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Sunday, May 8, 2011

Syria: Security forces enter Homs to crush protests

Anti-government protests in Homs, Syria (6 May 2011) Anti-government protests were held in Homs on Friday after prayers
Syrian security forces have moved into parts of the city of Homs, a centre of the nationwide protests against President Bashar al-Assad.
There were reports of heavy shooting in the city and a number of people were arrested.
State media said several "armed saboteurs" had been killed or wounded, arrests made and quantities of arms and ammunition seized.
Police operations are also continuing in Baniyas and Deraa.
Some 15 people were shot dead in Homs on Friday as they staged demonstrations after weekly prayers.
The authorities say 11 soldiers and police were also killed, blaming "armed terrorist groups" for the violence.
On Sunday night, troops and police moved into Homs with tanks, said Syrian state TV, confirming reports from activists and residents.
Heavy machine-gun fire and shelling were heard on the streets.
Electricity and communications to the city of one million people were cut before the operation began, a technique which the security forces are reported to have used before in other cities.
'Punishment' Foreign journalists are banned from entering Syria, so reports are difficult to independently verify.
BBC map
In the coastal city of Baniyas, activists say six people were shot dead on Friday night and at least 200 people - including a 10-year-old boy - arrested.
"It appears to be designed to punish his parents," said Rami Abdul-Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
He told reporters that water, electricity and nearly all communication connections to Baniyas city had been cut and that snipers had taken up position on rooftops in the southern districts.
In Deraa, the southern city where the unrest began in March, residents also remain cut off from the rest of the country.
Scores of people have been killed in Deraa during a 10-day security operation.
Across Syria, protesters have been calling for greater political rights and personal freedoms. Some are calling for the downfall of the regime.
The unrest in Syria poses the most serious challenge to Mr Assad since he succeeded his father, Hafez, in 2000.
On Friday, the US said the violence against protesters was "deplorable" and pledged a "strong international response" against Syria's government if Damascus does not end its brutal crackdown.
More than 500 people are thought to have been killed since mid-March.
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 SOURCE  BBC NEWS

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