Election called in bleeding Syria

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AGENCIES
Publication Date: 
Wed, 2012-03-14 00:42

China and Arab countries agree on the need to find a “political solution” to the crisis in Syria, Chinese envoy Zhang Ming said yesterday after talks in Cairo with Arab League officials.
However, Syrian President Bashar Assad, facing a one-year revolt against his rule, set parliamentary elections under the country's new constitution for May 7, the Parliament’s website said.
Assad's opponents say the constitution is illegitimate and insist the president must give up power.
“Of course we will boycott the elections because they will be fixed. But this is not a main focus for us. What we want is real change with a real presidential election, which Assad would surely lose,” Melhem Al-Droubi, a member of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood and the Syrian National Council told Reuters.
Advocacy group Human Rights Watch said yesterday that Syrian forces have laid mines near the borders of Lebanon and Turkey along routes used to escape the conflict in Syria.
Its report documented multiple accounts from witnesses in Turkey, Lebanon and inside Syria who had either seen Syrian troops laying mines or been injured by mines.
Meanwhile, video footage showed the bloodied bodies of several unidentified men strewn on the floor of the mosque. An unseen voice said it was impossible to move them due to heavy shelling.
Army defectors ambushed a checkpoint in Idlib region in the northwest, killing the 10 soldiers and possibly more, while rebels also killed 12 members of forces loyal to Assad in the southern town of Daraa, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Fighting was reported, too, in the eastern city of Deir Al-Zor and in Syria’s third largest city Homs, as a yearlong uprising against Assad’s authoritarian rule increasingly resembles a full-blown civil war.
Speaking after meeting opponents of Assad in Turkey, UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan said he was expecting to hear yesterday the response from Syria to “concrete proposals” he had made to end the escalating violence.
The Syrian Parliament said Assad, who has promised reforms short of his resignation, had ordered a legislative election for May 7. It would be held under a new constitution, approved by a referendum last month which the opposition and their Western and Arab backers dismissed as a sham.
Despite mounting international pressure on him in the form of sanctions, Assad has significant allies, notably in Iran. And world powers remained at odds over how to tackle the crisis, with Russia and China continuing to back the Syrian leader.
As growing numbers of refugees seek to flee the fighting, advocacy group Human Rights Watch said Syrian forces were laying land mines near the borders with Lebanon and Turkey, along routes used by the civilians to escape the mayhem.
Idlib province borders Turkey and has become a hiding place for rebels, drawing regular army reprisals.
An activist in the city of Idlib, speaking by telephone, said security forces had killed 11 people trying to leave the area two days ago and dumped them in Al-Bilal Mosque.
More bodies were brought to the mosque on Monday, but when locals went to inspect the corpses, they too came under fire, pushing the death toll above 50, he said. Another activist contacted by Reuters confirmed the killings.
“When people came from the neighborhood early this morning, the security forces also started firing at them. In total, about 45 people were massacred,” said the man, who like many in Syria gave only his first name, Mohammed, for fear of reprisals.
Activists said the bodies of six other people were found in the nearby village of Maarat Shureen.
Reports from Syria cannot be independently verified as the authorities deny access to rights groups and journalists.
Following meetings with Assad at the weekend in Damascus, former UN chief Annan held talks in Ankara with the Syrian National Council (SNC) — a fractious assortment of Assad opponents whose leadership lives abroad. “I am expecting to hear from the Syrian authorities today, since I left some concrete proposals for them to consider,” Annan told a subsequent news conference.
“Once I receive their answer we will know how to react.”
Annan has not disclosed what his proposals entailed, but a diplomatic source said the UN envoy had told Assad he wanted an immediate cessation of hostilities, humanitarian access to the conflict zones and political dialogue.
SNC leader Burhan Ghalioun said the aim remained to secure a political and diplomatic solution, otherwise foreign governments would deliver on promises to supply weapons to rebel forces.
While the rebels have only light weapons, the army has repeatedly used tanks, mortars and artillery, and has regularly shelled built-up areas, apparently indiscriminately.
“I have heard shelling in the Old City since 8 this morning,” one activist in the city of Homs told Reuters. “There is gunfire everywhere,” he added, asking to be referred to only as Sami for fear of arrest.

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