NORTON META TAG

16 July 2011

Syrians Mourn Slain Protesters; Opposition Meets 16JUL11

ONE has to admire the Syrian people for continuing their revolution without violence on their part. With every death they gain legitimacy, with every person on the streets protesting nonviolently they are showing the world incredible bravery. The world must do more to support the Syrian people, iron clad sanctions completely isolating the assad government politically, militarily and economically must be in place and enforced. The international community must also provide refugee assistance to Turkey to provide for those who are receiving sanctuary there. What is not needed, and should not happen, is military action from the outside. assad's days are numbered, and the Syrian people will prevail in their struggle for freedom, democracy and human rights. From NPR....

Tens of thousands of Syrians shouting "We want freedom!" carried slain protesters through the streets Saturday, one day after security forces killed at least 28 people during the largest anti-government demonstrations since the uprising began, activists said.
The funerals came as prominent opposition figures held a conference in neighboring Turkey seeking ways to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad, with a prominent dissident saying he leads "the most tyrannical regime in the world."
"The regime had kidnapped the entire state, and we want it back," said Haitham al-Maleh, who headed the conference in neighboring Turkey. The 80-year-old lawyer, who spent years in Syrian prisons for his political activism, recently left Syria out of fear for his life.
Activists say the government's crackdown on dissent has killed some 1,600 people since March, most of them unarmed protesters. But the regime disputes the toll and blames a foreign conspiracy for the unrest, saying religious extremists — not true reform-seekers — are behind it.
On Friday, hundreds of thousands of Syrians took to the streets across the country in the largest show of the uprising's strength.
Syrians poured into areas where the government crackdown has been most intense — a sign that security forces cannot break the revolt. Thousands turned out in the capital, Damascus, which until now had seen only scattered protests.
A witness in Damascus told The Associated Press on Saturday that tens of thousands from Damascus and the suburbs held funerals for slain protesters, carrying the bodies overhead on stretchers and shouting "God is Great!" and "We want freedom!"
Like most witnesses in Syria, he spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. The government has banned most foreign media and restricted local coverage, making it difficult to independently confirm accounts on the ground.
The Local Coordinating Committees, which help organize and track the protests, said they have the names of 28 people confirmed dead. Other estimates of the death toll were as high as 41.
Also Saturday, security forces continued a weekslong operation in the restive Idlib province, near the Turkish border. The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said authorities raided homes in the village Kfar Nabl and made scores of arrests.
The government crackdown has led to international condemnation and sanctions.
"What's happening in Syria is very uncertain and troubling because many of us had hoped that President Assad would make the reforms that were necessary," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told reporters in Istanbul on Saturday. "The brutality has to stop, there must be a legitimate sincere effort with the opposition to try to make changes."
"Yesterday we witnessed the largest demonstrations to date in Syria, an effort to try to convey directly to the government the pent-up desire of the Syrian people for the kind of reforms that they have been promised," she added.
Saturday's opposition conference in Turkey — called the National Salvation Conference — was attended by some 400 dissidents looking to form a unified opposition to Assad, whose family has ruled Syria for more than 40 years.
The conference is part of a series of meetings the opposition has held recently in Turkey and Europe in an attempt to organize their ranks. Activists in Damascus also took part in Saturday's meeting by telephone.
Organizers had planned to hold a conference in Damascus in tandem with the Turkey meeting, but it was canceled after Friday's bloodshed. The Local Coordination Committees said at least 14 people were killed near a hall where the conference was to be held.
In Turkey, al-Maleh accused Assad of leading a "fascist regime" and praised the "heroic people of Syria" for rising up against him.
Opposition figure Mashaal Tammo, addressing the conference by phone from Damascus, said Assad had lost his legitimacy to rule and called on him to step down.
In an emotional speech, he said the "the existence of the regime was no longer justified," and called for a peaceful transition to a civil, pluralistic and democratic state.
Abdul-Karim Rihawi, the Damascus-based head of the Syrian Human Rights League, said 28 intellectuals and artists were released from detention Saturday, three days after they were arrested for taking part in an anti-government protest in Damascus.
But regime supporters taunted them and threw stones at them as they left court, Rihawi said.
———
AP Writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report from Istanbul.
———
Zeina Karam can be reached on http://twitter.com/zkaram

No comments:

Post a Comment