Syria okays lifting of emergency laws
SYRIA'S government approved lifting the country's nearly 50-year-old state of emergency yesterday to meet a key demand of anti-government protesters, but also issued a stern warning to demonstrators to call off their challenges to President Bashar al-Assad's hard-line rule.
The mixed messages - just hours after security forces stormed an occupied square in Syria's third-largest city of Homs - leave ample doubt about whether authorities will ease their increasingly harsh blows against the month-old protests.
Assad's regime has labeled the protest movement as an "armed insurrection" that could give them the cover to continue the crackdown.
Assad last week told his cabinet to remove the state of emergency - in place since his Baath Party took power in March 1963 - but added that such a move would give protesters no more reason to take to the streets.
Syria's official news agency SANA said the cabinet also approved abolishing the state security court, which handled the trials of political prisoners, and approved a new law allowing the right to peaceful protests. The changes need parliament approval, but no objections are expected at its next session planned for May 2. The regime had claimed the reason for the emergency rule is because of the technical state of war with archenemy Israel.
The mixed messages - just hours after security forces stormed an occupied square in Syria's third-largest city of Homs - leave ample doubt about whether authorities will ease their increasingly harsh blows against the month-old protests.
Assad's regime has labeled the protest movement as an "armed insurrection" that could give them the cover to continue the crackdown.
Assad last week told his cabinet to remove the state of emergency - in place since his Baath Party took power in March 1963 - but added that such a move would give protesters no more reason to take to the streets.
Syria's official news agency SANA said the cabinet also approved abolishing the state security court, which handled the trials of political prisoners, and approved a new law allowing the right to peaceful protests. The changes need parliament approval, but no objections are expected at its next session planned for May 2. The regime had claimed the reason for the emergency rule is because of the technical state of war with archenemy Israel.
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