• Current Events & Politics
    Welcome Guest
    Please read before posting:
    Forum Guidelines Bluelight Rules
  • Current Events & Politics Moderators: deficiT | tryptakid | Foreigner

The Syria Uprising Thread

GenericMind

Bluelighter
Joined
Nov 30, 2005
Messages
39,948
Location
Western New York
I figured it was about time to break events in Syria off from the main middle east turmoil thread and give it's own, as things are really starting to boil over there. It's either going to turn into the next Egypt or the next Libya very soon. It's getting too bad for the UN to ignore the situation anymore without looking like jackasses.

More deaths on Syria's 'day of defiance'
Up to 30 reportedly killed in the cities of Homs and Hama, as protesters across the country take to the streets.


Activists claim that up to 30 people have been killed in Syria where thousands have taken to the streets for another day of anti-government rallies, dubbed a "day of defiance".

Human rights group Insan said that at least 16 people had been killed in the central city of Homs, six in Hama and two in Jableh. It said the total death toll was 26 but didn't specify where the other two deaths occurred.

A human rights activist told the Associated Press news agency that 30 people had died, while Syrian state television said an army officer and four police were killed in Homs by a "criminal gang".

Activist Najati Tayara said security forces opened fire to disperse protests that broke out after noon prayers in Homs.

Al Jazeera could not independently verify the reports because of restrictions on reporting in the country.

"We were chanting 'The people and the army are one' and 'The people want to topple the regime'," a witness told Al Jazeera over the phone. "Then security and thugs opened fire."

The sound of continuous gunfire was audible over the phone, as well as people shouting "There are snipers on the rooftops".



There were also reports that live ammunition had been fired in the Damascus suburb of Tel, wounding several protesters.

Reem Haddad, a spokeswoman for the Syrian information ministry, denied in a phone interview with Al Jazeera that she had any knowledge that Syrian protesters had been killed on Friday.

She said a planned visit by a UN delegation aimed at investigating the situation in Syria would be a positive thing for the government.

"The Syrian government is not worried, because there is nothing wrong," Haddad said.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Friday that Syria had agreed to allow UN teams to enter the country and check the humanitarian situation there.

UN condemnation

In an emergency session on Friday, the UN's top human rights body voted to condemn Syria for using deadly force against protesters and launched an investigation into the situation.

"With today's vote, the Council has stood against attempts to silence dissent with the use of gratuitous violence, which is not the act of a responsible government," said Susan Rice, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in New York.

The military earlier deployed troops and tanks in flashpoint cities including Baniyas, Homs and Rastan and in some Damascus suburbs.

In the Damascus district of Midan, protesters marched chanting "To heaven we go, one million martyrs".

The daughter of prominent opposition leader Riad Seif said her father had been arrested during the demonstration along with several others.

"Around 1.30pm, someone told me that my father was arrested at the al-Hassan mosque," Jumana Seif told Al Jazeera. "A friend told me later that he [Riad] had been hit on his head by the security elements."

She said her father had been participating in rallies in Midan every Friday since protests there began.

A 64-year-old former MP, Seif had been imprisoned twice since 2001, serving in total more than seven years in jail, for seeking reforms and constitutional changes in Syria.

'Will never stop'

Huge crowds were rallying in the coastal city of Baniyas, where there was a heavy army presence.

"We are here today to say we don't want to die. We don't want to be humiliated and we will never stop," a protester told Al Jazeera.

"Killing us and invading us with tanks will never stop us. Our souls will ascend to heaven calling for freedom".

"Killing us and invading us with tanks will never stop us. Our souls will ascend to heaven calling for freedom"

Protester in Baniyas

In the mainly Kurdish town of Amuda in the northeast, people were chanting "The Syrian people are one" and "Freedom, freedom, peaceful, peaceful".

More than 1,000 people have reportedly been arrested in the last week.

The army announced on Thursday that its forces had begun to pull out of Deraa, the southern city which has been under military siege since April 25.

General Riad Haddad, the military's political department chief, initially said all troops would be out of the city by Thursday night, but on Friday he said the withdrawal was gradual.

