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    Emboldened by monitors, Syrians hold huge protests

    BEIRUT (AP) — In the largest protests Syria has seen in months, hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets Friday in a display of defiance to show an Arab League observer mission the strength of the opposition movement.

    Despite the monitors' presence in the country, activists said Syrian forces loyal to President Bashar Assad killed at least 22 people, most of them shot during the anti-government demonstrations.

    In a further attempt to appeal to the monitors, dissident troops who have broken away from the Syrian army said they have halted attacks on regime forces to reinforce the activists' contention that the uprising against Assad is a peaceful movement.

    While opposition activists are deeply skeptical of the observer mission, the outpouring of demonstrators across Syria underscores their wish to make their case to the foreign monitors and take advantage of the small measure of safety they feel they brought with them.

    The nearly 100 Arab League monitors are the first that Syria has allowed into the country during the uprising, which began in March. They are supposed to ensure the regime complies with terms of the League's plan to end Assad's crackdown on dissent. The U.N. says more than 5,000 people have died as the government has sought to crush the revolt.

    Friday's crowds were largest in Idlib and Hama provinces, with about 250,000 people turning out in each area, according to an activist and eyewitness who asked to be identified only as Manhal because he feared government reprisal. Other big rallies were held in Homs and Daraa provinces and the Damascus suburb of Douma, according to Rami Abdul-Raham, who heads the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

    The crowd estimates could not be independently confirmed because Syria has banned most foreign journalists from the country and tightly restricts the local media.

    Haytham Manna, a prominent Paris-based dissident and human rights defender, said the observers' presence has emboldened protesters to take to the streets in huge numbers.

    "Whether we like it or not, the presence of observers has had a positive psychological effect, encouraging people to stage peaceful protests — a basic condition of the Arab League peace plan," he told The Associated Press.

    The observers began their mission Tuesday in Homs, often referred to by many Syrians as the "Capital of the Revolution." Since then, they have fanned out in small groups across Syrian provinces, including the restive Idlib province in the north, Hama in the center and the southern province of Daraa, where the revolt began.

    The orange-jacketed observers have been seen taking pictures of the destruction, visiting families of victims of the crackdown, and taking notes.

    On Friday, they were within "hearing distance" from where troops opened fire on tens of thousands of protesters in the Damascus suburb of Douma, activist Salim al-Omar said. They later visited the wounded in hospital, he added.

    Despite questions about the human rights record of the man leading the monitors, tens of thousands have turned out this week in cities and neighborhoods where they were expected to visit.

    The huge rallies have been met by lethal gunfire from security forces, apparently worried about multiple mass sit-ins modeled after Cairo's Tahrir Square. In general, activists say, security forces have launched attacks when observers were not present. But there have been some reports of firing on protesters while monitors were nearby.

    Omar Shaker, an activist and resident of the battered neighborhood of Baba Amr in Homs, said the observers were "laughable," often walking around with outdated cameras and without pens.

    "Still, the bombardment and killings have decreased here in their presence. We see them as a kind of human shields, that's all," he said.

    Shaker said around 7,000 protested Friday in Baba Amr — the first demonstration in the besieged district in more than a week.

    "People are feeling optimistic," he said. "We've been protesting and dying for 10 months. We have the feeling that the worst is over and the end is near," he added.

    In Douma, up to 100,000 people protested Friday. Amateur videos posted on the Internet by activists showed demonstrators carrying away a bleeding comrade after being hit by a gas canister.

    "Look, Arab League, look!" the cameraman is heard shouting. The British-based Observatory, which relies on a network of activists on the ground, said the regime used nail bombs against protesters in Douma. The report was confirmed by Douma activist al-Omar.

    In another video, a huge crowd packed a main street in Homs, singing anti-Assad songs and dancing in unison. The crowd sang, "We will die in freedom," to the festive beat of a drum, as the unidentified cameraman proclaimed, "For months we didn't hear anything on Friday" because of the crackdown. "But because of the observer committee, they didn't fire a single bullet."

    "Victory is close, god willing," he said.

    Thousands turned out in the city of Idlib to welcome the observers, filling a large square, waving olive branches and flags, and chanting, "The people want the fall of Bashar."

    But the ongoing violence in Syria, and questions about the human rights record of the head of the Arab League monitors, Sudanese Lt. Gen. Mohamed Ahmed Mustafa al-Dabi, are reinforcing the opposition's view that Syria's limited cooperation with the observers is merely a ploy by Assad to buy time and forestall more international condemnation and sanctions.

    One of Assad's few remaining allies, Russia, voiced its approval of the observer mission so far, calling the situation "reassuring."

    The Local Coordination Committees, an activist coalition, said at least 130 people, including six children, have been killed in Syria since the Arab League observers began their one-month mission.

