49 killed at Syria demonstrations

Syrian security forces fired bullets and tear gas at pro-democracy demonstrations across the country today, killing at least 49 people – including a young boy – in the bloodiest day of the uprising against President Bashar Assad’s authoritarian regime, witnesses and a human rights group said.

Syrian security forces fired bullets and tear gas at pro-democracy demonstrations across the country today, killing at least 49 people – including a young boy – in the bloodiest day of the uprising against President Bashar Assad’s authoritarian regime, witnesses and a human rights group said.

The protests, held every Friday, have become weekly bloodbaths as security forces try to crush the demonstrations. But the mounting death tolls have only served to invigorate the protest movement whose demands have snowballed from modest reforms to the downfall of the 40-year Assad dynasty.

More than 250 people have been killed over five weeks, human rights groups say.

“Bullets started flying over our heads like heavy rain,” said one witness in Izraa, a southern village in Daraa province, the region where the uprising kicked off in mid-March.

Ammar Qurabi, head of Syria’s National Organisation for Human Rights, said the death toll had reached 49 and at least 20 people were missing.

The protest movement has been the gravest challenge against the autocratic regime led by Mr Assad, who inherited power from his father 11 years ago in one of the most rigidly controlled countries in the Middle East.

The uprising in Syria takes its inspiration from the popular revolts sweeping the Arab world. But there are significant differences in Syria which make the protest movement there all the more unpredictable.

The country’s military structure is a key difference – unlike the armies of Tunisia and Egypt, Syria’s military and security forces will almost certainly stand by Mr Assad, at least for the time being.

That means there could be darker days ahead as the uprising gains momentum, something which has implications far beyond Syria’s borders.

The capital, Damascus, stands in the middle of the most combustible conflicts in the region because of its web of allegiances, from Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Shiite powerhouse Iran.

Today, tens of thousands of people were protesting in the Damascus suburb of Douma, the central cities of Hama and Homs, Latakia and Banias on the coast, the northern cities of Raqqa and Idlib, the north-eastern Kurdish region, and the southern province of Daraa.

As the protesters dispersed, the scope of the bloodshed began to emerge.

A video posted on the protest movement’s main Facebook page showed a man carrying a bloodied boy near a building as another child could be heard weeping and shouting “My brother!”

Hospitals received scores of dead and gravely wounded.

The witness accounts could not be independently confirmed because Syria has expelled journalists and restricted access to trouble spots.

Mr Assad has been trying to defuse the protests by launching a bloody crackdown along with a series of concessions, most recently lifting emergency laws that gave authorities almost boundless powers of surveillance and arrest.

He also has fulfilled a decades-old demand by granting citizenship to thousands among Syria’s long-ostracised Kurdish minority, fired local officials, released detainees and formed a new government.

But many protesters said the concessions have come too late – and that Mr Assad does not deserve the credit.

“The state of emergency was brought down, not lifted,” prominent Syrian activist Suhair Atassi, who was arrested several times in the past, wrote on her Twitter page.

“It is a victory as a result of demonstrations, protests and the blood of martyrs who called for Syria’s freedom.”

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