With death toll rising in Tall Kalakh, civilians flee across Lebanese border

By News Wires the 14/05/2011 - 19:46

Hundreds of Syrian civilians fled into Lebanon Saturday as security forces 
opened fire in the Western border town of Tall Kalakh, killing at least four 
people, witnesses said. President Bashar al-Assad had ordered troops not to 
shoot.

AFP - Syrian security forces killed at least four people on Saturday in a 
border town, witnesses said, as the death toll rose in anti-regime protests 
despite a no-shoot order, dialogue offer and troop pullouts.

"The security forces, who had been encircling Tall Kalakh since the morning, 
fired machine guns. At least three people were killed and several were wounded" 
in the western town near the border with Lebanon, a witness said.

A hospital source across the border said a man named as Ali Basha, who was 
admitted to a Lebanese hospital earlier the same day after fleeing Syria with 
gunshot wounds, had died of his injuries.

More than 500 people, mostly women and children, fled across the border from 
Tall Kalakh on Saturday, town councillor Mahmud Khazaal said.

Some of those who entered the area of Wadi Khaled in northern Lebanon suffered 
gunshot wounds, an AFP correspondent said, adding he saw two women and a man 
rushed away by ambulance.

Khazaal said intermittent gunfire could be heard across the border in Syria, 
and that refugees fleeing the violence reported security forces were "shooting 
and besieging Tall Kalakh."

A witness in Tall Kalakh itself told AFP that residents were treating the 
wounded in a small clinic rather than the town hospital to prevent the 
casualties from being arrested or "finished off."

Security forces had fired at a funeral convoy at an entrance to the town, 
killing the mother and wounding three family members of a victim of the 
clashes, according to the Tall Kalakh resident.

The assault came a day after thousands of people took to the streets after the 
main weekly Muslim prayers for anti-regime protests in the town, about 160 
kilometres (100 miles) north of Damascus.

At least five people were killed on Friday, activists said, despite an order 
from President Bashar al-Assad for security forces not to open fire on 
protesters and a government offer of dialogue.

Three people were shot dead in the central city of Homs and two others were 
killed as they emerged from a mosque in Damascus, activists said.

A woman also died on Friday of injuries sustained a few days earlier in Hara, 
near the southern town of Daraa, epicentre of the pro-democracy protests which 
erupted on March 15, they said.

One of those killed on Friday was Fuad Rajab, 40, hit by a bullet to the head 
when security forces fired to break up a demonstration in Homs.

The latest bloodshed cast a pall over the government's pledges to forge ahead 
with reforms in Syria, which has been gripped by two months of deadly protests, 
and triggered fresh condemnation from Western governments.

The United States expressed outrage and French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe 
blaming Assad for the deadly repression.

Britain summoned the Syrian ambassador to London, in coordination with other 
European nations, warning of "further measures" if it fails to stop the 
crackdown.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe, in an interview, said: "The use of tanks 
to respond to the demands of the people for more freedoms and democracy is 
unacceptable."

The army, which has been working alongside the security services to crush the 
protest movement, used batons, tear gas and water cannons to disperse 
demonstrators in Hama, to the north of Homs, activists said.

But the protesters succeeded in ripping down a town hall portrait of Assad, one 
activist said.

Security sources also fired warning shots on Friday to disperse thousands of 
anti-government protesters in Daraa, scene of a massive 10-day military 
operation that ended last week.

Assad's office had reportedly promised that security forces would not open fire 
on demonstrators as the government announced plans to launch a "national 
dialogue."

"A general national dialogue will start in the coming days in every 
governorate," Information Minister Adnan Mahmud said.

He also said army divisions had started a gradual withdrawal from the 
flashpoint coastal town of Banias and its province after ensuring a "return of 
security."

Up to 850 people have been killed and at least 8,000 arrested since the 
protests started in mid-March, human rights groups say. The regime has blamed 
the deadly violence on "armed terrorist gangs" and kept out the foreign media.
Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20110514-syrians-flee-across-border-bloodshed-rises-lebanon




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