Date: Aug 10, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Damascus defies all appeals

By Elizabeth A. Kennedy
Associated Press

BEIRUT: Turkey’s foreign minister said he met President Bashar Assad for more than six hours Tuesday to discuss “concrete steps” Syria should take to stop its violent crackdown on anti-government protesters.
Meanwhile, the army launched a series of new raids around the country, which activists said killed 22 people.


Ahmet Davutoglu, speaking to reporters on his return to Turkey from Damascus, said the talks were cordial but did not say what steps they had discussed or whether Assad had agreed to consider them.
“We discussed ways to prevent confrontation between the army and the people in the most open and clear way,” the Turkish foreign minister said.


Assad is facing growing international condemnation over his government’s deadly crackdown on a five-month-old uprising. Envoys from India, Brazil and South Africa are also headed to Damascus to press for an end to the violence.
The visit by Davutoglu is significant because Ankara until recently had close ties to Damascus. But Turkey has become increasingly critical of its neighbor over the bloodshed.


Syria’s state-run SANA news agency said Assad told Davutoglu the Syrian government will be relentless in its pursuit of “terrorist groups” to safeguard stability and security in the country. Syrian authorities blame the unrest on extremist and terrorist groups seeking to destabilize the country, as opposed to true-reform seekers. But the protesters being killed are mostly unarmed and peaceful.


SANA said Assad also pledged to press ahead with reforms. But promises reform have rung hollow, especially since they have been coupled with a bloody campaign against civilians.
Human rights groups said that at least 22 people, including several children, were killed across Syria Tuesday.
Tanks stormed villages outside the besieged city of Hama and two towns in Idlib province, which borders Turkey, activists said.


A rights activist near Hama said military operations in the town of Tibet al-Imam just north of the city killed at least five children, four of them from the same family.
“They were playing in the fields when they were struck by gunfire,” the activist said on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.


There was heavy machine-gun fire and reports of at least three deaths in the eastern city of Deir al-Zour, which also has been a flashpoint in recent days. Four people were also killed in the town of Binnish in the north, and several others in the central city of Homs.
The reports were confirmed by the activist network the Local Coordination Committees and the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The LCC said a total of eight children were killed across the country Tuesday.


Syria has blocked almost all outside witnesses by banning foreign media and restricting local coverage that strays from the party line that the state is fighting thugs and religious extremists who are acting out a foreign conspiracy.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Mark Toner lauded Davutoglu’s visit and said Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had spoken with the Turkish foreign minister.


“They did talk about the situation in Syria, you know, and we believe it’s another opportunity to send yet another strong message to Assad that this crackdown on peaceful protesters cannot stand,” Toner said Monday.
Egypt’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Amr joined other Arab countries in warning Damascus, saying: “The situation in Syria is heading to the point of no return.”


In a news conference in Cairo Tuesday, Amr urged Syrian government to carry out nationwide reforms and ending the crackdown. India’s U.N. Ambassador Hardeep Singh Puri said his country’s representative is scheduled to arrive in Damascus Tuesday and will join representatives from Brazil and South Africa for a meeting with Syria’s foreign minister to appeal for an end to the crackdown and to promote democratic reforms.


Syria has shown no signs of scaling back its crackdown despite Damascus’ increasing diplomatic isolation. Saudi Arabia, along with Bahrain and Kuwait in the Gulf, recalled their ambassadors this week.


In an editorial published Tuesday, the Al-Baath newspaper of Syria’s ruling Baath party said the state was hopeful that Turkey and the Gulf Arab nations will “quickly correct their stands.”
The latest wave of bloodshed started a week ago, on the eve of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, when tanks and snipers laid siege to Hama, which had largely freed itself from government control earlier this year.


Residents were left cowering in their homes, too terrified to peek through the windows. The city is haunted by memories of the regime’s tactics: In 1982, Assad’s father and predecessor, Hafez, ordered the military to quell a rebellion by Syrian members of the conservative Muslim Brotherhood movement there, sealing off the city in an assault that killed between 10,000 and 25,000 people.


Since the start of Ramadan, over 300 people have been killed in cities including Hama and Deir al-Zour, an oil-rich but largely impoverished region known for its well-armed clans and tribes whose ties extend across eastern Syria and into Iraq.
Assad, Monday, replaced his defense minister with the army chief of staff, saying Gen. Ali Habib was being removed from his post because of health problems. But some analysts said the general was unhappy with the crackdown.