Syrian troops shoot at unarmed civilians as ‘children’s Friday’ protests start
Syrian troops shoot at unarmed civilians as ‘children’s Friday’ protests start.
Al Arabiya
Friday, 03 June 2011
Protesters call for the toppling of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad. (File Photo)
The regime of President Bashar Al Assad of Syria ratcheted up its brutal crackdown against pro-democracy protesters on Friday, shooting at unarmed civilians in Ankhal, close to the protest-bastion city of Deraa.
The number of new deaths resulting from the firings on Friday could not be independently confirmed. An activist group said, however, that Syrian troops pounded Ankhal with artillery and heavy machinegun fire, killing at least two people in the latest onslaught.
The Local Coordination Committees, which helps organize and document Syria’s protests, said troops also opened fire on residents fleeing the bombing of Rastan. Friday’s deaths bring the toll in Rastan and nearby Talbisseh to 74 killed since the attack started last Saturday.
Rights group said more than 1,100 people have been killed since the revolt against Mr. Assad erupted in mid-March.
Syrian activists called protests on Friday over the dozens of children killed in anti-government protests after the opposition demanded President Assad’s “immediate resignation.”
Snubbing government concessions, opposition groups at a meeting in Turkey called late Thursday for parliamentary and presidential elections within a year of Mr. Assad’s ouster and vowed to work “to bring down the regime.”
US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, meanwhile, said the international community needs to be more united on dealing with the Syria government’s crackdown on the pro-democracy movement.
“Right now the attitude of the international community is not as united as we are seeking to make it,” she told reporters in Washington, apparently alluding to Russia’s moves blocking a proposed UN Security Council condemnation of Syria.
Activists called for “Children’s Friday” protests to honor the children killed in the uprising, such as 13-year-old Hamza al-Khatib whom activists say was tortured to death, a charge denied by the authorities, and to commemorate the nearly 30 children killed by the regime in the uprising.
UNICEF says at least 30 children have been shot dead in the revolt against President Assad’s autocratic regime.
The more than 10-week-old revolt in Syria was sparked by the arrest and torture of 15 children and adolescents accused of painting anti-regime graffiti in the southern town of Deraa, which became a flashpoint of the deadly protests.
“A photo of a child who is dead or being tortured or being mutilated is much more powerful than of an adult,” said UNICEF spokesman Patrick McCormick, referring to the Facebook campaign focused on the fate of Hamza.
“The use of Facebook or any image especially of children is incredibly powerful,” he told AFP. “They are innocent victims here, they get caught in the middle, and it is not their fight.”
Mr. McCormick warned the situation would worsen with the end of the academic year. “It will leave the children and teenagers more vulnerable because they will be out and about and not sitting in a classroom.”
On the ground, security forces armed with heavy machine guns shot dead 15 civilians in Rastan on Thursday, a human rights activist said, adding to a toll of at least 43 killed in towns of the flashpoint Homs region since Sunday.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s special advisers on prevention of genocide and responsibility to protect civilian populations expressed alarm on Thursday at the mounting death toll in Syria.
“We are particularly alarmed at the apparently systematic and deliberate attacks by police, military, and other security forces against unarmed civilians,” said advisers Francis Deng and Edward Luck.
More than 1,100 civilians have been killed and at least 10,000 arrested in a brutal crackdown on almost daily anti-regime demonstrations in Syria since March 15, human rights organizations say.
The government insists the unrest is the work of “armed terrorist gangs” backed by Islamists and foreign agitators.
(Dina Al-Shibeeb, an editor at Al Arabiya English, can be reached at: dina.ibrahim@mbc.net)
Explore posts in the same categories: Uncategorized
Leave a comment