Syrian troops tightens Hama siege

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Syrian troops have tightened their siege on the city of Hama, sending residents fleeing for their lives and drawing a fresh wave of international condemnation against a regime defying growing calls to end its crackdown on anti-government protesters.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met with US-based Syrian democracy activists as the Obama administration weighed new sanctions on Syria.

Congressional calls also mounted for action against President Bashar Assad’s regime, as the death toll from two days of military assaults on civilians Sunday and Monday neared 100.

Italy recalled its ambassador to Syria ‘in the face of the horrible repression against the civil population’ by the government, which launched a new push against protesters as the Muslim holy month of Ramadan began on Monday.

It was the first European Union country to pull its ambassador, and the measure came a day after the EU tightened sanctions on Syria.

The mounting international outcry has had no apparent effect so far in Syria, an autocratic country that relies on Iran as a main ally in the region.

The top US military officer said Washington wants to pressure the Syrian regime. But he added there was no immediate prospect of a Libya-style military intervention.

‘There’s no indication whatsoever that the Americans, that we would get involved directly with respect to this,’ Joint Chiefs chairman Adm. Mike Mullen said Tuesday.

The British Foreign Office said it shares Italy’s ‘strong concerns about the situation in Syria’ but is not recalling its ambassador.

‘In the absence of an end to the senseless violence and a genuine process of political reform, we will continue to pursue further EU sanctions,’ British Foreign Secretary William Hague said in a statement. Without change ‘President Assad and those around him will find themselves isolated internationally and discredited within Syria.’

At UN headquarters in New York, the Security Council met behind closed doors on Tuesday to discuss a revised European-drafted resolution backed by the US that has been languishing since late May that would condemn Syria’s attacks against civilians.

Russia softened its stance, indicating it would not oppose such a resolution. Last month, Russia and China had threatened to veto such a resolution, effectively blocking it.

But Sergei Vershinin, chief of the Foreign Ministry’s Middle East and North Africa Department, told Russian news agencies on Tuesday that such a resolution should not impose sanctions because that would only escalate the conflict.

Still there was no sign the Syrian regime was willing to back down.

There has been an intensified campaign since Sunday, apparently aimed at preventing protests from swelling during Ramadan, when Muslims throng mosques for special nightly prayers after breaking their daily, dawn-to-dusk fast. The gatherings could turn into large protests.

As expected, protests erupted on Monday evening across the country, with hundreds turning out in cities including Homs, Latakia, the Damascus suburbs and the eastern city of Deir el-Zour.

There were scattered protests in Hama, but heavy shelling kept most people inside. Hama has been the target of the recent operation because it has emerged as an opposition stronghold.

The city has a history of defiance to the Assad family 40-year dynasty in Syria. In 1982, Assad’s father, Hafez Assad, ordered the military to quell a rebellion by Syrian members of the conservative Muslim Brotherhood movement. The city was sealed off and bombs dropped from above smashed swaths of the city and killed between 10,000 and 25,000 people, rights groups say.

Hama-based activist Omar Hamawi told The Associated Press that troops advanced about 700 metres from the western entrance of the city overnight, taking up positions near homes and buildings in an area known as Kazo Square. He said the force consisted of eight tanks and several armoured personnel carriers.

Hamawi, who spoke to the AP by telephone, said troops were also reinforced on the eastern side of the city around the Hama Central Prison, an overcrowded jail.

He said residents there saw smoke billowing from the prison overnight and heard sporadic gunfire from inside, leading some to believe the inmates were rioting.

He added that it was impossible to know what was exactly going on in the prison or whether there were casualties inside the tightly controlled facility.

The activist also said that parts of Hama were hit Tuesday morning with heavy machine gun fire after sporadic shelling overnight. He said a shell hit a compound known as the Palace of Justice in the city centre, causing a huge fire that burned much of the building, which is home to several courts.

In the city of Homs, amateur video showed thousands joining in a funeral procession Tuesday for two men who died in clashes with army forces a day earlier. The bodies, shrouded in white sheets and covered with flowers, were carried overhead in wooden caskets as the crowd clapped and chanted ‘There is no God but God.’ Gunshots were fired in the air and a man sang songs lauding the dead men as martyrs on a loudspeaker as the crowd chanted ‘God is Great.’

Activists said around 24 people were killed Monday and 74 on Sunday, most of them in Hama. There were minor discrepancies in Monday’s death tolls, ranging from 19 to 25. The differences could not immediately be reconciled.

About 1,700 civilians have been killed since the largely peaceful protests against Assad’s regime began, according to tallies by activists.

