Security forces open fire as thousands rally for freedoms
By News Wires the 22/04/2011 - 13:22

Security forces fired on protesters Friday in the city of Homs as tens of 
thousands took to the streets in cities across Syria to call for more freedoms, 
just a day after President Bashar al-Assad ended 50 years of emergency rule.

Reuters - Syrian security forces fired at pro-democracy protests which broke 
out across the country on Friday, witnesses said, as demonstrators demanded an 
end to President Bashar al-Assad's 11-year rule.

Tens of thousands of Syrians took the streets at the start of a sixth week of 
protests and chanted for the "overthrow of the regime", reflecting the steady 
hardening of demands which initially focused on reforms and greater freedoms.
 
"God, Freedom and Syria only. God is greatest," was another rallying cry that 
echoed after Friday prayers.
 
Protests swept the country of 20 million people, from the Mediterranean city of 
Banias to the eastern towns of Deir al-Zor and Qamishli. In Damascus security 
forces fired teargas to disperse 2,000 protesters in the district of Midan.
 
More than 220 protesters have been killed since unrest broke out on March 18 in 
southern Syria, rights groups say, including 21 protesters killed this week in 
the central city of Homs.
 
Human rights lawyer Razan Zaytouna told Al Arabiya television she had names of 
six people killed on Friday, including two in the central city of Homs and two 
others in the
southern town of Izra'a.
 
It was not immediately possible to confirm the number of deaths, but one 
witness told Reuters that at least two people had been killed in the Damascus 
district of Barzeh. Activists said they had heard reports of numerous other 
deaths in unrest in rural areas and suburbs around the capital.
 
Assad signed a decree on Thursday lifting emergency law, imposed by his Baath 
Party when it took power in a coup 48 years ago, but other laws still give 
security forces wide powers and opposition figures have stepped up demands for 
concessions.
 
As in the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions that ousted Hosni Mubarak and Zine 
al-Abidine Ben Ali citizens are rebelling not just against a lack of freedom 
and opportunity but against security forces impunity and corruption that has 
enriched the elites while one-third of Syrians live below the poverty line.
 
In the first joint statement since the protests broke out, activists 
coordinating the mass demonstrations demanded on Friday the abolition of Baath 
Party monopoly on power and the establishment of a democratic political system.
 
"All prisoners of conscience must be freed. The existing security apparatus has 
to be dismantled and replaced by one with specific jurisdiction and which 
operates according to law," they said in the statement, which was sent to 
Reuters.
 
Aided by his family and a pervasive security apparatus, Assad, 45, has absolute 
power in Syria.
 
FORCES "FIRE AT PROTESTERS"
 
In the city of Hama, where Assad's father ruthlessly crushed an armed Islamist 
uprising nearly 30 years ago, a witness said security forces opened fire to 
prevent protesters reaching the headquarters of the ruling Baath Party.
 
"We saw two snipers on the building. None of us had weapons. There are 
casualties, possibly two dead," said the witness.
 
Witnesses said security forces also shot at demonstrators in the Damascus 
district of Barzeh, the central city of Homs, the Damascus suburb of Douma, and 
on protesters heading for the city of Deraa, where Syria's uprising first broke 
out five weeks ago.
 
Ahead of the main weekly prayers on Friday, which have often proved the 
launching pads for major demonstrations, the army deployed in Homs and police 
put up checkpoints across Damascus, apparently trying to prevent protests 
sweeping in from suburbs.
 

After prayers finished in Deraa, several thousand protesters gathered chanting 
anti-Assad slogans. "The Syrian people will not be subjugated. Go away doctor 
(Assad). We will trample on you and your slaughterous regime", they shouted.
 
Joshua Landis, a Syria expert at Oklahoma University, said the Syrian 
government had "drawn a line in the sand" after offering concessions, and that 
Assad made clear he believed "there is no longer reason to demonstrate".
 
"The organisers of the revolution vowed to turn out their largest numbers yet 
... They are determined to bring down the regime and understand that this is 
their chance," he said.
 
"Friday will be a day of reckoning".
 
Joe Stork of Human Right Watch said Assad's "reforms will only be meaningful if 
Syria's security services stop shooting, detaining, and torturing protesters."
 
Assad's conciliatory move to lift the state of emergency followed a familiar 
pattern since the unrest began a month ago: pledges of reform are made before 
Friday when demonstrations are the strongest, and are usually followed by an 
intense crackdown.
 
The authorities have blamed armed groups, infiltrators and Sunni Muslim 
militant organisations for provoking violence at demonstrations by firing on 
civilians and security forces.
 
Western and other Arab countries have mostly muted their criticism of the 
killings in Syria for fear of destabilising the country, which plays a 
strategic role in many of the conflicts
in the Middle East.
 
Syria is technically at war with Israel but has kept its  Golan Heights front 
with the Jewish state quiet since a 1974 ceasefire. It has long borders with 
Iraq, and supports the
Palestinian Islamist group Hamas and the Shi'ite Hezbollah movement in 
neighbouring Lebanon, also backed by Iran.

Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20110422-syrians-protest-assad-reform-promises-emergency-law




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