    On Friday, activists said security forces fired on protesters in Daraa, Hama, Idlib and Douma. In the central city of Homs, six people who were reported missing a day earlier were confirmed dead.

    The Observatory reported 22 people were killed nationwide, most of them shot while protesting. The Local Coordination Committees activist network reported 32 were killed. The differing death tolls could not be immediately reconciled.

    The Arab League plan, which Syria agreed to Dec. 19, demands that the government remove its security forces and heavy weapons from cities, start talks with the opposition and allow human rights workers and journalists into the country. It also calls for the release of all political prisoners.

    Pro-Assad groups turned out for rallies in Damascus and several other cities, waving portraits of the president, in an apparent bid to show that the regime has popular support.

    Also Friday, the rebel Free Syrian Army said it has stopped its offensive against government targets since the observers arrived, in a bid to avoid fueling government claims that it is facing armed "terrorists" rather than peaceful protesters.

    "We stopped to show respect to Arab brothers, to prove that there are no armed gangs in Syria, and for the monitors to be able to go wherever they want," breakaway air force Col. Riad al-Asaad, leader of the FSA, told the AP by telephone from his base in Turkey.

    "We only defend ourselves now. This is our right and the right of every human being," he said, adding that his group will resume attacks after the observers leave.

    The Free Syrian Army says it has about 15,000 army defectors. The group has claimed responsibility for attacks on government installations that have killed scores of soldiers and members of the security forces.

     
    • Ibrahim  •  West Chicago, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      mubarak was imprisoned, gaddafi was killed, the tunisian guy fled, so did the yemen guy, north korean guy died, that leaves bahrain and syria. (everyone forgets bahrain)
      • Say Whut 4 mths ago
        "Here comes the new boss... "
      • L M 4 mths ago
        No body forgot Bahrain, but the focus now on the barbarian gangs of the "Syrian regime" who defies sanity by all measures.
      • Yahoo IsCrap 4 mths ago
        don't forget "Myanmar" (Burma)
    • Tex  •  Norcross, Georgia  •  4 mths ago
      Freedom will prevail. USA needs to stay out of this one. Look at IRAQ......now that we are gone they are going to kill each other. What did we accomplish other than topple SADAM. I am getting old and look back at Vietnam and now Iraq and cry over the loss of all these brave young men and women. We need to stop policing the world. If we need to strike.....strike and get the hell out of the way.
      • HAPPY TRAILS TO U 4 mths ago
        By getting out maybe now more there will kill each other i will be very happy, and so will iran, lol lol lol lol come on bombers
      • kevin 4 mths ago
        I'm afraid we have stayed out of this situation too long already. Thousands have all ready been killed. This may go down as one of the worst atrocities ever by a government. The US and the rest of the World need to do a hell of a lot more than they have in Syria. Bottom line....
      • Roy 4 mths ago
        Kevin...GROW UP, man! There are atrocities and tragedies EVERYWHERE; and, it's a very subjective subject. What you may consider tragic, another may consider it just weeding out the weak. Now, if YOU want to go and protect the weak and prevent these atrocities, don't be a hypocrit; book a plane ticket and go fight the good fight. But, don't ask me, from the sweat stolen from my brow at the point of the IRS' gun, to send my tax money to prevent these tragedies in a foreign land! There's ALWAYS gonna be some form of an atrocity somewhere; whether the US intervenes or not. Look at Iraq; we weren't gone a WEEK and their system is breaking down and the killing has begun. How naively arrogant you and the US policy makers are thinking we're going to fix the world's tragedies at the point of gun....
    • Jon  •  Fresno, California  •  4 mths ago
      But who are the other countries that refuse to sanction Syria?
      Does China include one of them?
      • Dragnet 4 mths ago
        yes !!!
      • citizen 4 mths ago
        Stop spinning conspiracies - the whole world condemns Assad.
      • Ag 4 mths ago
        It also happens that China is not the the main target of Muslim hate, despite the fact that it is under a regime that suppresses all religion.
    • momoney  •  4 mths ago
      Freedom is a human right.

