Syrians living in Jordan shout slogans against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad

Syrians living in Jordan shout slogans against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad International pressure on Syria increased, with calls for President Bashar Al-Assad to quit as Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Al-Arabi said Monday he received the Syrian governments request for an emergency Arab summit. He also stated that 15 countries must approve the request for the meeting to be held, Al Arabiya reported.
Arabi said he has received a letter from Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem calling for the summit to discuss the crisis. Arab leaders have been informed of the request, the secretary general said, adding that the emergency summit can only be held if two-thirds of the bloc’s members endorse the call.
Arabi said that the organisation is preparing to send observers to Syria but needs guarantees from Damascus on their mission and the rights of each side.
The decision to send a 500-strong delegation follows a vote to suspend Damascus from the 22-member Arab bloc over its deadly crackdown on protests. It came a day after Syria said it would welcome such a mission.
Muallem called the Arab Leagues decision to suspend the country’s membership very dangerous and said the bloc had given in to external pressure. U.S. support for the organisations decision was incitement, he said on Monday during a news conference televised from Damascus.
“None of the delegates of Arab organisations tasked with protecting civilians will go to Syria until a clear memorandum of understanding is signed with the Syrian government spelling out the duties and rights of all the parties,” Arabi told reporters, according to AFP.
He made the remarks after separate talks in Cairo with representatives of Arab human rights groups and Syrian opposition figures.
Arabi chaired a meeting of the groups at which it was agreed a 500-strong delegation made up of rights activists, media and military experts would head to Syria on a fact-finding mission to study measures to protect civilians.
Arab foreign ministers are due to organise the trip and set a date for the mission on Wednesday, on the sidelines of a meeting in Rabat, according to a League official.
A senior member of the Union of Arab doctors, Ibrahim al-Zaafarani, said Syrian authorities will be asked to sign a document providing the delegation “guarantees” for their protection and freedom of movement.
“We will go everywhere and write up reports on the conditions of civilians and means of protecting them, and we will submit the reports to the Arab foreign ministers,” he added.
Meanwhile, at least 40 people have been killed in violence in Syria, rights groups and activists say, as pro- and anti-government forces reportedly clashed in Deraa province and elsewhere, with protests against Bashar al-Assad's government continuing.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Monday that security forces shot dead at least 16 civilians across the province of Deraa, where protests against Assad first began in earnest.
However, local activists in Deraa told the Reuters news agency that the death toll from clashes between forces loyal to Assad, the Syrian president, and those who have joined protesters against his rule could be as high as 40.
They said that troops killed 20 people including army defectors and civilians in an assault on Khirbet Ghazaleh, a town near the Jordanian border and in the fighting that ensued near the town. They said a similar number of government troops were killed.
Troops attacked the town, located about 20km north of the border on the main highway between Amman and Damascus, after army defectors attacked a police bus at a highway intersection near the town, activists said.
"Members of the (defectors') brigade fought back when the army attacked and Bedouin from nearby villages also rushed to help Khirbet Ghazaleh," said one of the activists, who gave his name as Abu Hussein.
The Syrian Observatory said that the 16 people who had been killed in Deraa were shot near government checkpoints.
The Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC), a loose umbrella group of local anti-government protest organising committees, said that 50 people had been killed in violence across the country on Monday. It said 28 had been killed in Deraa, 13 in Homs, six in Idlib, two in Hama and one in al-Qamishli.
The foreign minister also apologised for attacks on foreign diplomatic missions over the weekend. Government supporters raided the Qatari and Saudi embassies in Damascus on Saturday night. On Sunday, the Turkish embassy and consulates were attacked.
Addressing Syrians, Muallem said: "You should not feel any worry regarding the future. [Syria] will come out stronger due to the will of the people and national unity."
The Arab League on Saturday voted to suspend Syria from all Arab League activities over its failure to implement a deal to end the violence which has left around 3,500 dead since March, according to U.N. figures.
Syria on Sunday said it would welcome a dispatch of an “Arab ministerial delegation accompanied by observers, civilian and military experts and Arab media,” according to an official statement.
It said the delegation would be able to see for itself the situation on the ground “and supervise, in coordination with the Syrian government, the application of the Arab (peace) plan.”
The plan to end violence in Syria was drawn up by Arab foreign ministers on Nov. 2 and endorsed by Syria.
Under the deal, Syria was given 15 days to pull back its troops from the cities that were the focus of anti-government protests, release detainees, allow free movement for observers and media, and negotiate with the opposition.
Meanwhile, the European Union widened its sanctions on Syria, while King Abdullah of Jordan said Assad should step down. In Saudi Arabia, the Jeddah-based Arab News, which has links to the kingdom’s royal family, published an editorial yesterday with the headline ‘It is time for Assad to go.’
Security forces killed as many as 50 demonstrators on Monday, Al Arabiya reported, citing activists.
U.S. President Barack Obama said the Arab League’s action towards Syria shows the increasing diplomatic isolation of a regime that has systematically violated human rights.
The White House said on Monday that Syrian President Assad was increasingly isolated and reiterated Washington’s position that he had lost his legitimacy to rule and should go.
“It is clear that the Assad regime is continuing to be isolated, that the political pressure on them is building,” said White House spokesman Josh Earnest, according to Reuters.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called the Arab Syria League measure incorrect and premeditated, Interfax reported on Monday.
The EU, meanwhile, added 18 people in Syria alleged to be responsible for human-rights violations to a list of those targeted by an asset freeze and travel ban, according to an EU statement.
Assad has blamed foreign provocateurs and Islamist militants for the violence surrounding anti-government protests that erupted in March.