Syria warns of retaliation over killings

SYRIA has threatened to respond “firmly” to the reported killing of 120 policemen by “armed gangs” in the country’s northwest.

Activists dispute the official account, speaking instead of a mutiny in the town of Jisrash Shugur, where security forces had been carrying out operations for three days.

“The armed groups are committing a real massacre. They have mutilated bodies and thrown others into the Assi river,” the state broadcaster said. “They have burned government buildings.”

It said a total of 120 police were killed, including 80 at the town’s security headquarters, without specifying the date of the incidents in Jisrash Shugur.

Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim al-Shaar warned in a statement read on television that the authorities would hit back.

“The state will act firmly, with force and in line with the law. It will not stay arms folded in the face of armed attacks on the security of the homeland,” he said.

In its first report on Monday of police deaths in the town, state television spoke of 20 officers killed in an ambush.

“The police and security agents are confronting hundreds of armed men. They have managed to liberate one district controlled by gunmen” in Jisrash Shugur, the channel said.

It said residents of the town, 330km north of Damascus, had “pleaded for help and the rapid intervention of the army”.

“Armed gangs ambushed police who were on their way to rescue citizens being terrorised” by these gangs, state television said, adding that the groups were armed with “light weapons, grenades and are using residents as human shields.”

Elsewhere, “eight guards at a post office were also killed by armed gangs, who used the building’s gas pipes to blow it up,” it added.

However, two activists who spoke from Nicosia, in Cyprus, said the town was calm, and spoke of a mutiny at a local security headquarters, where shooting was heard the day before.

“I think they executed policemen who refused to open fire on demonstrators. There was a mutiny in the security service,” one said.

The other said “shooting followed by an explosion was heard in the military HQ, apparently after a mutiny”.

He said regime “snipers” had opened fire on protesters in the town, killing two. Demonstrators then gathered outside the headquarters and “shots and an explosion took place inside” the building, he added.

The reports came a day after at least 40 people were killed, including 35 in Jisrash Shugur, said the head of the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdel Rahman.

He said 27 civilians and eight security agents were killed in the town as security forces pressed sweeps targeting anti-regime protesters in Idlib province.

Two civilians were reported killed on Sunday in the coastal town of Jabla, and security forces shot at protesters outside a building of the ruling Baath party in the eastern town of Deir Ezzor, killing three, Abdel Rahman said.

Six human rights groups within Syria issued a joint statement condemning “the excessive use of force to disperse peaceful gatherings of unarmed Syrian citizens.”

They urged the government to “stop the spiral of violence and assassinations in the streets of Syria,” and demanded an independent and transparent inquiry to unmask those responsible.

“As the death toll in Syria reaches staggering new heights, it is imperative that the UN Security Council — which has so far been silent on this issue — votes to condemn the killings,” said Philip Luther of Amnesty International.

“It must also take decisive action and refer the situation in Syria to the International Criminal Court,” he said.

The latest violence comes despite Syria freeing more than 450 political prisoners since last Tuesday under a general amnesty announced by Assad.

Late on Sunday, the state news agency SANA also reported the creation of a committee tasked with drafting a law on political parties.

The current constitution stipulates that the ruling Baath party is “the leader of state and society,” but political pluralism has been at the forefront of demands by pro-reform dissidents.

Rights groups say more than 1100 civilians have been killed and at least 10,000 arrested in Syria since anti-regime protests erupted in mid-March.

Damascus blames the unrest on “armed terrorist gangs” backed by Islamists and foreign agitators.

 

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