Syrian Protests Continue Despite Crackdown, 
		More Deaths, and Promises of Elections
August 7, 2011
        
Syrian tanks storm eastern city, defying U.N. appeal
		By Khaled Yacoub Oweis and Suleiman al-Khalidi
		AMMAN | Sun Aug 7, 2011, 6:30am EDT 
		AMMAN (Reuters) - 
		Syrian troops killed 20 people in a tank assault on the eastern city 
		of Dair El-Zoar on Sunday, an activist group said, despite a direct U.N. 
		appeal to President Bashar al-Assad to stop using military force against 
		civilians.
		The assault on Dair El-Zoar, capital of a restive oil-producing 
		province, began exactly a week after Assad sent the army to seize 
		control of the city of Hama, a focal point of nearly five months of 
		protest against his autocratic rule.
		The Syrian Revolution Coordinating Union said most casualties in 
		Sunday's attack on Dair El-Zoar were in al-Joura district in the west of 
		the city.
		A resident told Reuters: "Early this morning columns of army tanks 
		and bulldozers, under cover of heavy rounds of gunfire, stormed into the 
		western and northern entrances of the city and dismantled barricades set 
		up by residents.
		"A dozen tanks are taking position in the main square in Jubaila 
		market in the northern sector of Deir al-Zor," the resident, who gave 
		his name as Abu Bakr, said by telephone.
		Syria has barred 
		most independent media since the start of the uprising against Assad, 
		making it hard to verify accounts from residents, activists and 
		authorities.
		The military assault on Dair El-Zoar, about 400 km (250 miles) 
		north-east of Damascus, was launched a day after U.N. Secretary General 
		Ban Ki-moon told Assad he was alarmed by the escalating violence and 
		demanded he rein in the army.
		"In a phone conversation with President Assad...the Secretary General 
		expressed his strong concern and that of the international community at 
		the mounting violence and death toll in Syria over the past days," the 
		U.N. press office said.
		Ban "urged the president to stop the use of military force against 
		civilians immediately," it added.
		Residents of Dair El-Zoar, situated on the Euphrates river in a 
		province bordering Iraq's Sunni heartland, had been bracing for an 
		assault on their city.
		A video posted on the Internet last week showed a tribal meeting 
		discussing preparations for armed resistance to any military move 
		against them.
		Several hours after the tanks moved in, explosions could be heard 
		during telephone calls to residents in al-Joura.
		Abu Bakr, from the Jubaila area which has seen some of the largest 
		anti-Assad demonstrations in recent weeks, said mosque loudspeakers were 
		blaring "Allahu Akbar (God is greatest)."
		TURKISH MESSAGE
		Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, who built close ties with 
		Assad before the uprising, said on Saturday his foreign minister would 
		visit Damascus on Tuesday to deliver a message to Syria.
		Turkey has grown 
		increasingly critical of Assad and a senior minister last week called 
		the attack on Hama an atrocity.
		Tanks and armored vehicles deployed throughout Hama on Saturday, a 
		resident said, after a week-long assault which one activist group said 
		had killed 300 civilians.
		Assad's father, Hafez al-Assad, crushed an armed Islamist uprising in 
		Hama nearly 30 years ago, killing many thousands of people and razing 
		parts of the city's old quarter.
		Syrian authorities blame the violence on gunmen and religious 
		extremists they say have killed 500 police and soldiers since March. 
		They say the army swept into Hama to confront "armed terrorist groups" 
		attacking civilians and sabotaging property, and that 20 soldiers have 
		been killed.
		Hama stands as a symbol of defiance to the Assad family due to the 
		1982 uprising and because, until Bashar al-Assad sent in the tanks to 
		crush the latest protests, it was the scene of some of the biggest 
		demonstrations against his rule, with more than 100,000 gathering on 
		Fridays to chant for his overthrow.
		In their first public comments about the bloodshed, Gulf Arab States 
		expressed the "greatest concern and regret" on Saturday over the 
		"increasing violence and excessive use of force" in Syria, but did not 
		directly criticize Assad.
		Seeking to contain their own domestic dissent, and wary of any 
		turmoil on their northern flank, the wealthy oil exporting Gulf states 
		had previously kept silent on Syria.
		A statement by the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council called for "an 
		immediate end to violent actions and any armed activity, an end to the 
		spilling of blood, recourse to wisdom, and carrying out serious, 
		necessary reforms."
		Rights groups say Syrian security forces have killed at least 1,600 
		civilians since the start of the protests, inspired by Arab uprisings 
		which overthrew leaders in Egypt and
		Tunisia.
		(Writing by
		
