options to help stop it. They have all but ruled out NATO-style military intervention, in part because the conflict is so explosive and could spark a regional war.

Earlier Friday, Syrian troops clashed with rebels near Turkey, raising fears that the conflict could spill across the border. Syria’s state-run news agency said authorities foiled an infiltration attempt by “armed terrorist groups” from Turkey and that the group fled back to Turkey.

Annan’s spokesman played down the incident.

Clashes between Syrian troops and opponents are “not unusual,” Ahmad Fawzi said. “Sometimes, in situations like this, the parties test each other.”

“We hope both sides will sustain this calm, this relative calm,” he added. “We are thankful that there’s no heavy shelling, that the number of casualties are dropping, that the number of refugees who are crossing the borders are also dropping.”

___

Associated Press writers Bassem Mroue and Karin Laub in Beirut, Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara, Turkey, Bradley Klapper in Washington and John Heilprin in Geneva contributed to this report.

Source: m.apnews.com

    • #Syria
    • #Truce
    • #Protests
    • #Regime
    • #Ceasefire
    • #Violation
    • #UNSC
    • #Observers
    • #Resolution
    • #Russia
    • #US
    • #Aid
    • #LCC
    • #SOHR
    • #FSA
  • 1 year ago
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Canada slams UNESCO for keeping #Syria on rights committee

Canadian Ambassador to UNESCO Jean-Pierre Blackburn had walked out of an executive board meeting while Syria’s representative was speaking, a spokesman said.
Photograph by: Reuters , Reuters

OTTAWA — Canada criticized UNESCO Thursday after members of the UN cultural agency’s executive board refused to kick Syria off a committee charged with investigating human-rights abuses.

Canada was one of 14 countries that had asked for Syria’s membership on UNESCO’s committee on conventions and recommendations to be revoked by sending a letter to the head of the executive board in December.

Syria was initially named to the committee in November. The appointment was made with unanimous consent from members of the executive board, including the United States and France, despite President Bashar Assad’s ongoing crackdown on demonstrators.

“Today, UNESCO had an opportunity to correct that wrong,” said a spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, Joseph Lavoie. “Instead, it failed to call out Assad and his backers for what they are: a regime that slaughters innocent Syrians.”

Members of UNESCO’s executive board voted 35-8 to condemn the crackdown on civilians in Syria, but the motion did not include any reference to the country being removed from the committee on conventions and recommendations.

Canada was unable to vote as it only has observer status on the executive board. However, last week, Canadian Ambassador to UNESCO Jean-Pierre Blackburn had walked out of an executive board meeting while Syria’s representative was speaking, Lavoie said.

“While Canada was not involved in the original decision to name Syria to the Committee on Conventions and Recommendations at UNESCO, we nonetheless found it deeply disturbing given the Assad regime’s continual and repeated violation of human rights,” he added.

Hillel Neuer, executive director of Geneva-based advocacy group UN Watch, believed the international community squandered an important opportunity to send the Assad regime a message because many UNESCO members were worried that censuring Syria would set a precedent.

“Politics simply trumped human rights, with too many UNESCO diplomats fearing that if Syria were removed for its violations, many of them would be next,” he said in an email.

Meanwhile, a dispute between Saudi Arabia and Russia spilled into Ottawa on Thursday.

Russian diplomats in Moscow and Damascus have accused Saudi Arabia of supporting terrorism by providing arms and training to rebels in Syria.

In response, the Saudi Embassy in Ottawa sent out a news release condemning the statements and countering that Russian support for Assad’s regime might expose Russia to “moral, legal and criminal responsibility.”

“History alone will respond to such accusations of arming terrorists,” the release adds, “and will undoubtedly testify to who are the terrorists and who are behind them.”

lberthiaume(at)postmedia.com

Twitter.com/leeberthiaume

Source: canada.com

    • #UNESCO
    • #Human rights abuse
    • #UN
    • #Crackdown
    • #US
    • #France
    • #Bashar al Assad
    • #Canada
    • #Violation
    • #UN Watch
    • #International community
    • #Saudi Arabia
    • #Russia
    • #Damascus
    • #Arming
    • #Training
    • #Accusations
    • #Terrorism
  • 1 year ago
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