Syria calls for Arab League meet to avert suspension

DNE
DNE
7 Min Read

AMMAN: Syria called on Sunday for an emergency summit of Arab League heads of state, in an apparent attempt to thwart its decision to suspend Damascus for violently cracking down on protests.

But a day after the League suspended Syria and said it would impose sanctions, its secretary general said officials from the 22-member organization of Arab states would also meet Syrian opposition representatives, a further blow to Damascus.

Syrian state television said the objective of its proposed summit would be to discuss the "negative repercussions on the Arab situation."

The Arab League’s suspension of Syria’s membership takes effect on Nov. 16. Syria’s call for an emergency summit appears to be an attempt to avert that decision.

It was the Arab League’s decision to suspend Libya’s membership of the group that helped get UN Security Council backing for the NATO air campaign that eventually aided the overthrow of Muammar Qaddafi.

The United Nations says 3,500 people have been killed in the pro-democracy protests which began in March. Syria blames the unrest on "terrorists" and foreign-backed Islamist militants. It says 1,100 soldiers and police have been killed.

Syrian security forces shot dead eight people who shouted slogans against President Bashar Al-Assad at a rally that had been organized by authorities in the city of Hama on Sunday, to show popular anger at an Arab League decision.

"Security forces were leading public workers and students into Orontes Square when groups broke away and started shouting ‘the people want the fall of the regime.’ They escaped into the alleyways but were followed and four were killed," said one of the activists in Hama, 240 km (150 miles) north of Damascus.

Video posted online shows a group of teenagers who broke away from state rally running for cover down a street as the sound of automatic gunfire is heard. "God damn your soul Abu Hafez," some of them shouted, referring to the president.

Syrian authorities have banned most foreign media from the country making independent confirmation of reports difficult.

State television said millions of Syrians denounced the Arab League decision in demonstrations across the country and showed crowds with Syrian flags and posters of Assad in Damascus, and the cities of Raqqa, Latakia and Tartous.

France, Turkey and Saudi Arabia said their diplomatic premises were attacked by pro-government crowds overnight.

Embassies attacked

Some 1,000 Assad supporters attacked the Turkish embassy in Damascus on Saturday evening, throwing stones and bottles before Syrian police intervened to break up the protest, Turkey’s state-run Anatolian news agency said.

Non-Arab Turkey, after long courting Assad, has lost patience with its neighbor’s failure to halt the violence and implement promised reforms and now hosts the Syrian opposition and has given refuge to defecting Syrian soldiers.

Turkey called on Damascus to guarantee its diplomats in Syria would be protected and for those behind the embassy attacks to be prosecuted.

Another group armed with sticks and knives attacked the Saudi Arabian embassy in Damascus, residents said.

They said hundreds of men shouting slogans in support of President Assad beat a guard and broke into the Saudi embassy in Abu Rummaneh, three blocks away from Assad’s offices in one of the most heavily policed areas of the capital.

"We sacrifice our blood and our soul for you, Bashar," the crowd shouted, according to neighborhood residents.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry said in a statement that a group of demonstrators "gathered outside the embassy, threw stones at it, then stormed the building."

France said it "very firmly" condemned "the systematic destruction of the Saudi Arabian embassy in Damascus" and attacks on its own honorary consulate in Latakia and diplomatic offices in Aleppo.

It said the attacks were carried out by groups of demonstrators and security forces did not intervene.

"These attacks constitute a bid to intimidate the international community after the courageous decisions taken by the Arab League in response to the continuing repression in Syria," the French Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Saudi Arabia, wary of the growing influence of Shia regional power Iran, Syria’s biggest remaining backer, is one of the leading Arab nations pushing for stronger measures against Damascus.

The Arab League also plans to impose as yet unspecified economic and political sanctions on Damascus and has appealed to member states to withdraw their ambassadors, Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al-Thani said.

A top US Treasury official held talks with senior Jordanian officials and banking executives on Sunday on efforts to enforce economic sanctions against Syria.

The European Union and the United States recently have expanded sanctions against Syria to put pressure on Damascus to end the violent crackdown on demonstrators.

The US Treasury Department’s assistant secretary Daniel Glaser arrived in Amman after meeting Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati and Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh in Beirut.

A US embassy statement said the Treasury official stressed the "need for authorities to protect the Lebanese financial sector from Syrian attempts to evade sanctions."

Major Lebanese and Jordanian banks have several branches in Syria that were opened in the last six years when the country lifted restrictions on foreign stakes in the banking sector.

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