Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Government wants new law for elections in Syria

Syria’s prime minister issued a decision to form a committee in charge of preparing a new draft law for general elections to make the country’s elections process compatible with the best internationally recognized standards, the state’s news agency SANA reported on Wednesday.


Rights activists said Wednesday that the regime had arrested at least 10,000 pro-democracy protesters, and several hundred have been reported missing. They said that Syrian forces have been conducting door to door searches in attempts to seize suspects.

According to the SANA, the committee, which is studying different Arab and foreign laws and is in discussion with a number of experts, is expected to submit its work results to Prime Minister Adel Safar within two weeks.
Meanwhile, shells and gunfire rocked the anti-regime protest hub city of Homs on Wednesday as the Syrian army hunted down more dissidents in the flashpoint town of Banias, activists said.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, said the 27-member bloc will look at fresh sanctions this week against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime after already honing in on his inner circle. It has frozen the assets of 13 Syrians close to Mr. Assad, including his brother Maher, the commander of the elite Republican Guards.

“Shelling and automatic gunfire could be heard early Wednesday in the (Homs) neighborhood of Bab Amr and in nearby villages, Mashada, Jobar and Sultanya,” human rights activist Najati Tayara told Agence-France Presse.

He said that the villages, with a combined population of some 100,000 inhabitants—many of them Bedouins—have been the target of a security operation since Monday.

In a bid to snuff out anti-regime protests, the Syrian army has deployed its tanks to several protest hubs and unleashed a wave of arrests focused on dissidents and protest organizers, local human rights activists said.

Secretary General Ban Ki-moon of the United Nations, meanwhile, urged the Syrian president to refrain from using excessive force.

“I urge again President Assad to heed calls for reform and freedom and to desists from excessive force and mass arrest of peaceful demonstrators,” Mr. Ban told journalists in Geneva.

Syrian security forces have earlier released 300 people detained in the coastal city of Banias and restored basic services, a rights group said, within hours of the government saying the threat from protests was receding.

Tanks stormed residential areas of Banias last week, after President Assad deployed the military to crush dissent against three decades of Baath Party rule, having held out the prospect of political reform when unrest first erupted in March.

Water, telecommunications and electricity had been restored, but tanks remained in major streets, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Tuesday. Two hundred people, including pro-democracy protest leaders, were still in jail, it said.

“Scores of those released were severely beaten and subjected to insults. A tank deployed in the square where demonstrations were being held,” Observatory director Rami Abdelrahman said, according to Reuters.

Human rights campaigners said at least six civilians, including four women, where killed in raids on Sunni neighborhoods in the mixed-faith city, and in an attack on an all-women demonstration just outside Banias on Saturday.

Bouthaina Shaaban, a presidential adviser, said security forces were reacting to armed militants who had manipulated “the legitimate demands of the people,” calling them “a combination of fundamentalists, extremists, smugglers, people who are ex-convicts and are being used to make trouble.”

“I think now we’ve passed the most dangerous moment...I hope we are witnessing the end of the story,” Ms. Shaaban told a New York Times correspondent allowed into the country for a few hours. Most foreign journalists have been banned.

Until the uprising began, 46-year-old Mr. Assad—who hails from the minority Shiite Alawite sect—had been emerging from Western isolation after defying the United States over Iraq and reinforcing an anti-Israel bloc with Iran, increasing Syrian Sunni concerns.

“This regime is playing a losing card by sending tanks into cities and besieging them. Syrians have seen the blood of their compatriots spilt. They will never return to being non-persons,” said Suhair al-Atassi, a prominent rights campaigner from Damascus.

Ms. Atassi said a demonstration against President Assad’s autocratic rule erupted on Tuesday in Homs, Syria’s third city, despite a heavy security clampdown, after tanks stormed several neighborhoods on Sunday and three civilians were killed.

Another human rights campaigner in Homs said 1,500 people had fled their homes in three villages near the city where tanks had been deployed. The military forces, which swept into the area on Sunday, killed one woman he told Reuters.

In the eastern city of Qamishli, around 1,000 people marched in a night demonstration demanding the lifting of the sieges of Homs, Banias and southern cities and towns encircled by tanks.

Four civilians in the southern town of Tafas were killed as security forces widened a campaign of arrests, a human rights campaigner in the region said, adding that 300 people had been detained since tanks entered Tafas on Saturday.

Officials have blamed most of the violence on “armed terrorist groups,” backed by Islamists and foreign agitators, and say around 100 soldiers and police have also been killed in the unrest.

United States officials said the first step in a new American approach toward the nation, of 23-million people, would be to declare that Mr. Assad has forfeited his legitimacy to rule, a policy shift that would amount to a call for regime change, The Associated Press reported.

The tougher US line almost certainly would echo demands for “democratic transition” that the administration used in Egypt and is now espousing in Libya, the officials said. But directly challenging President Assad's leadership is a decision fraught with problems: Arab countries are divided, Europe is still trying to gauge its response and there are major doubts over how far the United States could go to back up its words with action.

The Obama administration’s policy deliberations were occurring against a backdrop of ongoing violence in Syria.

Thousands of Syrians have been detained in the past two months, including about 9,000 who are still in custody, said Ammar Qurabi, who heads the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria.

Mr. Qurabi told AP that the group has documented the deaths of 757 people.

“We urge the Syrian government to stop shooting protesters, to allow for peaceful marches and to stop these campaigns of arbitrary arrests and to start a meaningful dialogue,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Tuesday in Washington. He said Mr. Assad still had a chance to make amends, but acknowledged, “the window is narrowing.”

Mr. Toner called the government’s claims of reforms “false,” and demanded that the regime stop shooting protesters even as security forces entered new cities in southern Syria that had been peaceful until now.

Syria has a history of deadly crackdowns. President Assad’s late father, Hafez al-Assad, crushed a Sunni uprising in 1982 by shelling the central town of Hama, killing 10,000 to 25,000 people, according to Amnesty International estimates. Conflicting figures exist and the Syrian government has made no official estimate.

(Dina Al-Shibeeb of Al Arabiya

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