"Throughout the night, they withdrew ... and this is continuing today," he told AFP. He said 600 people had been arrested in Daraa during 11-day operation.

Activists said the city remained under the army's control and was surrounded by tanks. Footage emerging from the city showed massive destruction, with shelled buildings and burnt cars.

Activists say scores of civilians were killed during the siege and that a severe humanitarian crisis had emerged, with shortages of bread, water and gas.

EU sanctions

President Bashar al-Assad is under growing international pressure to end the violent crackdown on protesters.

The European Union on Friday agreed to impose sanctions on 14 Syrian officials involved in the crackdown, diplomats said.

Aid workers from the Red Cross and Red Crescent delivered their first emergency relief supplies to Deraa on Thursday, according to a spokesperson for the organisation.

Hicham Hassan said a convoy of two lorries carrying clean drinking water and two more with food and first-aid material accompanied a team of 13 experts from the Syrian Red Crescent and International Committee of the Red Cross.


Click here for more of our Syria coverage
Rights campaigners say army, security forces and assailants loyal to Assad had killed at least 560 civilians during seven weeks of pro-democracy demonstrations.

The authorities blame "armed terrorist groups" for the violence, including the killings of civilians and members of the security forces. Assad says protests are part of a foreign conspiracy to cause sectarian strife.

Dorothy Parvaz, an Al Jazeera journalist, has been detained since she flew in to Damascus one week ago. The network and her family are calling for her immediate release.
 
I really wish I had seen a break in the page that said:

"American embargo and sanctions against Syria"

Alas, our enabling hand is doing more harm than good. Lets hope the problem isn't compounded by our intervention.
 
link.

Syrian protesters, including women and children, are being tortured in school cellars as part of a mass campaign to crush the spirit of the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, activists and former captives have claimed. Photographic evidence collected by Western and local rights agencies indicate that children as young as 12 have faced heavy beatings at the hands of Mr Assad's feared secret police, the Mukhabarat. Men and women were said to suffer even more extreme punishment, ranging from electric shocks to the extraction of fingernails.

As Syria braces for an eighth consecutive weekly showdown between the security forces and demonstrators after midday prayers on Friday, graphic testimony is slowly emerging of the price paid for challenging Mr Assad's 11 year-rule.

Unable to quell the unrest through force alone, despite having killed hundreds of civilians, Syria's security forces have instead resorted to mass intimidation. Over the past week, the number of detentions has soared to more than 500 a day, bringing the total to more than 8,000.


yikes.
 
As much as I'm sure they'd like to, the U.S. isn't going to be able to ignore this for much longer. The EU is starting to press hard for a UN resolution.
 
I don't know how much the US would like to ignore Syria, I'd be suprised if they weren't involved in some way already. The regime doesn't exactly cooperate with human rights and the US isn't exactly friendly towards them.
 
Wait maybe I'm thinking of a different country. Which is the one with the US naval base? Bahrain?

it depresses me that our foreign relations with Saudi Arabia basically means we are letting them illegally occupy, and oppress the majority in Bahrain (Shi'i majority country, being ruled by Sunnis, kind of like Iraq but inverse). shit sucks.
 
we saw a group of muslims protesting downtown in front of the CNN headquarters, waving flags, chanting, singing. mostly women and their children. won't show up on the CNN though, only the world of Coke party across the street :|
 
And Syria is a candidate for a spot on the UN Human Rights Council.


Gotta love the UN, and politics in general.
 
Deaths reported as tanks shell Syrian cities
Nineteen people have reportedly been killed in shelling by tanks in residential areas in Syria as president Bashar al-Assad attempts to crush anti-government protests, defying calls for an end to the brutal crackdown.

Ammar Qurabi, head of the National Organisation for Human Rights in Syria, said 13 people were killed in the southern village of al-Harah on Wednesday.

Tanks also shelled a residential district in Syria's third largest city Homs and at least five people were killed, a rights campaigner in the city said. A sixth person was killed by a sniper shot to the head as he stood in front of his house.

Most were killed in shelling, but gunfire killed several of the victims, Qurabi said.

"Homs is shaking with the sound of explosions from tank shelling and heavy machine guns in the Bab Amr neighbourhood," Najati Tayara, a human rights campaigner, said.

