Assad pledge fails to quell Syria anger; troops fire

AMMAN, (Reuters) – Syrian security forces opened  fire on protesters at a funeral yesterday, witnesses said, and  an announcement that President Bashar al-Assad would lift  48-years of emergency rule failed to quell fury on the streets.

Bashar al-Assad

Two witnesses said security forces killed three mourners  when they opened fire on a funeral for a man killed the day  before, which turned into a demonstration on a highway outside  the town of Talbiseh, north of the central city of Homs.

One resident said he counted five tanks and saw soldiers  wearing combat gear deployed around the town.

Chants at protests yesterday, Syria’s Independence Day  holiday, more hostile towards Assad than at previous marches  held in recent weeks, a sign that a promise to lift the  country’s hated emergency law had failed to appease the public.

Opposition figures say they believe new laws that will  replace the emergency rule are likely to retain severe curbs on  political freedoms.

Thousands of demonstrators called for Bashar’s overthrow at  another funeral, held in Hirak town northeast of the southern  city of Deraaa, for soldier Mohammad Ali Radwan al-Qoman, whose  relatives believe he was tortured by the security forces.

“Freedom, freedom Syria, Bashar get out,” people chanted,  their slogans audible in a telephone call with one of the  mourners at the funeral.

A relative, who declined to be named, said Qoman’s family  were told he had been accidentally electrocuted at his unit, but  the 20-year-old conscript had signs of beating to his feet and  doctors at the local hospital said there were signs of torture.

DEATH TOLL RISING

Assad named a new cabinet last week, and in a speech to his  ministers on Saturday said legislation to replace the emergency  law should be ready by next week. But he did not address  protesters’ demands to curb Syria’s security apparatus and  dismantle its authoritarian system.

Protests against Assad’s authoritarian rule began in Deraa  after teenagers were arrested for scrawling pro-democracy  graffiti more than a month ago. Demonstrations have spread  across large parts of the country of 20 million people, inspired  by uprisings in other parts of the Arab world this year.

The death toll, which rights groups put at more than 200  people, continues to rise. Assad says Syria is the target of a  conspiracy and authorities blame the violence on armed gangs and  “infiltrators” supplied with weapons from Lebanon and Iraq.

The unprecedented unrest has spread across the authoritarian  state, posing the sternest challenge yet to Assad, who assumed  the presidency in 2000 when his father, Hafez al-Assad, died  after 30 years in power.