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Syria Protest Crackdown Leaves At Least 32 Dead During Assault On North

Syria Protests

SELCAN HACAOGLU AND ZEINA KARAM   06/10/11 11:35 PM ET   AP

YAYLADAGI, Turkey — Elite Syrian forces moved swiftly through the country's restive north on Friday, raining tank shells on rebellious towns, torching farmland and shooting protesters who tried to tear down a poster of President Bashar Assad, activists and refugees said.

At least 32 people were killed, activists said, and undaunted protests extended to every major city.

The leader of neighboring Turkey, angered by violence that has sent more than 4,000 Syrians streaming across the border, accused the Assad regime of "savagery."

Backed by helicopters and tanks, the troops responsible for most of Friday's violence were believed to be from an elite division commanded by Assad's younger brother, Maher. The decision to mobilize his unit against the most serious threats to the 40-year Assad regime could be a sign of concern about the loyalty of regular conscripts.

Syrians who escaped from the town of Jisr al-Shughour into Turkey said the army came after police turned their guns on each other and soldiers refused orders to fire on protesters last week. Syrian state television has said 120 officers and security personnel were killed by gunmen. A man who remained behind said the few residents left were hoping barricades of burning tires could hold off the reinforcements surrounding them.

Twenty-five miles (40 kilometers) to the southeast in the town of Maaret al-Numan, thousands of protesters overwhelmed security officers and torched the courthouse and police station, and the army responded with tank shells, a Syrian opposition figure told The Associated Press by telephone, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Syria's state-run television appeared to confirm at least part of the report, saying gunmen opened fire on police stations, causing casualties among security officials.

Syria's government has a history of violent retaliation against dissent, including a three-week bombing campaign against the city of Hama that crushed an uprising there in 1982. Jisr al-Shughour itself came under government shelling in 1980, with a reported 70 people killed.

Confirming information out of Syria is difficult. Communications are cut in areas where the uprising is strongest. Syrians who speak openly face retribution from the regime, and foreign journalists have been expelled.

Refugees trying to escape into Turkey, who now number more than 4,000, gave a more detailed picture of the events in the north.

A group of young men who arrived at the Turkish village of Guvecci on Friday said relatives who stayed behind told them Syrian forces were burning homes and fields in the village of Sirmaniyeh, near Jisr al-Shughour. One of the men said a helicopters had fired on a mosque there, the refused to say anything more.

"They are burning down everything there," said a young man who gave his name as Adil. "They said they even killed animals. The people have no weapons, they can't defend themselves. The only thing they can do is escape."

As he spoke another Syrian got a call telling him his cousin had died in Latakia, where activists said security forces fired on protesters who tried to tear down a giant poster of Assad, killing seven. The young man whose phone rang slumped and wept.

The Local Coordination Committees, a group that documents anti-government protests in Syria, said 32 people were killed on Friday, half of them in Idlib, the province home to Maaret al-Numan and Jisr al-Shughour. Late Friday, Syrian television said troops reached the entrances of Jisr al-Shughour and detained members of "armed groups."

Citing contacts inside Syria, Rami Abdul-Rahman, the London-based head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said more than 10,000 soldiers were involved.

Witnesses contacted by telephone said most residents had abandoned the town of up to 45,000.

Syria's government invited an AP reporter to accompany troops to Jisr al-Shughour, apparently reflecting a new effort to counter criticism and prove the existence of armed gangs.

In Sirmaniyeh, where the refugee reported the torching of homes and fields, journalists accompanying Syrian troops in the morning saw a parked army bus, its front windshield smashed by gunfire. The army said the bus was ambushed early Friday, and that driver escaped unhurt after a bullet struck his protective vest.

Journalists were also shown eight grenades on a roadside in Ziara, another village in the area.

"Now we feel safe," said Walida Sheikho, a 50-year-old woman who welcomed the troops in the village of Foro, near Jisr al-Shughour.

She and other residents offered food, water and juice to the Syrian troops and said they had appealed for help from the army.

Jisr al-Shughour is a predominantly Sunni town with some Alawite and Christian villages nearby. Most Syrians are Sunni Muslim, but Assad and the ruling elite belong to the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

State television said armed groups torched crops and wheat fields around Jisr al-Shughour as the army approached.

