Arabian Gulf states call for end to Syrian bloodshed

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Gulf Arab states have broken their silence on the bloodshed in Syria, as activists say at least 26 more people were killed Friday in the government’s crackdown on opposition protesters.

The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council issued a statement Saturday calling for an immediate end to the violence and for the implementation of reforms. The bloc includes Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

The statement from the six nations followed a pledge by the U.S., France and Germany to consider additional ways to support the Syrian people and bring pressure against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

A White House statement Friday said U.S. President Barack Obama spoke separately with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. It said the three leaders condemned the continued use of “indiscriminate violence” against the Syrian people.

Tens of thousands of Syrians rallied against the government Friday – the first Friday of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Protesters held demonstrations in Damascus, Homs, Dara’a, Deir el-Zour and other cities.

Meanwhile, more details are emerging about the situation in Hama, a city that has been under a military siege since Sunday. A political activist in the city told VOA Persian Service on Friday that government forces have been carrying out indiscriminate arrests and killings as they storm homes of activists. But he said anti-government demonstrators rallied on Friday in spite of the crackdown.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Thursday that Washington believes more than 2,000 people have been killed in the months-long effort to suppress dissent.

The Syrian government has blamed much of the violence on what it says are terrorists and militants.

In a statement Friday, U.N. human rights experts urged Syria to stop the killings and “pursue dialogue through peaceful processes.”

President Assad issued a decree Thursday that would allow opposition parties to operate for the first time. The move would be a departure from Syria’s single-party system that has been dominated for decades by the Assad family’s Ba’ath party. But the U.S. State Department dismissed the announcement as “empty rhetoric.”

Gulf Arab states have broken their silence on the bloodshed in Syria, as activists say at least 26 more people were killed Friday in the government’s crackdown on opposition protesters.

The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council issued a statement Saturday calling for an immediate end to the violence and for the implementation of reforms. The bloc includes Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

The statement from the six nations followed a pledge by the U.S., France and Germany to consider additional ways to support the Syrian people and bring pressure against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

A White House statement Friday said U.S. President Barack Obama spoke separately with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. It said the three leaders condemned the continued use of “indiscriminate violence” against the Syrian people.

Tens of thousands of Syrians rallied against the government Friday – the first Friday of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Protesters held demonstrations in Damascus, Homs, Dara’a, Deir el-Zour and other cities.

Meanwhile, more details are emerging about the situation in Hama, a city that has been under a military siege since Sunday. A political activist in the city told VOA Persian Service on Friday that government forces have been carrying out indiscriminate arrests and killings as they storm homes of activists. But he said anti-government demonstrators rallied on Friday in spite of the crackdown.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Thursday that Washington believes more than 2,000 people have been killed in the months-long effort to suppress dissent.

The Syrian government has blamed much of the violence on what it says are terrorists and militants.

In a statement Friday, U.N. human rights experts urged Syria to stop the killings and “pursue dialogue through peaceful processes.”

President Assad issued a decree Thursday that would allow opposition parties to operate for the first time. The move would be a departure from Syria’s single-party system that has been dominated for decades by the Assad family’s Ba’ath party. But the U.S. State Department dismissed the announcement as “empty rhetoric.”

VOA

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19 responses to “Arabian Gulf states call for end to Syrian bloodshed”

  1. Hannibal Avatar

    t3iisho wu tfiiqo and while you’re at it, did you call upon the Syrians to stop slaughtering the Lebanese people during the civil war? Did you know that the reprisal in Damour was not at the hand of the leftists Lebanese but at the hands of the Syrians who from the beginning of the war instigated everyone against everyone else? There is no sect in Lebanon that did not suffer at their criminal hands and now what that regime does to its own people is more brutal than the Kosovo wars so why on earth the U.N. does not openly bring those criminals to face charges against humanity?

  2. t3iisho wu tfiiqo and while you’re at, did you call upon the Syrians to stop slaughtering the Lebanese people during the civil war? Did you know that the reprisal in Damour was not at the hand of the leftists Lebanese but at the hands of the Syrians who from the beginning of the war instigated everyone against everyone else? There is no sect in Lebanon that did not suffer at their criminal hands and now what that regime does to its own people is more brutal than the Kosovo wars so why on earth the U.N. does not openly bring those criminals to face charges against humanity?

  3. t3iisho wu tfiiqo and while you’re at, did you call upon the Syrians to stop slaughtering the Lebanese people during the civil war? Did you know that the reprisal in Damour was not at the hand of the leftists Lebanese but at the hands of the Syrians who from the beginning of the war instigated everyone against everyone else? There is no sect in Lebanon that did not suffer at their criminal hands and now what that regime does to its own people is more brutal than the Kosovo wars so why on earth the U.N. does not openly bring those criminals to face charges against humanity?

  4. t3iisho wu tfiiqo and while you’re at, did you call upon the Syrians to stop slaughtering the Lebanese people during the civil war? Did you know that the reprisal in Damour was not at the hand of the leftists Lebanese but at the hands of the Syrians who from the beginning of the war instigated everyone against everyone else? There is no sect in Lebanon that did not suffer at their criminal hands and now what that regime does to its own people is more brutal than the Kosovo wars so why on earth the U.N. does not openly bring those criminals to face charges against humanity?

  5. shankarees Avatar
    shankarees

    Better late than never and I urge you to withdraw your ambassadors and close your embassies in Damascus.  All Arabic speaking nations, since they are useless anyway in doing anything to change the mind of the terrorist tyrant Assad, should close down their embassies in Damascus.

  6.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Better late than never and I urge you to withdraw your ambassadors and close your embassies in Damascus.  All Arabic speaking nations, since they are useless anyway in doing anything to change the mind of the terrorist tyrant Assad, should close down their embassies in Damascus.

  7.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Better late than never and I urge you to withdraw your ambassadors and close your embassies in Damascus.  All Arabic speaking nations, since they are useless anyway in doing anything to change the mind of the terrorist tyrant Assad, should close down their embassies in Damascus.

  8. NOW THAT THEY SNAPED OUT OF THEIR COMA  THEY ARE CALLING FOR “immediate end to the violence and for the implementation of reforms” OR THEY WILL DO WHAT??

    1. 5thDrawer Avatar
      5thDrawer

      Probably put out a ‘dialogue’ against him … 😉

  9. NOW THAT THEY SNAPED OUT OF THEIR COMA  THEY ARE CALLING FOR “immediate end to the violence and for the implementation of reforms” OR THEY WILL DO WHAT??

  10. NOW THAT THEY SNAPED OUT OF THEIR COMA  THEY ARE CALLING FOR “immediate end to the violence and for the implementation of reforms” OR THEY WILL DO WHAT??

    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Probably put out a ‘dialogue’ against him … 😉

  11. guss043 Avatar

    ARABIAN STATES? DO THEY EXIST ?!!!

    1. shankarees Avatar
      shankarees

      Again, I repeat:  “The Arab World is the biggest lie of the 20th century.”

  12. guss043 Avatar

    ARABIAN STATES? DO THEY EXIST ?!!!

    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Again, I repeat:  “The Arab World is the biggest lie of the 20th century.”

  13. Arabs they can;t even do a simple thing by themselves they have to be told by the western country what to do and what to say they must told them watch us and do exactly the same what a nations foul and homos thats all what they are

  14. Arabs they can;t even do a simple thing by themselves they have to be told by the western country what to do and what to say they must told them watch us and do exactly the same what a nations foul and homos thats all what they are

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