AMMAN - Arabstoday
Syrian children join protesters in front of the Syrian Embassy in Amman, Jordan .
Syrian forces stormed three neighborhoods in the central city of Homs and tanks swept into several southern towns on Sunday, residents said, in a campaign to crush an uprising against autocratic Baathist rule. In
the first incursion into residential areas in Homs, Syria’s third city, machinegun fire and shelling was heard across the city of one million people, they told Reuters.
At least one civilian, a 12-year-old child, was killed when tanks and troops charged into the Bab Sebaa, Bab Amro and Tal Al-Sour districts of Homs overnight, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
\"The areas have been under total siege since yesterday. There is a total blackout on the numbers of dead and injured, Telecommunications and electricity are repeatedly being cut with the districts,\" the Observatory said in a statement.
A human rights campaigner in Homs said by telephone \"There are reports of (more) deaths but they cannot be confirmed. I cannot get out of my house. Security forces are everywhere.\"
The pro-democracy upheaval that began in Daraa on March 18, inspired by similar revolts across the Arab world, spread on Friday across Hauran, a southern farm region bordering Jordan to the south and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights to the west.
Protesters are demanding political freedoms, an end to corruption and the departure of President Bashar Asad, who has said they are part of a foreign conspiracy to cause sectarian strife — an accusation the demonstrators dismiss.
Syrian authorities have blamed the nearly two months of violence on \"armed terrorist groups\" they say are operating in Daraa, Banias, Homs and other parts of the country, which has been ruled by the Asad family for the last 41 years.
Asad’s father, Hafez, who was president for 30 years until his death in 2000, brutally suppressed an armed Islamist uprising in 1982 in which around 30,000 people were killed.
A human rights group says security forces have killed at least 800 civilians in the seven-week-old uprising.
Tanks moved into the towns of Tafas, Dael and Ibtaa in the Hauran Plain on Sunday. Residents said they heard gunfire and that army and forces broke into houses to arrest youths. The three towns have a combined population of around 80,000 people.
The army intensified its presence across the Hauran region having partly pulled out of Daraa this week and redeployed in nearby rural towns, witnesses said.
\"We knew they would not forgive us for our solidarity with Daraa. They are also targeting Tafas because it is harboring lots of the youth who escaped the attack on Daraa,\" one of the residents of Tafas said.
Tens of thousands of villagers from Hauran converged on Tafas on Friday and chanted slogans demanding Asad’s overthrow.
Prevented from entering Daraa, still encircled by tanks after nearly two weeks, they staged one of the largest demonstrations in Hauran despite the heavy security presence in the plain, witnesses said.
In Banias on the Mediterranean coast, where human rights campaigners said Syrian forces shot dead six civilians in an attack on Sunni Muslim districts on Saturday, mass arrests continued, rights activists said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 200 more people have been arrested in Banias by soldiers in raids on houses in the city, including a 10-year-old child.
A Western diplomat has said 7,000 people in all had been arrested in security sweeps since mid-March.
The West had been working on rehabilitating Asad on the international stage over the last three years to wean Damascus off its Iran alliance and encourage peace moves with Israel, but his crackdown on dissent has put that rapprochement on hold.
The United States, reacting to the death of 27 protesters on Friday, threatened to take new steps against Syria’s rulers. Washington imposed more targeted sanctions on Syrian officials but excluded Asad himself.
The European Union later imposed similar sanctions.