The official Syrian news agency said one soldier was killed while in "pursuit of armed terrorist gangs".

Reports have also emerged that troops have deployed tanks around the central city of Hama, known for a bloody 1982 revolt which was crushed by government forces.

It is not possible to independently verify information on casualties as Syria bars international media from reporting inside the country.


Rights groups say about 800 people have been killed since protests began in March.

Reports of the latest bloodshed came as Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, urged Syria to halt mass arrests and to heed calls for reform.

Ban said UN humanitarian workers and human rights monitors must be allowed into Deraa, as well as other cities so as to assess the situation and needs of the civilian population.

"I urge president Assad to heed the call of the people for reform and freedom and desist from the mass arrest of peaceful demonstrators, and to co-operate with the human rights monitors," Ban told a news conference in Geneva.

"I am disappointed that the United Nations has not been granted access yet to Deraa and other places," he added.

Fresh sanctions

Assad initially responded to the unrest, the most serious challenge to his 11-year grip on power, with promises of reform. He granted citizenship to stateless Kurds and last month lifted a 48-year state of emergency.

But he also deployed the army to crush dissent, in Deraa, where demonstrations first erupted, and then in other cities, making clear he would not risk losing the tight control his family has held over Syria for the past 41 years.

Activists said security forces used batons to disperse a pro-democracy demonstration by 2,000 students on Wednesday at a university campus in Syria's second largest city, Aleppo.


Amid the continuing turmoil, Catherine Ashton, the EU diplomacy chief, said on Wednesday that the bloc would look at fresh sanctions this week against Assad's regime after already honing in on his inner circle.

Asked by members of the European Parliament to explain why Assad's name was not on a list of 13 Syrian officials targeted by European Union sanctions, Ashton said "we started with 13 people who were directly involved" in cracking down on protests.

"We'll look at it again this week," she added.

"I assure you that my intention is to put the maximum political pressure that we can on Syria."

Speaking to the New York Times, a powerful cousin of the president said the Assad family was not going to capitulate.

"We will sit here. We call it a fight until the end... They should know when we suffer, we will not suffer alone," Rami Makhlouf, one of the 13 people targeted by additional sanctions, told the newspaper.

Makhlouf, a tycoon in his early 40s who owns several monopolies, and his brother, a secret police chief, have been under specific US sanctions since 2007 for corruption.

Demonstrators have shouted the name of Makhlouf as a symbol of graft in a country that has been facing severe water shortages and unemployment ranging from government estimates of 10 per cent to independent estimates of 25 per cent.

Makhlouf maintains he is a businessman whose companies provide jobs for thousands of Syrians.

Presidential adviser Bouthaina Shaaban told a New York Times correspondent, briefly allowed into the country, that the government was close to re-establishing order after unrest it blames on "armed terrorist groups".

"Now we've passed the most dangerous moment... I hope we are witnessing the end of the story," Shaaban said.

State-run TV said on Wednesday the government had formed a committee to come up with a new election law that would be "up to international standards".
 
12:09am
A quick catch up on yesterday's events. A day after protests in the town, Syrian troops surrounded Talkalakh, in the west of the country.

As shooting began, residents face a desperate scramble to the border with Lebanon, 5km away. Several who made it into Lebanon had gunshot wounds, and at least four people died in the exodus.

11:30am
Our correspondent Zeina Khodr, outside Beirut, the Lebanese capital, reports:

Tension along the Lebanon-Syria border, particularly in the Wadi Khalid region, that's in the north. I just got out off the phone with some residents in that area, they are reporting gunfire and now we're getting reports that there have been three injuries, three people suffering from gunshot wounds. One of them a Lebanese army soldier who was manning a checkpoint at an unofficial border crossing. A Lebanese civilian also wounded, as well as a Syrian woman who was trying to cross into Lebanon, fleeing the unrest across the border.

Over the past 48 hours we've seen dozens of families escape the border town of Talkhalak, that's approximately five kilometres from the border with Lebanon. There [has] been unrest there, it's one of the protest hubs.

I can't give you exact figures on how many people actually crossed, but some say up to 2,000 in the past 48 hours alone.

