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Syria tightens grip on flashpoint despite outcry | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Man carrying a baby enters a medical tent at refugee camp for Syrian refugees in the Turkish border town of Yayladagi. (R)


Man carrying a baby enters a medical tent at refugee camp for Syrian refugees in the Turkish border town of Yayladagi. (R)

Man carrying a baby enters a medical tent at refugee camp for Syrian refugees in the Turkish border town of Yayladagi. (R)

DAMASCUS (AFP) – Syrian troops tightened their stranglehold on the country’s restive northwest, activists said, as a global outcry grew over a deadly three-month crackdown on protests by President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

Human rights activists said security forces were continuing to sweep through villages and towns near the flashpoint town of Jisr al-Shughur, in Idlib province, forcing refugees to flee across the border with Turkey.

“Soldiers are heading to Maaret al-Numan. They are coming from the cities of Aleppo and Hama,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Witnesses said security forces were preventing residents from leaving Idlib province, and reported they were shooting at people who attempted to elude military checkpoints.

Protesters have described the operation in the northern mountains as a scorched-earth campaign, while Syrian soldiers who deserted to Turkey have alleged they were forced to commit atrocities there.

“Six civilians perished in the past few hours in Ariha,” east of Jisr al-Shughur, an activist told AFP in Nicosia, without providing further details.

According to a toll released Tuesday by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the violence has claimed the lives of 1,297 civilians and 340 security force members in Syria since the unrest erupted mid-March.

Washington meanwhile accused Iran of backing Syria’s assaults on pro-democracy protesters and again urged Assad to end the violence.

“Iran is supporting the Assad regime?s vicious assaults on peaceful protesters and military actions against its own cities,” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said.

She compared its response to the Islamic republic’s 2009 crackdown on its own pro-reform protests.

“President Assad needs to engage in political dialogue,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said earlier.

“A transition needs to take place. If President Assad does not lead that transition then he should step aside.”

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan telephoned Assad on Tuesday, urging him to “refrain from violence and end the unrest”, Anatolia news agency reported.

Erdogan stressed “it would be useful to draw up a timetable of reforms as soon as possible and urgently implement them,” the agency added.

Although the two leaders have enjoyed close personal ties in recent years, Ankara’s insistent calls on Damascus to initiate reforms have so far gone unheeded.

Last week, as thousands of fleeing Syrians crossed into Turkey to seek refuge from bloodshed, Erdogan toughened his tone, accusing the Syria of perpetrating an “atrocity” against the demonstrators.

The prominent Syrian poet Adonis, in an open letter published Tuesday in a Lebanese daily, called on Assad to let Syrians decide their own future.

“It seems your destiny is to sacrifice yourself for your mistakes and to give back voice to the people and let them decide,” he wrote.

The United Nations said more than 10,000 Syrians have fled into neighbouring countries to escape the crackdown.

In Lebanon alone, there were more than 5,000, UN humanitarian affairs spokeswoman Stephanie Bunker said. A Turkish official said Tuesday they had now received more than 8,500 Syrians refugees.

“There is no water, no food, children cry all the time,” one woman who had fled Jisr al-Shughur over the mountains into Turkey told AFP.

“May God punish him! He even poisoned our water. What have we done to him?”

UN emergency relief coordinator Valerie Amos again appealed to Syria to let in a UN humanitarian team make a proper assessment.

But Syria has refused to let UN aid experts visit stricken towns and has also blocked access to rights investigators.

At the United Nations, European powers campaigning for a draft resolution condemning the crackdown face opposition from Russia and China, both of whom wield veto powers and object to UN action against Assad.

Refugees arriving in Turkey said fighting had also broken out among Syrian troops during the northern operation Sunday, as soldiers bent on destroying the area were confronted by others trying to defend civilians.

Syria blames what it says are foreign-backed “armed terrorist gangs” for the unrest. It says troops launched operations in Jisr al-Shughur at the request of residents and after 120 policemen were massacred there.

Rights activists say those deaths came about after soldiers after soldiers told to fire on the town’s residents mutinied.

They say that the security forces are now firing on unarmed protesters.

A Syrian refugee leans on a fence by bags of food supplies donated by Turkish villagers before going across the border to fellow refugees still stuck in Syria, near the village of Guvecci, Turkey. (AP)

A Syrian refugee leans on a fence by bags of food supplies donated by Turkish villagers before going across the border to fellow refugees still stuck in Syria, near the village of Guvecci, Turkey. (AP)

A Turkish soldier patrols around the Syrian refugees camp in the Turkish border town of Boynuegin in Hatay province. (R)

A Turkish soldier patrols around the Syrian refugees camp in the Turkish border town of Boynuegin in Hatay province. (R)