Syria: Regime fires over borders with Lebanon, Turkey



Source: Billings Gazette

"Syrian forces opened fire across two tense borders Monday, killing a
TV journalist in Lebanon and at least two people in a refugee camp in
Turkey on the eve of a deadline for a cease-fire plan that seems all
but certain to fail. Across Syria, activists reported particularly
heavy violence with more than 125 people killed in the past two
days." (04/09/12)

Annan: No preconditions for end to Syria violence

Syrian troops shelled and raided opposition strongholds nationwide on Tuesday, activists said, prompting an urgent appeal by international envoy Kofi Annan to the Syrian regime to halt violence and give his truce plan a chance.

Syria's foreign minister claimed that regime forces have begun withdrawing from some areas in compliance with Annan's plan, which requires Syrian forces to pull back from towns and villages on Tuesday and both sides to cease all hostilities by 6 a.m. Thursday.

However, activists said Syrian forces carried out new attacks and that there were no signs of a withdrawal.

In a news conference in Hatay, Turkey, Annan insisted that his plan has not failed and that Syria still had time to comply.

"We still have time between now and the 12th (Thursday) to stop violence," he said. "I appeal to all, the government in the first place ..." to halt fighting. He also said that violence must stop without conditions.

Annan said the U.N. Security Council would take up the issue later Tuesday.

The main Syrian opposition group, meanwhile, estimated that some 1,000 people have been killed in escalating regime attacks in the week leading up to Tuesday's withdrawal deadline, though such figures cannot be verified independently.

France and Britain accused Syria of deception and even Damascus ally Russia seemed critical of Bashar Assad's regime, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov complaining that Syria's "efforts to implement the plan could have been more active and resolute."

Syrian opposition leaders said Tuesday they remain committed to the cease-fire brokered by Annan, which requires Syrian forces to withdraw from towns and villages on Tuesday and both sides to cease all hostilities by 6 a.m. Thursday.

The truce is widely seen as the last chance for diplomacy, and its collapse could push Syria even closer to an all-out civil war.

The opposition as well as the U.S. and its allies have been deeply skeptical that the regime would comply with the cease-fire because it has violated previous agreements and stepped up attacks in recent weeks. At the same time, options for ending the fighting appear to be dwindling with the international community unwilling to intervene militarily.

French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero on Tuesday dismissed Syria's claims of a withdrawal as "a new expression of this flagrant and unacceptable lie." British Foreign Secretary William Hague accused Damascus of using the cease-fire deadline "as a cover for intensified military efforts to crush Syria's opposition."

Opposition activists said Tuesday they've seen no signs of a troop pullback. "Soldiers are not being withdrawn from towns and villages," said Fadi al-Yassin, an activist in the Idlib province close to Turkey. "On the contrary, reinforcements are being sent."

© Copyright 2012, The Billings Gazette, Billings, MT