People who crossed into Lebanon say that there is alot of violence in their town, the Syrian army encircled the town, blocking off all entrances, and yesterday four people died - four protesters were killed and up to 20 wounded - in that town.

3:06pm
Israeli troops opened fire on a mass of protesters near the town of Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights, killing at least four and injuring 10 to 20 others after some breached the Israeli border fence. Between 400 and 1,000 people approached the fence to mark Nakba Day, the anniversary of the expulsion of thousands of Palestinians from Israel in 1948. Majdal Shams is a Druze village on the Israeli side of the disputed Golan Heights and is separated from the Syrian border by the reportedly heavily mined Ayn al-Tineh valley.

5:01pm
More on that latest shooting: Syrian state television reported that Israeli forces killed four Syrian citizens who had been taking part in an anti-Israeli rally on the Syrian side of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights border on Sunday.

Israeli army radio said dozens were wounded when Palestinian refugees from the Syrian side of the Golan Heights border were shot for trying to break through the frontier fence.

Israeli army spokepersons' office said an Israeli army patrol shot in the air in an effort to desist "people trying to cross into Israel and trying to damage the fence." There was no comment on reports of the injured.

About 20,000 people are expected to gather by the end of Sunday at Ras Maroun, a Lebanese border town.

Matthew Cassel, a journalist en route to Lebanon's southern border with Israel, tweeted that dozens of buses were departing Nahr al-Bared and Baddawi refugee camps in northern Lebanon.

Some activists tweeted that the Lebanese and Jordanian authorities were prohibiting protesters from nearing the borders. The information could not be independently verified.

5:13pm
Syria has condemned Israel's "criminal activities" in the Golan Heights, the occupied Palestinian territories and southern Lebanon - where eyewitness Matthew Cassel told Al Jazeera Israeli forces shot into protests held by Palestinian refugees.

Israeli troops shot at protesters in three separate locations to prevent crowds from crossing Israeli frontier
lines, leaving at least eight dead and dozens wounded, says Reuters.

Syria's state news agency SANA quoted the foreign ministry as saying it called on the international community to hold Israel responsible for the incidents, the deadliest such confrontation along the borders in years.

5:43pm
Syria's state TV says four Syrian protesters were shot dead by Israeli troops during a demonstration on the Syrian side of the border with the occupied Golan Heights.

Dozens were injured by the shooting after hundreds walked across minefields, overwhelmed border guards and attempted to cross the border near the village of Majdal Shams.

Eyewtiness Salman Fakhreddin describes the scene to Al Jazeera.

6:05pm
As at least three people are reportedly killed by Syrian snipers in the border town of Talkalakh, thousands of residents flee to neighbouring Lebanon.

The military crackdown in the town followed a protest held against the government of president Bashar al-Assad.

Al Jazeera's Zeina Khodr, reporting from Beirut, has more on the story.

8:01pm
At least seven people were killed today in Talkalakh, as the Syrian army raided the town, an activist has told the AFP news agency. Al Jazeera can't confirm the exact number, but our sources have been telling us there has been shooting there throughout the day.
...
 
7 hours 39 min ago - Syria
Human Rights Watch, the New York-based rights watchdog, says that the Syrian government is carrying out a "nationwide campaign of arbitrary arrests and intimidation against political and human rights activists, holding them incommunicado, forcing them to sign undertakings to stop protesting, and in some cases torturing them".

In its latest release on develoments in Syria, HRW speaks to a number of activists and protesters who say they and their families have been detained or harassed by the government.

Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW's Middle East Director says:

Syria's leaders talk about a war against terrorists, but what we see on the ground is a war against ordinary Syrians - lawyers, human rights activists, and university students - who are calling for democratic changes in their country. Syria's emergency law may have been lifted on paper, but repression is still the rule on Syria's streets. [...]

"The Syrian government is leaving no stone unturned in its efforts to detain and punish every last voice for civil society reform in the country. [...]

"When families and neighbours of wanted activists are fair game for the security services and their Ba\ath thug agents, you know that the government is morally bankrupt. Behind the empty rhetoric of promises and national dialogue, there is a systematic campaign to rebuild Syria's wall of fear with only one purpose: allowing [President Bashar] al-Assad and his cronies to maintain their absolute grip on power."

