| 

GANPublications

Service Menu

  Add Site to Favorites
  Add Page to Favorites
  Make Homepage
  Share This Page
We have 849 guests and 1 member online
Logo KLM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| | Follow Global_Arab_Net on Twitter | Linkedin
Syria: protests erupt in Damascus in support of Deraa
Global Arab Network - - Adam Turner
Friday, 25 March 2011 12:20

Protests have spread across Syria in solidarity with the

people of southern city Deraa, where a violent crackdown on anti-government protests has left at least 25 people - and possibly as many as 100 - dead.
On Friday, Syrian security forces reportedly opened fire on the protesters in the town of Sanamein, killing 20 people.

"There are more than 20 martyrs...they (security forces) opened fire haphazardly," a witness told Al Jazeera.

Hundreds were also demonstrating in the centre of the Syrian capital Damascus, but the protest was broken up by security forces who arrested dozens of people. Damascus also saw counter demonstrations from supporters of the Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad. Reports suggested up to three demonstrators had been killed by security forces in the Damascus suburb of Mauadamieh, and the district had been sealed off.

Deraa

In Deraa itself, thousands marched behind the coffins of dead protesters, chanting for freedom. They set fire to a statue of the former President Hafez al-Assad - father of Bashar - but were forced to flee when gunfire sounded across the city and tear gas was released.

The situation is potentially quite explosive in the sense that people do not have the opportunity to voice their political views except by violently challenging the regime. Middle East expert Dr Frederic Volpi

Among the targets of the crowd's anger on Friday was Maher al-Assad, a brother of the President and head of the Republican Guard, a special security force, and Rami Makhlouf, a cousin who runs big businesses and is accused by the United States of corruption.

White House spokesman Jay Carney on Friday called for an end to the violence, saying: "We strongly condemn the Syrian Government's attempts to repress and intimidate demonstrators."

Protests also spread, for the first time, to other Syrian cities in support of Deraa - including in a town near Damascus called Tel as well as in Hama, a city in which the late President Hafez al-Assad sent in troops to quell a 1982 armed revolt by the Muslim Brotherhood, killing many thousands.

A Facebook page called Syrian Revolution called on people to gather on the "Friday of Dignity" after prayers, "in all mosques, in all provinces, in the biggest squares".

Middle East expert Dr Frederic Volpi, a senior lecturer at the University of St Andrew's School of International Relations, told Channel 4 News the situation was "quite explosive".

'Bloody week'
"There are still likely to be protests in Deraa as this bloody week draws to a close. But the real test will be whether those demonstrations spread throughout Syria. If they do, then the military will be arguing that their hardline approach was right all along," a British-Arab journalist, formerly based in Syria, writes for Channel 4 News. Read more on Syria: the battle between reform and repression

He said: "The Syrian regime is one of the more tightly controlled regimes in the region. The Assad family has been in charge for many decades and does not show any signs of opening up the regime, which makes the situation potentially quite explosive in the sense that people do not have the opportunity to voice their political views except by violently challenging the regime."

Restraint

The United Nations' human rights office has urged Syria to investigate the deadly police response to the protests in Deraa.

A spokesman said: "We will be watching with some nervousness what will go on in Syria, Yemen and Bahrain."

Dr Volpi said it was possible that President Assad was still formulating a response to the unprecedented revolts.

"Up until now, the regime has been quite ruthless in suppressing opposition," he told Channel 4 News.

"During the former President's regime, it did not hesitate to use the military to violently oppress popular uprisings in various towns in the early 80s. Bashar has not yet faced large-scale uprising, so up until now he has been able to suppress dissent before it gained momentum. What we are witnessing now is the beginning of momentum of popular protest, and it is still unclear how the regime will react in the long-term if the protests keep happening.

"It seems that for now he has chosen a mixed course of promising reform - although that talk could just be for the media - but harshly suppressing the demonstrations. Or it may be that the regime is still considering its options and there may be divisions in the regime over whether to offer political openings and calm down the protesters, or repress the demonstrations."

Whatever happens, he said fears that the country could fall into the hands of extremists if the President falls were unfounded.

"This is the usual line used by the authoritarian regime - if they leave there will be chaos," he said. "There are some radical Islamist movements in Syria as there are across the region but they are not particularly significant."

The protests are part of a wave of uprisings which have spread across the Arab world, after revolts in Tunisia and Egypt

overthrew entrenched leaders.

However, the so-called Arab Spring has been quelled in countries including Libya, Yemen, Syria and Bahrain, leading to violence and bloodshed - and, in Libya, intervention from the west.

Dr Volpi said it was too early to say which trajectory Syria could follow - but stressed it was unlikely to be like Tunisia because "the military in Syria has been known and is likely to use its hardware if the regime decides that it wants to repress its population."

Read More: Source: http://www.channel4.com/news/syria-protests-erupt-in-damascus-in-support-of-deraa

 

Add comment

The opinions of the authors in articles published are theirs alone and do not necessarily reflect the views of Global Arab Network
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Published comments are the opinions of private individuals and do not reflect the views of Global Arab Network

--- Newsletter Subscription

Newsletter & events update

-- Weather London

Clear

25°C

London

Clear

Humidity: 65%

Wind: E at 9 mph

  • Thu Chance of Storm

    26°C 16°C

  • Fri Clear

    21°C 15°C

  • Sat Clear

    22°C 13°C

  • Sun Partly Sunny

    25°C 13°C

Book a Stay at a Golf Resort
-
This site uses advanced software, which requires latest Browser (Internet Explorer 8 or Firefox). Please click to download free
firefoxlogowithebackground_copy
---------------
or free upgrade
internetexplorer8_free_upgrade_copy
---------------
Follow Global_Arab_Net on Twitter
-

Banner
© 2006-2012 Global Arab Network | Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions
Banner