SAT 27 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Sep 8, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Homs under heavy fire after Arabi visit delayed

AMMAN/DAMASCUS: Syrian forces backed by tanks killed at least 14 civilians in the city of Homs Wednesday in one of the fiercest military assaults on an urban center during the crackdown on six months of pro-democracy protests, activists and residents said.


Residents said the assault concentrated on old districts that have been seeing daily street demonstrations demanding the removal of President Bashar Assad.


It came as the Arab League announced that its secretary-general would visit Syria Saturday after a last-minute cancellation Tuesday, and Arab foreign ministers will meet next week to convey their concerns over the continuing crackdown.


“Military helicopters are flying overhead and snipers are shooting from rooftops at anything. Tank machine-gun fire is coming at us like rain,” a resident of the Bab Sbaaa district of Homs who did not want to be further identified told Reuters by satellite phone.


Human rights campaigners say Syria’s ruling hierarchy has stepped up efforts to crush demonstrations in recent weeks, including more frequent military raids, targeted assassinations of protest leaders and the arrest of thousands of Syrians.


Assad, 45, has repeatedly said he is facing a foreign conspiracy to divide Syria. The authorities blame armed militant groups for the bloodshed, and say 500 police and soldiers have been killed, with the military deployed to protect the public from terrorists.


Homs, hometown of Assad’s wife Asma, is situated on the main northern highway 165 kilometers from Damascus. Old districts such as Bab Sbaaa, Bab Dreib and Bab Hut have seen the biggest daily protests to demand that Assad step down. Their mazes of streets aid protesters in their attempts to escape from security forces, activists and residents said.


Residents of the nearby town of Rastan posted a YouTube video apparently showing 12 defecting soldiers in military fatigues appearing from a balcony of a commercial building to ecstatic cheers and applause of protesters in the streets below.


“We will be one hand to bring down Bashar and every traitor,” said one soldier from a microphone in the video.
Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Arabi had originally been expected to travel to Damascus Wednesday. Arab diplomats said the visit was delayed at Syria’s request.


An Arab diplomatic source said Syrian authorities delayed the visit after Arabi met Syrian opposition members and because of a leaked Qatari proposal for possible demands that Arab states would make to Assad. The Qatari proposal had not yet been adopted, the source said.


Louay Hussein, a prominent opposition figure, told Reuters that the Arab League initiative had not stopped the attack on Homs from being “more random and severely repressive than what we had seen before”, leading to more calls for armed resistance.
He pointed to another YouTube video purportedly filmed in Homs this week, which showed several soldiers in uniform next to light tank shooting a man lying on the street several times over. One soldier congratulates another for continuing to fire at the body, saying: “You are truly a beast.”


A local group, the Homs City Neighborhoods Union, said most telephone lines and Internet connections with Homs had been cut.


Assad, who inherited power from his father in 2000, has promised to implement reforms, including a multi-party parliamentary election by February, but independent lawyers said a new political party law kept an old majority quota system for farmers and workers whose representation is controlled by the state.


Tanks and troops moved into Homs about four months ago and occupied the main square in the city in an attempt to end protests demanding the removal of Assad, who is from the minority Alawite sect in the mainly Sunni Muslim country. Alawites dominate senior ranks of Syria’s security forces and core army units that have besieged towns and cities.


Most of the casualties reported in Homs since the army deployed there have been caused by assaults on Sunni areas, but activists have also reported the deaths of several Alawite residents in apparent revenge killings.
Activists and residents have also reported an increasing number of defections among the mostly Sunni rank and file military personnel in Homs and its surrounding countryside.


Syrian authorities, which have barred most independent media from the country since the uprising began, say there have been no desertions from the military.


The International Committee of the Red Cross said Tuesday it was seeking access to thousands of demonstrators believed to be held in informal detention centers. A day earlier, the ICRC announced Syria had opened a prison for the first time.


Human rights campaigners say Syrian forces have arrested tens of thousands of people during the uprising, with many being housed in security police buildings off-limits to the ICRC.


The European Union, which imposed a ban on purchases of Syrian oil on Sept. 3, was working on a new round of sanctions, the French Foreign Ministry said Tuesday, to target entities that enable the “daily repression” of civilians.
France Wednesday accused Syria of “crimes against humanity” and expressed hope that Russia, would change its current stance and back U.N. condemnation of the crackdown.


“The Syrian regime has committed crimes against humanity,” French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said during talks in Moscow with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.
“The way it [the Syrian regime] suppressed the popular protests is unacceptable,” he said.
The Syrian authorities, he said, should be sent “a powerful signal that such actions cannot continue.”

 



 
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