Thousands of antigovernment protesters marched in Damascus, Homs and other Syrian cities Friday in opposition to President Bashar Assad, chanting, "These are the last days of your season."Also at Instapundit, "SYRIA UPDATE: Tanks Move in on City as Thousands Mourn Protesters’ Deaths."
Security forces responded by firing on protesters in several cities. Dozens of people were killed, with the toll particularly high in Hama, Syria's fourth-largest city and the site of a bloody crackdown ordered by Assad's father nearly 30 years ago. Snipers reportedly fired from rooftops at thousands of protesters. The reports could not be independently verified because Western journalists are barred from entering the country.
Months after pro-democracy protesters unseated repressive regimes in Egypt and Tunisia, the so-called Arab Spring appears to have turned into a brutal stalemate in Syria. Assad has not been able to crush the protests; demonstrators take to the streets daily but have failed to gain enough popular support to topple him.
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed alarm Friday over the violence in Syria, which has reportedly claimed at least 70 lives in the last week, and called for independent and transparent investigations of all the killings. Human rights groups say 1,000 people have been killed in the 11-week uprising.
Analysts say that Syria will play an important role in shaping the legacy of the regional reform movement, and that the opposition has the potential to influence other countries where uprisings also have stalled, such as Bahrain and Yemen.
"Many other countries are watching to see if they achieve regime change," said Mohammed Masri, a researcher at Jordan University's Center for Strategic Studies in Amman. "If they are successful, it could bring new momentum to the Arab Spring."
"There are now two roads," Masri said, "The road of Egypt and Tunisia, and the other, which is a brutal and bloody one."
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Sunday, June 5, 2011
Dozens Killed as Syrian Security Forces Open Fire on Protesters
At Los Angeles Times, "Dozens reported killed as Syrians continue protests":
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