A man in the town blamed security forces for the crop-burning. He said the few remaining residents were collecting tires to burn in an attempt to try to block the army advance. Speaking by phone, he told an AP reporter in Beirut that about 40 tanks rolled into a village five miles (12 kilometers) from Jisr al-Shughour. He and other activists reported hearing bursts of machine gun fire.

Other protests in Syria occurred in neighborhoods in the capital, Damascus, and the major city of Aleppo, which are vital to Assad's authoritarian regime. But the demonstrations in those cities have been relatively limited in scope compared to other restive areas.

Activists said security forces opened fire on protesters near the Sheikh Jaber mosque in the Damascus suburb of Qaboun, killing three people and wounding several others. One activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals, said there were snipers on rooftops and security checkpoints outside local mosques.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said he will keep the frontier open to Syrians fleeing violence, and the Turkish military was increasing border security to better manage the refugee influx. He singled out Assad's brother for criticism.

"I say this clearly and openly, from a humanitarian point of view, his brother is not behaving in a humane manner. And he is chasing after savagery," Erdogan said late Thursday.

Human rights groups say the crackdown has killed more than 1,400 people, most of them unarmed civilians. The government says a total of 500 security forces have also been killed.

"Unfortunately, it is clear that things are not going in the right direction," Turkish President Abdullah Gul said, according to the Anatolia news agency. "We are following things with sadness."

On Friday, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon issued a note highlighting his deep concern over the continuing violence in Syria and its heavy toll on the civilian population and called on the government to respect the rights of the Syrian people.

U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said that Ban tried to speak with Assad several times, but he would not come to the phone.

"The Secretary General has been keen to speak to Assad. He tried to place a call yesterday but unfortunately the president was not available," Nesirky said. "He tried to place the call more than one time but he was not available."

___

Karam reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer Albert Aji in the Jisr al-Shughour area contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects spelling of U.N. spokesman's name to Nesirky. AP Video. For global distribution.)

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YAYLADAGI, Turkey — Elite Syrian forces moved swiftly through the country's restive north on Friday, raining tank shells on rebellious towns, torching farmland and shooting protesters who tried ...
YAYLADAGI, Turkey — Elite Syrian forces moved swiftly through the country's restive north on Friday, raining tank shells on rebellious towns, torching farmland and shooting protesters who tried ...
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Dale Andersen
I use my real name...and you don't...
11:46 PM on 06/11/2011
Here’s a line from the movie, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. It’s a sheriff telling Butch that the West has changed, but it could just as well apply to the Syrian dictator:

“You should have let yourself get killed a long time ago when you had the chance. You may be the biggest thing that ever hit this area, but you’re still a two-bit outlaw. It’s over, don’t you get that? Your time is over and you’re gonna die bloody, and all you can do is choose where.”

