By Khaled Yacoub Oweis
An armored Syrian force surrounded a town near the city of
Homs Monday and fired heavy machineguns after the defection of tens of soldiers
in the area, activists and residents said.
One woman, 45 year-old Amal
Qoraman, was killed and five other people were injured, they said, adding that
tens of people were arrested in house to house raids in the town of 40,0000.
Since the demise of Muammar
Gaddafi's rule in Libya, activists and residents have reported increasing
defections among Syrian troops, as well as more intense street protests in a
five-month-old uprising against President Bashar al Assad.
Syrian authorities have
repeatedly denied army defections have been taking place. They have expelled
independent media since the uprising began in March.
Activists say there have been
desertions in eastern Deir al-Zor province, northwestern Idlib province, the
Homs countryside and the outskirts of Damascus, where security forces fought
gunbattles with defectors Sunday.
At least 40 light tanks and
armored vehicles, and 20 buses of troops and military intelligence members
deployed at dawn at the entrance of Rastan, 20 km (12 miles) north of Homs and
began firing heavy machineguns at the town, two residents said.
"The tanks deployed at
both banks of the highway, which remained open, and fired long bursts from
their machineguns at Rastan," one of the residents, who gave his name as
Raed, told Reuters by phone.
He said defections began in
the town when it was stormed by tanks three months ago to crush large street
protests against Assad in an assault that killed dozens of civilians.
Security forces killed Monday
a former officer who had played a key role in coordinating army defections,
activists said.
Mostapha Selim Hezbollah, a
former air force officer in his 40s', was shot dead when his car was ambushed
near the town of Kfar Nubul in Idlib province, which borders Turkey,
they said.
"It was a targeted
assassination. A companion who was with him in the car was badly wounded but we
managed to get him to a hospital. The attack happened just before 'iftar'
(breaking of fast). We don't know yet if it was security police or troops who
fired at them," one of the activists told Reuters by phone.
The Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights, which is based in Britain, said five other people were killed
earlier in military assaults on several towns in Idlib.
Rastan is traditionally a
reservoir of recruits for the mostly Sunni rank-and-file army that is dominated
by officers from the Alawite minority sect to which Assad belongs, and
effectively commanded by his younger brother Maher.
Troops backed by tanks also
entered the town of Qara on the same highway south of the city of Homs, which
has been scene of daily protests, killing one resident and arresting tens of
people in house to house raids, activists said.
"These armored assaults
on outlying areas are designed to crush protests and to contain any defections
in the army," said a Syrian political analyst in Damascus, who did not
want to be named because of fear for his safety.
"The regime's political
control on the army had seemed unbreakable, but that is no longer the case,
after soldiers saw mosques being stormed, worshippers attacked and minarets
shelled," he said.
PRESSURE
The fall of Gaddafi coincided
with increased international pressure on Assad, with European Union sanctions
on the oil sector that could come as early as this week.
European Union governments may
also impose sanctions on Syrian banks as well as energy and telecommunications
companies within a week, EU diplomats said Monday.
President Abdullah Gul of
Turkey, once a strong supporter of Assad, said recently that the situation had
reached a point in Syria where changes would be too little too
late.
The Arab League said it was
concerned "over the dangerous developments on the Syrian arena that had
caused thousands of casualties" and "stresses the importance of
ending bloodshed and to resort to reason before it is too late."
At an Arab League meeting in
Cairo, Syrian representative Youssef Ahmad said "the response of the
Syrian leadership to the just popular demands has helped stop the popular
movement in many cities and their decline in other areas."
He said the authorities were
pursuing reforms but they will not "allow terrorism and extremism to
target peaceful coexistence in Syria and the independence of its patriotic and
national decisions."
The official state news agency
said the attorney general of the city of Hama, 210 km north of Damascus, was
kidnapped by armed men on his way to work Monday.
Citing witnesses, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said 15,000 people demonstrated overnight in the
town of Saraqeb in the Idlib province that borders Turkey. It also reported
demonstrations in Deraa province and Damascus suburbs.
"Oppressor, your reign is
coming to the end. Prepare yourself for execution," chanted a crowd in the
town of Hirak in the southern Hauran Plain, according to video footage
distributed by residents.
In Damascus, dozens of
soldiers defected and fled into al-Ghouta, an area of farmland, after pro-Assad
forces fired at a large crowd of demonstrators near the suburb of Harasta to
prevent them from marching on the center of the capital, residents said.
"The army has been
firing heavy machineguns throughout the night at al-Ghouta and they were being
met with response from smaller rifles," a resident of Harasta told Reuters
by phone.
It was the first reported
defection around the capital, where Assad's core forces are based.
"The younger conscripts
who defect mainly go back to their town and villages and hide. We have seen
more experienced defectors fighting back in the south, in Idlib, and around
Damascus," said an activist who gave his name as Abu Khaled.
(Reporting by Khaled Yacoub
Oweis, Amman newsroom; Editing by Diana
Abdallah)
Source : Reuters
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