Witness: 6 dead from sniper fire in Daraa as fear in Syria grows
By the CNN Wire Staff
April 27, 2011 -- Updated 0849 GMT (1649 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

    * The U.N. Security Council will be briefed Wednesday on the chaos in Syria
    * The U.S. ambassador to the U.N. calls acts by the Syrian regime 
"abhorrent and deplorable"
    * Human rights group: More than 400 have died since March 18 amid a 
government crackdown
    * The Syrian ambassador to the U.N. rejects a call for an independent 
investigation

(CNN) -- Terror reigned in the Syrian city of Daraa on Wednesday as 
intermittent gunfire rang out overnight and snipers held their positions on 
rooftops, a witness there said.

He said the situation "is worsening day after day" where the country's recent 
anti-government protests started.

Five people were killed by sniper fire on Tuesday, including a 6-year-old girl, 
said the witness, who is not being identified for security reasons. But no 
funerals have taken place, he said, because the cemetery is occupied by 
security forces.

Half a world away, United Nations Security Council will be briefed Wednesday on 
the crisis in Syria when it meets in a private session, U.N. Secretary-General 
Ban Ki-moon said.

Syria's ambassador to the United Nations rejected Tuesday a call for an 
independent investigation into the reported killings of hundreds of 
demonstrators by government forces.

"Syria has a government, has a state," Bashar Jaafari told reporters at the 
world body. "We can undertake any investigation by our own selves, with full 
transparency. We have nothing to hide. We regret what is going on, but you 
should also acknowledge that this unrest and riots, in some of their aspects, 
have hidden agendas."
Syria crackdown under way
Bloody new crackdown in Syria
Map: Unrest in Syria

Jaafari called Syrian President Bashar al-Assad a reformer who has been working 
to effect change by issuing decrees that, among other things, lifted the 
decades-old emergency law and allowed peaceful demonstrations.

He said Syria's own National Investigation Commission has already undertaken an 
investigation into the violence against civilians and the military, and will 
issue its findings at a later date.

"So we are doing our homework; we don't need help from anybody," Jaafari said.

He urged the Security Council to rely on official reports, not on media reports.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice called the violence wielded by 
the government of Syria "abhorrent and deplorable," adding, "The outrageous use 
of violence to quell protests must come to an end, and now."

The Syrian government's repeal of its emergency law and allowance for peaceful 
demonstrations "were clearly not serious, given the continued violent 
repression against protesters," she said.

The United States is pursuing "a range of possible policy options," Rice said, 
including the imposition of additional sanctions.

"The Syrian people's call for freedom of expression, association, peaceful 
assembly and the ability to choose their leaders freely must be heard," she 
said.

Rice accused al-Assad of "disingenuously blaming outsiders while, at the same 
time, seeking Iranian assistance in repressing Syria's citizens through the 
same brutal tactics that have been used by the Iranian regime."

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Tuesday "the situation in Syria is 
unacceptable." He added that -- as has been the case for the Ivory Coast and 
Libya -- "nothing will happen without a resolution from the Security Council."

Syrian Human Rights Information Link reported Tuesday that more than 400 people 
have died since March 18 in incidents linked to the government crackdown on 
protesters seeking reform.

While the vast majority are apparently civilians, the group's list describes a 
few of the dead as members of the army or police.

The United Nations has said it has information that 76 people were killed on 
Friday alone, apparently during peaceful marches. The organization said the 
death toll from that day could be much higher.
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RELATED TOPICS

    * Syria
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CNN cannot independently confirm death tolls and witness accounts of the bloody 
crackdown. The Syrian government has not granted CNN access to the country.

Human Rights Watch's U.N. director, Philippe Bolopion, called on the Security 
Council to "condemn abuses by the Syrian government, support an international 
investigation and sanction those ordering the shooting and torture of 
protesters."

He called Syria's campaign for a seat on the Human Rights Council "a slap in 
the face to the victims of the current crackdown, and an embarrassment to those 
who have supported its candidacy."

In state-run media, al-Assad's regime has described the protesters as "armed 
criminal groups" and said its soldiers and police were working to stop them.

After witnesses told CNN Monday about thousands of troops and police entering 
the city of Daraa and firing indiscriminately, killing people in the streets, 
the Syrian government insisted that the citizens of Daraa had asked for the 
troops to stop "terrorist" groups.

Razan Zaytouni, a human rights activist in Damascus, refuted the government's 
claim.

"It's just rubbish, actually. People, innocent people are killed now, including 
children and women. We got two names of children who were killed," Zaytouni 
said. "The only terrorists are those who are killing our people there now."

In the Damascus suburb of Douma, a resident who asked to be referred to as 
Rawwad said that, over the past several days, security personnel had been 
arresting people they recognized as members of the protest movement.

The Syrian protests -- part of a wave of uprisings in the Arab world -- began 
in Daraa last month following a crackdown by security forces on peaceful 
demonstrators protesting the arrests of youths who scribbled anti-government 
graffiti. Protesters have asked for freedom and regime reform, and public 
discontent with al-Assad's government has mounted.

Activists also want the easing of the ruling Baath Party's power and a law that 
would permit the establishment of independent political parties.

Fawaz Gerges, an analyst on the region with the London School of Economics, 
said Tuesday that "the regime has decided to crush the protesters, to silence 
the opposition."

Gerges added that Al-Assad is "using now massive force in order to break the 
will of the protesters. But even if he wins the first round, the situation is 
far from over ... The reality is President Assad will emerge as a much weakened 
president after his particular confrontation because he has lost much 
legitimacy and authority inside Syria."

Zaytouni, the human rights activist in Damascus, insisted on being identified 
publicly -- despite concerns for her own safety.

"The regime is playing very dirty rule about media. They made all this 
propaganda. They made all of these lies," she said. "We see what is going on 
the ground -- we who are protesting, those who are killed in the street, those 
who are arrested and tortured. We know the truth, and we need the whole world 
to know it."



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