Assad cracks down on coastal town
SYRIAN tanks rolled into a Mediterranean coastal town yesterday in an escalating crackdown by President Bashar Assad, just a day after clashes with anti-government protesters left at least 30 dead nationwide, activists said.
Details of the troop deployment in Banias, which has seen weeks of demonstrations demanding regime change, were scarce as communications with the town and the surrounding area were cut off.
But activists in touch with townspeople said soldiers deployed in Banias before dawn.
One activist said tanks rolled into the seaside area and were stationed in at least three Sunni villages just south of Banias, adding that soldiers were carrying out house-to-house searches and arrests in al-Marqab district about a mile southeast of the town and in the villages of Bayda and Basatin further south.
Banias, which has a major oil refinery and is the main point of export for Syrian oil, has a potentially explosive mix of religious groups and sects. It is divided between Sunni Muslims and Alawites - the sect of the ruling Assad family and many key officials.
Several other activists, speaking on condition of anonymity, reported gunboats off the Banias' coast. They said the town, which had become a leading focus of anti-regime demonstrations, was now completely besieged.
The Banias deployment came only hours after Friday's clashes with anti-government protesters killed 30 people across the country, according to a leading Syrian rights activist.
The move raises fears of a large-scale military operation in Banias, similar to the one carried out in the flashpoint southern city of Daraa.
Daraa has been under siege since April 25, when Syrian authorities cut off electricity and phone lines and deployed tanks and snipers to crush dissent there.
The army announced the end to an 11-day military operation on Thursday, but residents have since said troops still remain in the streets. About 50 people have been reported killed in Daraa in the past 10 days.
The uprising in Syria was sparked by the arrest of teenagers who scrawled anti-regime graffiti on a wall in Daraa. Protests spread quickly across the nation of some 23 million people.
More than 580 civilians and 100 soldiers have been killed since the revolt began, rights groups say.
The UN said yesterday it is sending a team into Syria to investigate the situation, and the European Union is expected to place sanctions on Syrian officials next week.
Details of the troop deployment in Banias, which has seen weeks of demonstrations demanding regime change, were scarce as communications with the town and the surrounding area were cut off.
But activists in touch with townspeople said soldiers deployed in Banias before dawn.
One activist said tanks rolled into the seaside area and were stationed in at least three Sunni villages just south of Banias, adding that soldiers were carrying out house-to-house searches and arrests in al-Marqab district about a mile southeast of the town and in the villages of Bayda and Basatin further south.
Banias, which has a major oil refinery and is the main point of export for Syrian oil, has a potentially explosive mix of religious groups and sects. It is divided between Sunni Muslims and Alawites - the sect of the ruling Assad family and many key officials.
Several other activists, speaking on condition of anonymity, reported gunboats off the Banias' coast. They said the town, which had become a leading focus of anti-regime demonstrations, was now completely besieged.
The Banias deployment came only hours after Friday's clashes with anti-government protesters killed 30 people across the country, according to a leading Syrian rights activist.
The move raises fears of a large-scale military operation in Banias, similar to the one carried out in the flashpoint southern city of Daraa.
Daraa has been under siege since April 25, when Syrian authorities cut off electricity and phone lines and deployed tanks and snipers to crush dissent there.
The army announced the end to an 11-day military operation on Thursday, but residents have since said troops still remain in the streets. About 50 people have been reported killed in Daraa in the past 10 days.
The uprising in Syria was sparked by the arrest of teenagers who scrawled anti-regime graffiti on a wall in Daraa. Protests spread quickly across the nation of some 23 million people.
More than 580 civilians and 100 soldiers have been killed since the revolt began, rights groups say.
The UN said yesterday it is sending a team into Syria to investigate the situation, and the European Union is expected to place sanctions on Syrian officials next week.
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