6 hours 56 min ago - Syria
Mustafa Osso, a human rights activist, has told the Associated Press that the death toll from attacks by the government on protesters fleeing the town of Talkalakh is now eight.

He said that six people had been killed when Syrian security forces opened fire on and shelled pro-democracy protesters who were fleeing the border town for Lebanon. Another two people, including a soldier, died from wounds suffered during that attack while in hospital in Lebanon, he said.

Osso says that military operations are continuing in Talkalakh on Monday. The town has now been completely cut off from the outside world by Syrian forces, who have surrounded it and cut all telephone lines.

6 hours 9 min ago - Syria
More from that HRW report, which quotes multiple activists who say they or their families have been detained or threatened by Syrian security forces.

One opposition activist, who wished to remain anonymous for his own safety, said:

They went to my home and broke the door; when they couldn't find anyone there, they went to my neighbour. They asked him if he could tell them where they could find me, my wife, or one of my children. He refused, so they arrested him. But he is a known Ba`ath supporter, so they released him after 10 hours. They then went to my wife's shop and did the same thing with two men who own a grocery store and electronics shop near her workplace. One was in prison for two days, and the other is still in prison now. My wife and small child are now living in one place, and my other two children in another. I am in hiding in Damascus, changing my location every two days.

Another rights activist, this time a 67-year-old from Salamiyeh, told HRW that 30 men rode up to his house on May 13:

They drove up and started throwing stones on my house. I was out, and only female members of the family were inside. They had to rush to close the shutters. They kept throwing rocks for 15 minutes. They want to terrorise us. I am worried for my family. We were able to recognise some of the attackers. Some work as bodyguards for the head of local branch of the Ba'ath party.

5 hours 58 min ago - Syria
Zeina Khodr, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Beirut, reports that a number of Syrian women who wanted to hold a demonstration near the Lebanese border with Syria were not allowed to do so by the Lebanese army.

5 hours 33 min ago - Syria
It's almost midday in Syria, and it looks like today's daily newspapers have been unequivocal in their criticism of Israel over yesterday's violence, when Israeli forces opened fire on angry demonstrators who were marking 'Nakba', or the day of "catastrophe". Several people were killed, and scores wounded, in Gaza, Golan Heights, Ras Maroun and the West Bank.

The Golan, south Lebanon and Palestine: one blood, one front."

That headline appeared in red letters in the al-Baath newspaper, which is the official newspaper of Syria's ruling party.

The Israeli criminal action was not simply a confirmation of their crime-ridden history but new proof of their aggression which is mounting through the years."

That's from the government al-Thawra newspaper, which said the violence had "unified Arab blood".

Is the United Nations aware that the zone in the Golan that separates the occupied and liberated territories is demilitarised?"

That question was asked by the government-run Tishreen newspaper.

And finally, a condemnation of the international community, from the al-Watan newspaper:

What happened to the Palestinians yesterday was met with total silence by Europe's foreign ministers and of course Washington as well as human rights groups."

3 hours 48 min ago - Syria
Dozens of Syrians who fled violence in their home towns and villages have gathered in northern Lebanon, at the illegal al-Boqayah border crossing with Syria, to demand the fall of Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president.

"We don't love you, Bashar," and "TalKalakh, have no fear, we are with you," they shouted.

Lebanese troops looked on, as the protesters chanted slogans against the Syrian government.

Most of those present were from the Syrian towns of Talkalakh and Arida, located close to the border. Over the last few days, hundreds of Syrians have fled their homes for Wadi Khalid, in Lebanon, often travelling by foot and bringing basic provisions with them.

Some spoke to AFP, on condition of anonymity, saying that the Syrian military is using "tanks and ... missiles" to target their homes in Talkalakh.

"The wounded lie with the corpses in our streets, and no one dares to move them to hospital," said one resident of the town.

AFP reported that sounds of intermittent gunfire could be heard in Wadi Khalid, from the direction of the Syrian border.

