Friday, April 22, 2011

What Causes Socks To Slip Down In Shoes

Syrian Repression causes at least 50 deaths in opposition marches

security forces deployed by the regime of Bashar Assad in several Syrian cities to house the thousands of demonstrators, another day, have called for reforms in the street and the end of the dictatorship, opened fire on the crowd. Various reports said that more than fifty dead and dozens injured, according to several sources of opposition and human rights organizations.
news source country "Demonstrations have spread to most cities and villages of Syria," said Efe lawyer and human rights activist Haizam Maleh. The largest number of victims occurred in the city of Homs, in central Mexico and the southern town of Izra. The Qatari Al Jazeera chain raises the death toll of 70.
"Thousands of people took to the streets. I myself have helped to move people with gunshot wounds in the legs" Reuters explained to a witness of the riots in the neighborhood of Douma, on the outskirts of Damascus. A resident of the town of Dera has told Al Jazeera that the security forces prevented ambulances from leaving hospitals to treat the wounded.
Tens of thousands of people have supported the call by opposition groups and have been thrown out at the end of Muslim prayers in Damascus and Homs Deraa. The protests have served to measure the real impact of the decision by President Asad to remove the emergency via a state of emergency in force since 1963. A decree which abolished the State's emergency powers and political tribunals but that seems to be late for opponents, interpreting the gesture of openness as a sign of weakness of the regime. "We will continue with peaceful protests. We welcome the lifting of the state of emergency. But it has not been lifted. Fallen ... and with the help of God we embark on freedom," said a comment posted on one page Activists on Facebook. In Damascus, the army and police have also launched tear gas to disperse the crowd gathered in the historic district of Midan. "Police have fired tear gas from the rooftops. There were more than 2,000 protesters and hundreds of them now have regrouped," said a witness in a telephone conversation Reuters. "The people want to overthrow the regime" has been one of the most chanted slogans this morning in Damascus. In parallel with the street demonstrations, the Syrian activists this morning issued a joint statement demanding the abolition of the Baath Party Syrian president and the establishment of a democratic system. The local coordinating committees, which represent the different Syrian provinces, have ensured that "the slogans of freedom and dignity can not be achieved if there is no place for peaceful change toward democracy." "All prisoners of conscience should be released. The security apparatus must be dismantled and replaced by another jurisdiction limited and operating under the dictates of the law, "the statement concluded.
Day
critical opposition groups faced a critical time for the Assad regime, dubbed by protesters as Good Friday, with the call for protests more than 40 cities in the Arab country. It was the biggest challenge to date launched by the critical movements against the Syrian dictatorship, which is playing a double game of concessions and repression that has failed to quell the desire for change in the majority of Syrian population.
Muslim prayers on Friday marked the starting point of a decisive day for the future of the revolt in Syria. The organizers themselves admitted they expected new shootings and further deaths after the regime's repression left between Saturday and Tuesday only fifty dead in Homs, the third largest city and epicenter of the revolt. 220 dead

Homs Residents have set up citizen patrols to defend against the attacks of the dreaded Shabih, hired guns of the regime who have infiltrated the peaceful protests to encourage violence and lead to chaos. More than 220 opponents have been killed in Syria since protests erupted last March 18 in the town of Dara, south of the country, including 21 killed in Homs opponents on Monday, according to figures offered by Human Rights Watch (HRW).
From New York, this humanitarian organization has warned that the decision of the roast, to lift the state of emergency must be accompanied by concrete measures "to end the serious human rights violations committed daily by the security forces." "The reforms will only be important if the Syrian security forces stop shooting, arrest and torture protesters," said the deputy director of HRW's Middle East, Joe Stork. "President Assad has the opportunity to show what their intentions are allowing protests (this Friday) without any violent repression."


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