http://playwrighter.blogspot.com/2011/06/stuck-in-damascus-with-memphis-blues.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roy Rudy
new Coelacanthforms exist
08:34 PM on 06/11/2011
The US needs to match Turkey's attempts to secure safety for Syrian refugees. The US needs to do more than stand by and watch the slaughter that will become a genocide. Assad needs to go and an interim transitional government set up for fair elections. The fear of Iran's involvement should not be valued as a reason to do nothing, meanwhile the volatile effects of regional involvement in Syria's activities has begun. Turkey will be a UN and NATO Allie should the US begin a congressional vote of support for intervening in Syria's slaughter of its citizens by Assad's military and security forces
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wom122
Primum non nocere
11:07 AM on 06/12/2011
The US are not omnipotent and we need less involvement in the Near East not more. We have legions of domestic problems to attend to meanwhile with a bit of luck the planet Earth would continue to orbit the Sun without Uncle Sam.
06:19 PM on 06/11/2011
Beyond meaningless rhetoric, the Obama administration is not taking sides in the civil uprising against Assad's brutal dictatorship. The argument for remaining on the sidelines of history goes like this, wait until the dictator satisfies his blood thirst and the appearance of a clear winner, then side with the winning party. What is wrong with such an argument is that regardless as to who is the winner, the influence of the US will be severely diminished.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
11:10 AM on 06/12/2011
I doubt Obama has anything + to offer Syria. You only have to look around and see what or involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan has wrought. Let the Syrians and their neighbors figure this out.
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SolomonRivlin
An ignorant with a computer is like a drunk driver
04:22 PM on 06/11/2011
The thundering silent of the Israel bashing crowd in the face of reports and pictures that come out of Syria (http://www.worldcrunch.com/exclusive-dark-journey-deraa-syria-s-martyr-town-under-siege/3254) is amazing. They are all out en mass when Israeli soldiers are protecting the Israeli border from paid rioters or when Israeli police attempts to quell a mob of stone throwers after Friday prayers however, when innocent Syrian citizens are being massacred for three months now, this crowd is hiding, not having the courage to condemn Assad the butcher.
04:42 PM on 06/11/2011
Oh get off your high horse, this liberal detests any violnce and Israel is as guilty of killing innocent people as Syria. That picture of the kids breaks my heart !
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SolomonRivlin
An ignorant with a computer is like a drunk driver
07:54 PM on 06/11/2011
The double standard is my point. It is very easy to sit in front of your computer monitor and criticize those who are under fire in the field. Being a liberal doesn't make you understand better the situation on the ground than a conservative does. As a liberal myself, I have criticized Israel's policies frequently, but I also spent many good years of my life on the ground, under fire as so many other Israelis do daily. There's a huge difference between Assad and Netanyahu. There are huge differences between democratic Israel's and autocratic Arab regimes' rules of engagement where firing your weapon is concerned. As a liberal, you should criticize not only W and his personal war in Iraq, but the way the US is conducting its war against terrorism around the world, using drones to eliminate terrorism suspects along with hundreds of innocent citizens. If Israel would have done it on the scale that the US does it, the Israeli leadership would be charged with crimes against humanity. Seems to me it is you who should get off the high horse.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
11:12 AM on 06/12/2011
The pro Israeli crowd is quite vociferous on just about any post related to the Near East so they more than make-up the difference. You don't have to believe what I say just a summary look at the comments will do.
04:04 PM on 06/11/2011
One must wonder: Why is it that the "leader" of the free world is silent?

Is it possible that he "leads from behind", or rather that he doesn't lead at all, because he doesn't know how...??
04:43 PM on 06/11/2011
Well I bet he isn't taking a photo op chopping twigs at a make believe ranch.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
11:14 AM on 06/12/2011
Let him lead the country that voted him into office and that would be ample. The world can manage I'm sure without our leadership.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
I boycott products from Syria & Gaza dictatorships
02:34 PM on 06/11/2011
As you can see from the photo above, Turkey is caging these Syrian refugees, not allowing them to speak to the media. Turkey is protecting Assad.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
11:15 AM on 06/12/2011
Turkey has a vested interest in a peacful Syria but there has been no shortage of condemnation. Turkey even hosted a conference of the Syrian opposition.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim Moore
Afraid of clowns
11:01 AM on 06/11/2011
Faces of the innocents truly are heartbreaking. Sad that the perpetrators of bloodshed have no conscience even seeing that. It's also sad that the media spent 100 times more attention on a congressman's underwear pictures than stories about Syria, Yemen, Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq in the last 2 weeks.
04:45 PM on 06/11/2011
Isn't that the truth, this nation is doomed when we are more concerned about a penis than we are about human suffering. Fanned and faved
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim Moore
Afraid of clowns
01:58 AM on 06/12/2011
Yes it's depressing. Thanks so much for fanning. Ditto.
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SolomonRivlin
An ignorant with a computer is like a drunk driver
10:37 AM on 06/11/2011
Here's an interesting observation, on this HP WORLD page there's a post, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/10/palestinians-israeli-police-jerusalem-temple-mount-noble-sanctuary-_n_874754.html which describes clashes between Israeli police and stone-throwing mob on Temple Mount after Friday prayers. No one was killed or hurt; over 500 comments, many by the usual suspects, anti-Israel commenters.