Another young man told AFP that Alawite Muslims had been taking up arms in the villages around Talkalakh, looking to target Sunni Muslims.

3 hours 28 min ago - Syria
Israel will be complaining to the United Nations regarding 'Nakba' day marches in Syria and Lebanon, Al Jazeera correspondent Nisreen el-Shamayleh reports.

The Israeli delegation to the UN will be filing their complaint at the UN Security Council against what it describes as violations of international law and UNSC resolutions.

Lebanon had already earlier filed a complaint at the UN against Israel, after its military said that 10 people were killed and dozens wounded at Maroun al Ras after Israeli troops fired on them.

2 hours 44 min ago - Syria
A mass grave has been discovered in the southern town of Deraa, which has been at the heart of the protest movement against President Bashar al-Assad's rule, an activist has told AFP.

2 hours 30 min ago - Syria
Residents who fled Talkalakh have described the situation in the town as "catastrophic", the Associated Press reports. They say that the authorities have been justifying a siege of the town, which has seen many anti-government protests, by saying that it is occupied by Islamic extremists who are trying to form an Islamic state.

Residents of the town, population 70,000, have strenuously denied this.

One man, who asked to be identified only by his first name, Hamid, said that pro-government gunmen, known as "shahiba", have been targetting Sunnis in the town. This account is in line what other residents have been telling news agencies after fleeing the town.

Bursts of gunfire continue to be heard from the Syrian side of the border near the Lebanese town of Wadi Khaled. Hundreds of Syrian and Lebanese men were standing metres away from the border when bullets were heard buzzing overhead. They all ran for cover.

The Lebanese army at Wadi Khaled has been fortifying its positions with bulldozers and barbed wire to try and protect themselves from stray bullets. Ambulances are on standby near the border to tend to any of the wounded.

2 hours 24 min ago - Syria
More on the allegations that a mass grave has been found in Deraa.

"The army today allowed residents to venture outside their homes for two hours a day," Ammar Qurabi, of the National Organisation for Human Rights in Syria, told AFP.

"They discovered a mass grave in the old part of town but authorities immediately cordoned off the area to prevent residents from recovering the bodies, some of which they promised would be handed over later," he said. He added that he did not know how many people were buried in the grave.

Qurabi was speaking on the telephone from Cairo, the Egyptian capital. He said the Syrian government must bear the responsibility for crimes against "unarmed" citizens and that the international community should exert pressure on it to stop the "brutal repression" of Syrians.

2 hours 19 min ago - Syria
Reuters reports that at least 15 Syrian tanks have moved into the area around Arida, according to rights activists.

Rights activists also say that a sniper has killed one person today in Talkalakh.

"Talkalakh is a ghost town. There are no doctors. Pharmacies are shut. Snipers are on the roof of the main hospital. Phones, water and electricity are cut," Mohammad al-Dandashi told Reuters from the town through a satellite phone.
...
 
22 hours 48 min ago - Syria
The United States will respond to Syria's political crackdown with additional steps in coming days if the government does not change course, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said.

"We will be taking additional steps in the days ahead," Clinton said, saying she agreed with European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who told reporters that the time for Syria to make changes was now.

22 hours 43 min ago - Syria
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton met on Tuesday. Ahead of their meeting, Ashton told reporters she had spoken recently to Syria's foreign minister to convey the message that it was time to stop the violence.

This is extremely urgent ... If the government really does ... want to see some kind of change, it's got to be now.

(We are) now in a situation where we need to consider all of the options. So I think there will be a number of moves in the coming hours and days that you will see.

22 hours 39 min ago - Syria
Half of Kuwait's 50 lawmakers urged the Gulf Arab state to cut ties with Syria and expel its ambassador in protest at violence by Syrian security forces to crush opposition to President Bashar al-Assad's rule, the Reuters news agency reports.

20 hours 57 min ago - Syria
French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said France and Britain were close to getting nine votes for a resolution on Syria at the UN Security Council, but Russia and China were still threatening to use their veto, Reuters reported.

A European push for the UN Security Council to condemn Syria's crackdown on the protesters was blocked at the end of April by resistance from Russia, China and Lebanon.