		Dominic Evans; Editing by
		
		Alistair Lyon)
        
		Syrian soldiers kill 4 in tank assaults 
		Ma'an, August 7, 2011, 13:14 
		 DAMASCUS (AFP) -- 
		Syrian security forces backed by tanks killed at least four civilians 
		as they moved to crush democracy protests in a central town and the 
		flashpoint eastern city of Dair El-Zoar on Sunday, an activist said.
		
The crackdown came only hours after the government vowed to hold 
		"free" elections by the year's end, and following a personal appeal by 
		UN chief Ban Ki-moon to President Bashar Al-Assad to halt the bloodshed.
		
"About 25 tanks and troop carriers entered Hula and carried out 
		military operations that killed four," Rami Abdul Rahman, head of the 
		Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human rights, told AFP in Nicosia 
		by telephone.
The death toll from the assault on Hula, a town in 
		the central province of Homs, was likely to rise as many people were 
		seriously wounded in the assault, said Abdul Rahman.
Another two 
		people died in the northwestern city of Idlib from gunshot wounds they 
		suffered when security forces fired on protesters during massive 
		protests late on Saturday, he said.
Hundreds of tanks and armored 
		cars have been deployed in Dair El-Zoar, he said, adding that many 
		residents had fled in fear of the assault on the city, the largest in 
		eastern Syria with more than half a million people.
"Shelling has 
		been heard in several areas" of Dair El-Zoar, said Abdul Rahman, adding 
		later that a sweeping campaign of arrests followed with "dozens" of 
		people being taken into custody.
The Local Coordination 
		Committees of Syria, which has been organizing democracy protests on the 
		ground, said the army had entered nine areas of Dair El-Zoar, which was 
		rocked by "very strong explosions."
Syria's government has sought 
		to crush the democracy movement with brutal force, leaving at least 
		2,038 people dead, including 389 members of the security forces, 
		according to the Britain-based Observatory.
On Saturday, security 
		forces in Damascus arrested prominent opposition figure and former 
		political prisoner Walid Al-Bunni and his two sons, said Abdel Rahman.
		
The assaults on Hula and Dair El-Zoar came after Ban finally managed 
		to reach Assad who had been refusing to take his phone calls, urging the 
		Syrian president to immediately end the military campaign.
"In a 
		phone conversation with President Assad of Syria today, the secretary 
		general expressed his strong concern and that of the international 
		community at the mounting violence and death toll in Syria over the past 
		days," UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said late Saturday.
Ban 
		"reflected to the Syrian president the clear message sent by the 
		Security Council and urged the president to stop the use of military 
		force against civilians immediately," Nesirky said.
Ban's call 
		followed a pledge by the US, French and German leaders to consider new 
		steps to punish Syria after security forces killed more than 30 people 
		on the first Friday of Ramadan, the holy Muslim month of fasting.
		
Foreign Minister Walid Al-Mu'allim said on Saturday that elections 
		to a new parliament would be held by the end of 2011, as he met with 
		foreign ambassadors posted to Damascus.
"Syria will hold free and 
		transparent elections that will give birth to a parliament representing 
		the aspirations of the Syrian people," Mu'allim said.
The foreign 
		minister stressed "the commitment of the Syrian leadership to the 
		continued reform process and implementation of measures announced by 
		President Assad."
The embattled president issued a decree on 
		Thursday allowing opposition political parties.
In April, he 
		ordered an end to five decades of draconian emergency rule and abolished 
		the feared state security courts, while in June he said talks could lead 
		to a new constitution and end his Baath party's monopoly on power.
		