To the present post, describing the massacre of innocent civilians by Syrian soldiers, except for a few, the usual suspects are nowhere to be found. The few shown up here, of course, comment about Israel's whatever.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
11:17 AM on 06/12/2011
Perhaps you should break down those 500 comments and see who posted more, Israel apologists or what you refer to as "anti-Israel commentators". I would bet on the former.
08:21 PM on 06/12/2011
you would lose.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GEEWIZ
09:28 AM on 06/11/2011
Why hasn't this violence against civilians been condemmed by the Arab League?
09:32 AM on 06/11/2011
Because violence by Arabs is business as usual. Besides if the Arab League condemns the violence then they won't be able to use it when the people try to overturn their own criminal governments.
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
09:08 AM on 06/11/2011
So caIIed lsrael is stolen Palestine.
09:30 AM on 06/11/2011
Israel is for Jews. Jordan is for the Palestinians.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omega777
Yellow cake is the Bomb
09:51 AM on 06/11/2011
read z bible
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oneyippie
Leaning far to your left
11:03 AM on 06/11/2011
Sorry but the bible isn't a title to land, no matter what you think.
08:18 AM on 06/11/2011
One wonders, why is the White House silent about the slaughter that is in progress in Syria...??

Isn't it time all foreign diplomats, including the US, left Syria in protest? Isn't it time the EU, the US, Canada and Australia ceased doing business with the Assad regime?

Where is the President's voice...??!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omega777
Yellow cake is the Bomb
09:52 AM on 06/11/2011
O I L
11:43 AM on 06/11/2011
Oil explains the response in Libya, but does not explain the silence and lack of leadership coming out of the White House headed by a Nobel Peace Prize winner.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
08:16 AM on 06/11/2011
This is an AP story.

The AP is a propaganda organ.

If it is even possible to uncover the truth it will certainly not come from the AP.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
I boycott products from Syria & Gaza dictatorships
08:50 AM on 06/11/2011
All these Arabs in Syria complaining about the Syrian army are liars?
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
09:12 AM on 06/11/2011
All these Arabs in Syria complaining about slaughters by the Syrian insurgents are liars?
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
09:13 AM on 06/11/2011
I don't know who is telling the truth but you think you do.

This much I am certain of, much of what you think you know is false - and that is true for me as well.
09:32 AM on 06/11/2011
Maybe you like Al Jezeera better?
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
10:13 AM on 06/11/2011
Isn't that a British rag?
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
08:08 AM on 06/11/2011
Doesn't the Syrian government say that 120 police/soldiers were slaughtered by the residents of this town last weekend?

Didn't the US military wipe out the city of Fallujah in Iraq because 4 contractors were killed?

It seems to be all BS news reports and all human slaughter all the time, these days.

Our leaders are covered in blood and so are leaders elsewhere.

Everyone picks a side - except the side against killing.

Too bad.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
courtb
05:25 PM on 06/11/2011
And don't the people of the village say that the soldiers were actually trying to defect and were killed by the government?

When police officers or soldiers are gunned down on American soil, does the American government send in troops and slaughter people in the town it occurs in?
06:58 AM on 06/11/2011
For those of you that think we should send ground troops into Syria or Libyia, there is a local Recruiter near you. As the Joker Said in Full Metal Jacket: If you are going to talk the talk then walk the walk.
For those of you that think that that NATO is or would intervein for Humanitarien Reasons. NATO is there for the Oil. Just like the USA is there for the Oil.
For those of you that are just brealizing that these Atrosoties occure all over the Middle East Every day. Congradulations! You have just taken your first step into the real world! Your next step is to stop watching Opra and Dr. Phil. If you can get past that then we can try to ween you off Gerry Springer.

Semper Fi
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:13 PM on 06/11/2011
The armed forces are for those don't have the aptitude for higher education and/or enjoy killing.
Find another solution.
11:44 AM on 06/12/2011
You have a very narrow way of thinking. Some of the greatest leaders this country has ever had have been Military Men & Women. They were all College graduates! What College did you attend? I want to make sure my children never go there!
11:45 AM on 06/12/2011
Keep watching Dr. Phil. It fits you!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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linton
Perseverance is one short race after another.
06:44 AM on 06/11/2011
This guy is worse than Gadhafi. Hopefully, he will one day pay for all the killings that he commissioned. The Arab World should not stand idle and watch this guy continue to unleash such horror on his own people.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
08:11 AM on 06/11/2011
In the current world, justice and injustice are things that are purchased by the powerful and privileged according to their desires.