Britain, France, Germany and Portugal had been seeking a UN statement on Syria. A statement does not carry the same weight as a Security Council resolution.
*This is why I fucking hate Russia and China.

19 hours 46 min ago - Syria
Syrian activists have called for a nationwide strike on Wednesday in new 'punishment' against the Assad regime, the AP reports.

19 hours 40 min ago - Syria
The Syrian authorities must carry out a prompt, impartial investigation into reports that a number of bodies were unearthed near the city of Deraa and into how those deaths occurred, Amnesty International said.

Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa Director, said:

If true, these reports of multiple corpses buried in a makeshift grave show an appalling disregard for humanity.

The Syrian authorities must immediately carry out independent and impartial investigations into these reports and other killings related to the recent pro-reform protests.

Anyone found to be responsible for unlawful killings, torture and other human rights violations must be brought to justice in fair trials.

19 hours 28 min ago - Syria
The White House warned the Syrian government on Tuesday that the "window is narrowing" for Damascus to halt its violent crackdown on democracy protests and avoid further US sanctions, Reuters reports.

10 hours 38 min ago - Syria
Al Jazeera's Zeina Khodr reports on exclusive footage from the Syrian town of Daal, north of Deraa. The footage, shot on May 8, shows the residents' defiance as the Syrian army enters the town. Video from Deraa, meanwhile, suggests the siege there has not ended, contrary to what the Syrian government has claimed:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVsGkQF-7eY&feature=player_embedded
...
 
US imposes sanctions on Syrian president

The United States is to impose sanctions on Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, and six senior Syrian officials for human rights abuses over their brutal crackdown on anti-government protests.

The White House announced the sanctions on Wednesday, a day before Barack Obama, the US president, was to deliver a major speech on the uprisings throughout the Arab world with prominent mentions of Syria

The sanctions are part of "an effort to increase pressure on the government of Syria to end its violence against its people and begin transitioning to a democratic system," a US official told the AFP news agency on the condition of anonymity.

In a letter to congressional leaders, Obama said he issued the new sanctions order as a response to the Syrian government's "continuous escalation of violence against the people of Syria".

Obama cited "attacks on protesters, arrests and harassment of protesters and political activists, and repression of democratic change, overseen and executed by numerous elements of the Syrian government".

The sanctions will freeze any assets Assad and the six Syrian government officials have in US jurisdiction and make it illegal for Americans to do business with them.

Syrian rights activists say at least 700 civilians have been killed in two months of clashes between goverment forces and protesters seeking an end to his 11-year rule.

Swiss sanctions

The US announcement came as Switzerland announced new sanctions against Syria on Wednesday, saying that it was following the European Union's lead in imposing an embargo on arms and equipment used for internal repression.



"The new edict on measures against Syria includes an embargo on military assets and equipment that could be used for internal repression," the Swiss economic ministry said in a statement.

"It also includes financial sanctions and travel restrictions on 13 people from the Damascus regime," it added.

The ministry said that through the new sanctions, "Switzerland is joining sanctions announced on May 9, 2011 by the European Union against Syria."

EU heavyweight Germany, meanwhile, is pushing for further sanctions against Bashar.

"Our demands are clear. Violence and repression against peaceful demonstrators must be stopped immediately," Guido Westerwelle, Germany's foreign minister, said.

Tighten sanctions

European governments agreed on Tuesday to tighten sanctions against the Syrian leadership, but said they would decide next week about whether to include Assad on the list.


The EU put 13 Syrian officials on its sanctions list in what it described as a move to gradually increase pressure.

Meanwhile, Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, said his country would not support any UN resolutions on the use of force against the Syrian government.

"As for a resolution on Syria, I will not support such a resolution even if my friends and acquaintances ask me about it," Medvedev told reporters during a rare news conference on Wednesday, arguing Syria must be allowed to settle its domestic affairs.

He did not specify what he meant, adding that such resolutions were open to interpretation.

Last month, Obama signed an executive order imposing a first round of US sanctions against Syria's intelligence agency and two relatives of Assad's for alleged human rights abuses.
 
The Syrian authorities must immediately carry out independent and impartial investigations into these reports and other killings related to the recent pro-reform protests.
???
 
Top