But the concessions have been largely dismissed by the opposition as 
		too late and a ploy to appease protesters.
The Syrian protesters 
		have been calling for greater freedoms since mid-March, inspired by Arab 
		uprisings that ousted the autocratic leaders of Tunisia and Egypt at the 
		start of the year.
Assad's regime has become increasingly 
		isolated, with allies like Turkey and Russia calling for an end to the 
		bloody crackdown.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev spoke 
		forcefully about the situation this week, calling on Assad to "carry out 
		urgent reforms," warning otherwise "a sad fate awaits him and in the end 
		we will have to take some decisions."
And Turkey's Foreign 
		Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is to visit Syria on Tuesday with the message 
		that Ankara "has run out of patience" with the ongoing violence, Prime 
		Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.
		Syria vows 'free elections' as pressure grows 
		Ma'an, 06/08/2011 22:37 
		 Syria vowed on Saturday to hold "free and transparent" 
		elections by the end of 2011 as Arab states in the Gulf joined a chorus 
		of Western pressure over its deadly suppression of anti-regime protests.
		
An activist, meanwhile, said hundreds of tanks and armored cars had 
		been deployed in the northeastern city of Deir Ezzor and around Homs in 
		central Syria.
"Syria will hold free and transparent elections 
		that will give birth to a parliament representing the aspirations of the 
		Syrian people," Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said in a meeting with 
		ambassadors posted to Damascus.
"The general elections will be 
		held before the end of the year," Muallem said, quoted by the official 
		SANA news agency.
The foreign minister stressed "the commitment 
		of the Syrian leadership to the continued reform process and 
		implementation of measures announced by President (Bashar Al-) Assad."
		
The embattled president issued a decree on Thursday allowing 
		opposition political parties, but the move was largely dismissed by the 
		opposition as a ploy to appease protesters.
The oil-rich Arab 
		monarchies of the Gulf on Saturday turned up the heat on Damascus, with 
		the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council calling in a statement for an 
		"immediate end to violence... and bloodshed."
They urged a 
		"resort to wisdom and introducing serious and necessary reforms."
		
Their call followed a pledge by the US, French and German leaders to 
		consider new steps to punish Syria after a deadly crackdown on the first 
		Friday of Ramadan, the holy Muslim month of fasting.
President 
		Barack Obama spoke separately to France's Nicolas Sarkozy and German 
		Chancellor Angela Merkel as Western nations cranked up pressure on 
		Assad.
They "condemned the Assad regime's continued use of 
		indiscriminate violence," the White House said. They "also agreed to 
		consider additional steps to pressure the Assad regime and support the 
		Syrian people."
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, in an 
		interview to be published on Sunday, said Assad no longer has a future 
		in Syrian politics.
"I don't believe that Assad has a political 
		future ahead of him which is supported by the Syrian people," 
		Westerwelle told the newspaper Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.
The 
		Syrian government has sought to crush the democracy movement with brutal 
		force, killing around 1,650 civilians and arresting thousands of 
		dissenters, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
		
Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory, 
		told AFP by telephone that around 250 tanks and armored cars were 
		deployed in four districts of Deir Ezzor on Saturday.
The tanks 
		were also posted around the airport in Deir Ezzor, many of whose 
		residents started to flee the city from Wednesday, fearing imminent 
		military action.
In Homs, "many armored cars and other army 
		vehicles have been posted in the Bab al-Sibaa district," Abdel Rahman 
		said, adding that activists in the city reported gunfire from early 
		morning.
In the latest bloodshed, Abdel Karim Rihawi, who heads 
		the Syrian League for the Defense of Human Rights, said 22 people were 
		killed on Friday, including seven after the special evening prayers for 
		Ramadan.
Seven of the fatalities were in Irbin, three in Damir 
		and one in Maadamiya, all near Damascus, he said by telephone. Three 
		others were killed in Homs and one other in Nawa, southern Syria.
		
SANA, meanwhile, said two members of the security forces were killed 
		and eight wounded on Friday in an ambush on a road in the northwestern 
		Idlib region, near the Turkish border.
On Friday, communications 
		were completely cut off as the army stepped up an operation to crush 
		dissent in Hama, the central city where security forces killed at least 
		30 civilians and wounded dozens more earlier in the week.
More 
		than 1,000 families have fled the city, according to Abdel Rahman.
		
"Thousands of demonstrators marched in Deir Ezzor, Daraa and 
		Qamishli in support of the city of Hama despite the extreme heat" on 
		Friday, said Rihawi, adding they numbered 30,000 in Deir Ezzor alone.
		
The call for Friday's protests came from activists on Facebook 
		group The Syrian Revolution 2011, a driving force behind the 
		demonstrations that have been calling for greater freedoms since 
		mid-March.
		
      
      
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