Syrian tanks shell towns, at least 19 killed

AMMAN, (Reuters) – Syrian tanks shelled residential  districts in two towns yesterday and at least 19 people were  killed across the country, rights campaigners said, as President  Bashar al-Assad’s forces fought to crush a seven-week uprising.

Assad, fighting the most serious challenge to his  11-year-rule, has sent troops and tanks into several cities in  the last two weeks to try to bring to an end protests inspired  by Arab revolts which toppled leaders in Egypt and Tunisia.

Protesters, who first called for reforms and greater  freedoms, have hardened their demands with many chanting for the  overthrow of the president who inherited the authoritarian  powers of his father Hafez al-Assad, who died in 2000.

Yesterday was one of the bloodiest days apart from the main  Friday protest days, when thousands use the platform of weekly  Muslim prayers to demonstrate. Most of the violence occurred in  the southern Deraa province, where unrest erupted on March 18.

Ammar Qurabi, head of the National Organisation for Human  Rights in Syria, said 13 people were killed in the town of  Harra, about 60 km (40 miles) northwest of Deraa city.

Most were killed when tanks shelled four houses. Two people  — a child and a nurse — died in gunfire, he said.

Tanks also shelled a residential district in Homs, Syria’s  third largest city, and at least five people were killed, a  rights campaigner in the city said. A sixth person was killed by  a sniper shot to the head as he stood in front of his house.

“The security forces are terrorising urban centres,” said  Najati Tayara, the activist in Homs.

There was no immediate comment from Syrian authorities, who  have banned most international media from Syria, making it  difficult to verify accounts of events.

In Syria’s second city Aleppo near the border with Turkey,  security forces used batons to disperse a pro-democracy  demonstration by 2,000 students on Wednesday at a university  campus, a witness at the scene said.

Another resident of Aleppo said secret police had closed the  main road leading from the centre of the city to the campus in  the western Furqan district.

The violence has been denounced in the West, where countries  have imposed limited sanctions on Syrian leaders but stopped  short of calling for Assad to step down, as they have in the  case of Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi.

Syria withdrew its candidacy yesterday for a spot on the  top U.N. human rights body. Its ambassador to the United  Nations, Bashar Ja-afari, said Damascus was “reconsidering our  priorities” and would try again in 2013.

U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice said Syria’s bid was blocked by  Asian states with the “good sense” to withdraw support from a  country “in the process of killing its own people on the  streets, arresting thousands and terrorising a population that  is seeking to express itself through largely peaceful means”.

THOUSANDS ARRESTED

In Damascus, security forces have arrested opposition leader  Mazen Adi, from the People’s Democratic Party founded by Syria’s  top dissident, Riad al-Turk, according to rights activists.

They added that thousands of pro-democracy Syrians had been  arrested and beaten in the last two months, including scores yesterday in Homs and in the coastal city of Banias.

Assad adviser Bouthaina Shaaban said this week authorities  had “passed the most dangerous moment” of the protest and that  she had met a group of veteran opposition figures, promising  them a freer press, political parties and an election law.

Assad has responded to the unrest with promises of reform,  lifting a 48-year-old state of emergency. The state news agency  SANA said on Wednesday a government committee had been formed to  draft a new election law, but gave no details.