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14 responses to “Syrian troops tightens Hama siege”

  1. 5thDrawer Avatar
    5thDrawer

    And on and on ….

  2.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    And on and on ….

  3. Hannibal Avatar

    Shaatir 3a sha3bak? Go free the Golan Heights you coward!

  4. Shaatir 3a sha3bak? Go free the Golan Heights you coward!

  5. guss043 Avatar

    Israel didnt do to Syria what the Alawite did , today the Hama people will welcome an Israeli army as a liberator from the Nazi Alawite sect

  6. guss043 Avatar

    Israel didnt do to Syria what the Alawite did , today the Hama people will welcome an Israeli army as a liberator from the Nazi Alawite sect

  7. guss043 Avatar

    Syrian regime is = to Nazi Hitler. this is a holocaust that the world is watching and just shy to do anything ,shame on Obama , he proved to be a sissy in politics, if USA didnt back the freedom what else can we expect from them.If the USA is not the freedom leader what they are now?. Looking at being elected and worrying about the US debt is OK, but not more important than people shelled with tanks ,and massacred while stripped frrom clothing ,the same way the Nazis did to the people in concentration camps. As the commandant of Auswitz Rudlof Hoess was hanged in 1947  in Aushwitz , Assad should be hanged with his generals in Hama !!!!!!!

    1. 2160John Avatar

      No one is comparable to Hitler except maybe Genghis Khan and Stalin.

      Calling everyone Hitler and Nazis is no more than Zionist propaganda and labeling.

      If the Syrian regime has criminal tendencies to suppress its people then it should be labeled as such. But to compare it to someone who killed millions of people is just far off.

      1. 5thDrawer Avatar
        5thDrawer

        Pol Pot did fairly well on numbers …. 
        Despots in Somalia are trying it on the cheap too – just don’t let the food-aid get to the people.
        And I doubt there were that many humans around when Genghis was conquering – except maybe in China – who managed a fair accounting themselves trying to emulate Stalin, after the Japanese had already had a shot at it.
        But for the efficiency/time of a machine, no-one has matched Hitler.

        I have a feeling the Iranians are working up to using radiation in one way or another … a method which could backfire, of course – although plant-life seems to be doing fine at Chernobyl now.

    2. Beiruti Avatar

      Just a terrible comparison, the Assad family is responsible for the lives of 40,000 – 50,000 people in 40 years. Hitler was responsible for the lives of millions in couple years. What happened in Syria in 40 years happened in Aushwitz in a month. Putting these two things on the same scale is just ridiculous, calling the Alawite religion Nazis also is disrespectful, theres many Alawites who oppose Assad. Dont get me wrong Assad is a pig and should be hanged, but dont compare two things like this i mean this is like comparing an ant to an elephant.

  8. guss043 Avatar

    Syrian regime is = to Nazi Hitler. this is a holocaust that the world is watching and just shy to do anything ,shame on Obama , he proved to be a sissy in politics, if USA didnt back the freedom what else can we expect from them.If the USA is not the freedom leader what they are now?. Looking at being elected and worrying about the US debt is OK, but not more important than people shelled with tanks ,and massacred while stripped frrom clothing ,the same way the Nazis did to the people in concentration camps. As the commandant of Auswitz Rudlof Hoess was hanged in 1947  in Aushwitz , Assad should be hanged with his generals in Hama !!!!!!!

    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      No one is comparable to Hitler except maybe Genghis Khan and Stalin.

      Calling everyone Hitler and Nazis is no more than Zionist propaganda and labeling.

      If the Syrian regime has criminal tendencies to suppress its people then it should be labeled as such. But to compare it to someone who killed millions of people is just far off.

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        Pol Pot did fairly well on numbers …. 
        Despots in Somalia are trying it on the cheap too – just don’t let the food-aid get to the people.
        And I doubt there were that many humans around when Genghis was conquering – except maybe in China – who managed a fair accounting themselves trying to emulate Stalin, after the Japanese had already had a shot at it.
        But for the efficiency/time of a machine, no-one has matched Hitler.

        I have a feeling the Iranians are working up to using radiation in one way or another … a method which could backfire, of course – although plant-life seems to be doing fine at Chernobyl now.

    2.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Just a terrible comparison, the Assad family is responsible for the lives of 40,000 – 50,000 people in 40 years. Hitler was responsible for the lives of millions in couple years. What happened in Syria in 40 years happened in Aushwitz in a month. Putting these two things on the same scale is just ridiculous, calling the Alawite religion Nazis also is disrespectful, theres many Alawites who oppose Assad. Dont get me wrong Assad is a pig and should be hanged, but dont compare two things like this i mean this is like comparing an ant to an elephant.

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