      Non-negotiable.
      • brian 4 mths ago
        in this case it is one time only freedom, afterwhich it becomes islamic and no more freedom. remember hamas
      • kitsy-chan 4 mths ago
        Actually that's debatable. There are more then a few cases and places where "arab people" have migrated into area's within the last 20-50 years, then staged protests and uprisings there saying they deserve independent homeland and the government of that area now give up huge sets of land as a new homeland for them. I'm pretty sure for example if a few thousand latin americans decided that a chunk of texas should now be theirs, uses weapons to force others off the land, and tries to declair independence from the usa, that freedom would become irrelivent.
      • Chris 4 mths ago
        @Kitsy-Chan. What you're talking about isn't freedom, it's insurrection. There's a huge difference between people who are being oppressed in their own homeland by a government thats supposed to protect it's civilians and uphold human dignity and that of a "rebellion" created by selfish people.
    • No Einstein  •  Greeley, Colorado  •  4 mths ago
      Ever notice how all of the protest signs are in English?
      Nothing wrong with that, but just an observation about the audience they are playing to!
      • No Einstein 4 mths ago
        and French too!
      • Karen 4 mths ago
        that's because the USA usually protest human rights violations . and No were not perfect either.
      • Karen 4 mths ago
        if these protest are true in the nuumbers they show ,why don't we americans protest are government ineptness.
    • gary  •  Pompano Beach, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      We should learn that our own government is not of the people....
    • Jon  •  Fresno, California  •  4 mths ago
      Even Russia is now having it's own protests!
    • Celestial  •  Boca Raton, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      Women be proud what god gave you, show your braveness, see the bright light of life for once!
    • Barney the Purple Dinosau ...  •  4 mths ago
      Arab despots - your people hate you.
    • infinite truth  •  4 mths ago
      All over the world ,thru out history, a tiny percentage has always ruled a huge majority. Our new found inter-connectedness,has given us all the strength and the power to say "Rule right,rule fair,with freedom above all." Could be the dawn of a new age....could take a while.
    • Charles in NJ  •  4 mths ago
      I wouldn't want to be anybody in those pictures after the inspectors leave.
    • Blub  •  4 mths ago
      Why does the Arabic speaking Syrian crowd carry signs in English?
    • Anon  •  Brookville, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      What do you expect? We see just the gov allows or wants us to see.
    • Don  •  New Braunfels, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      this tactic that the syrians are using of dressing up as arab league observers was used by the germans in their pow camps in WW2.when the red cross observers would come through and inspect conditions in the camps,they would always have a good little nazi escort them through the camp and if you were bold enough to say anything out of the way to the RC,well,let's just say,you had a bad day.when are these syrian people going to figure this and the other problem out,you know,when you get shot at,you find a way to shoot back.it's not rocket science,pick up a gun people,don't stand there and take it.revolutions aren't won with diplomacy,they're won with the blood of those who beleive in what they're fighting for.if you're not ready or willing to pay that price,then you are'nt ready for the freedom you cry for.
    • Michael  •  Georgetown, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      Dump the leach Assad
    • momoney  •  4 mths ago
      I hold these truth's to be self evident....

      Dictatorship is invalid by virtue.
      A dictator has earned no right or respect to the sovereignty of any territory they claim to rule.
      There is no such thing as a benevolent dictator.
      Dictators are enemies of all mankind.
    • G  •  Los Angeles, California  •  4 mths ago
      does yahoo think we're a bunch of idiots? the sign clearly says 21-12-2011, they write the day before the month in europe and the middle east, so this picture is from the 21st showing oh about 20 women tops, for a headline in the front page of yahoo "hundreds of thousands protest in Syria" what? where?when? I think the sheep that keep commenting and cheering to yahoo lies, is making yahoo bolder and bolder in treating you like you deserve.
    • Hippie Hunter  •  4 mths ago
      SMH Syria like most other countries around the world will end up worse off after this so called "revolution." Egypt worse off now than before. Libya will be worse off than before and now Syria. Lets take a moment and look at 3 famous revolutions in history, the french revolution=worse military dictatorship slaughtered that slaughtered hundreds of thousands of innocents? My favorite the Russian revolution, the czars never killed as many of their own people in half a century than Lenin did in a day; more than 30,000,000 Russian civilians died of starvation, Gulags, or execution under the soviet union. The Mao revolution in China, an approximation of 78,000,000 people starved to death or were executed in the time that he was their "dictator. Now let us look at the United States revolution and see what is different. We followed the idea of freedom not someone who preached it, you can only have true freedom in a constitutional republic which unfortunately we have stopped following because of what is known of soft tyranny. In which this allows people to be dependent on the government for their needs and desires. This was all predicted by a Frenchmen who came to america (1700's) and saw that the people who lived in america would fight to the death for freedom so the only way for a tyrannical government could take over was to do it unsuspectingly through this "soft tyranny." It is a natural instinct for people to vier towards despotism so in order to preserve freedom you must be ready to fight for it. Back to the original point, I am not saying that these dictators in these countries are good but they are simply revolting in the wrong way and I am predicting that Syria will end up the same way as these other countries have in the past and present. I am also not implying that we should aid them (which I am sure Obama will do)
    • SirKsun  •  4 mths ago
      I love how excited Muslim hater are that Muslims are in conflict. I doubt though Muslims will ever reach the record setting 20 million + Christian death toll of WW II not to mention the 6 million Jews they decided to take with them. Worst Muslim on Muslim death toll 1 million during the C.I.A. war of Iraq and Iran. I guess if you go by the #'s Christians are 26 times more evil than the worst dictator any Muslim peoples have come up with.
    • yahoouser  •  4 mths ago
      I wish freedom for the Syrian people.
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