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Syrians Flee Town Of Jisr Al-Shughour, Where Scores Of Security Men Were Killed, As troops approach

Syria Jisr Al Shughour

First Posted: 06/ 8/11 08:45 AM ET Updated: 06/ 8/11 09:13 AM ET

(Reuters) - Syrians fled a restive town toward the Turkish border, fearing bloodshed as troops with tanks approached, under orders to hit back after the government accused armed bands there of killing scores of its security men.

Though accounts of days of killing in Jisr al-Shughour ranged from an official version of gunmen ambushing troops to residents' reports of an army mutiny, it triggered international alarm that violence may enter a new and bloodier phase after three months of popular unrest that has left over 1,000 dead.

France and Britain, allies in the war against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, took a lead in pushing U.N. moves against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. But Russia, citing NATO's inconclusive bombing of Tripoli, said it would veto intervention against Syria in the United Nations Security Council.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe, at U.N. headquarters in New York, said it was "a question of days, maybe hours" before the Council voted on a resolution condemning Syria. A draft circulated last month does not propose military intervention.

At Jisr al-Shughour, home to tens of thousands of people, residents said they were taking cover and bracing for attacks.

"The army is taking up position around Jisr al-Shughour," one anti-government activist told Reuters by telephone, saying residents have seen troops approaching the northeastern town from Aleppo, Syria's second city, and from Latakia on the coast.

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"Most people have left the town because they are scared," he said, asking not to be named for his own safety. "They know the deaths will be high. People have gone to nearby villages close to the Turkish border. The doctors and nurses have also left."

On Monday, Information Minister Adnan Mahmoud said army units would carry out their "national duty to restore security."

The government has expelled independent journalists, making it hard to determine clearly what is happening in the country.

Despite enthusiasm for pro-democracy movements that have unseated dictators in Tunisia and Egypt, few Western leaders -- let alone their autocratic Arab partners -- have shown a will to intervene in Syria, an Iranian ally whose volatile mix of ethnic and religious groups sits astride a web of regional conflicts.

FOREIGN PRESSURE

Assad's family and supporters from the minority Alawite sect have dominated Syria since his late father seized power 41 years ago. He has responded with promises of reform, and a crackdown on protesters in towns across the country. His officials accuse radical Islamists of fomenting a violent, armed revolt.

Neighboring countries, including Israel and Turkey, worry that a collapse into chaos could set off sectarian conflict and the emergence of violent, radical Islamists, as happened in Neighboring Iraq after the U.S. invasion of 2003.

But Western powers kept up pressure. British Foreign Secretary William Hague, in some of London's strongest language yet against the 45-year-old leader, told parliament: "President Assad is losing legitimacy and should reform or step aside." He said European governments were looking at further sanctions.

"We are working to persuade other countries that the Security Council has a responsibility to speak out," Hague added. Russia appears opposed to a general condemnation of Assad, let alone authorising military action against him.

U.S. President Barack Obama, who last month urged Assad to lead a transition to democracy or "get out of the way," did not mention Syria in remarks at a news briefing on Tuesday.

But in Brussels, Russia's envoy to the European Union, Vladimir Chizhov, said: "The prospect of a U.N. Security Council resolution that's along the same lines as Resolution 1973 on Libya will not be supported by my country ... The use of force, as Libya shows, does not provide answers."

Veto-holding Russia abstained on the Libya vote, allowing NATO to begin a bombing campaign that Western powers say saved civilians in rebel-held Benghazi from an onslaught by Gaddafi's forces, but which has failed to dislodge the Libyan leader.

Syria's ambassador to France strongly denied a report on Tuesday that she had resigned in protest at the government's repression of protests, saying it was part of a campaign of disinformation against Damascus.

Lamia Chakkour, shown standing in front of a portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the Paris embassy, told France's BFM television that a report by news channel France 24, featuring a telephone interview with a woman claiming to be her, was false.

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny and Yara Bayoumy in Beirut; Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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(Reuters) - Syrians fled a restive town toward the Turkish border, fearing bloodshed as troops with tanks approached, under orders to hit back after the government accused armed bands there of kil...
(Reuters) - Syrians fled a restive town toward the Turkish border, fearing bloodshed as troops with tanks approached, under orders to hit back after the government accused armed bands there of kil...
 
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10:28 PM on 6/08/2011
Am I missing the point somewhere? Arabs killing Arabs but it is my fault as an American ??

Seems to me that every one down is one less potential terrorist so whats the problem? If its all my fault then at least we should get some benifit.
07:08 PM on 6/08/2011
when it coomes to the mid east, there are no reasonable people... there are 2 sides and neither side approaches the middle. to most people, a good jew or a good arab is a dead one. So, with this in mind how the hell will there ever be any form of peace as long as no side ever wants to approach the middle. eventually there will be another war, but it will be a whopper. Bahir is killing his own, ok, hamas kills fatah fatah kills hamas, the christians kill the moslems the
moslems kill the copts, and they all want to kill the jews.. hundreds of years of the same plot and no changes... its like the twilight zone. so here.is another option if there are any reasonable people there...Is­rael has the technology­, the arabs have the money, the labor force is there... so how about both sides getting together and taking over the business world, wow the thought brains, money and labor... when everyone has money in their pocket they will be less prone to risk it over nonsense. the odds....ni­hl.... you know why, honor is more important than common sense. O well..... now who has the guns....!
4 hours ago (12:02 AM)
From your comment to the relevant parties' ears...
06:03 PM on 6/08/2011
The Russians are acting like the criminals they always do. Sure, the zionists and the USA are making Israel unreasonab­le and Saudi and Bahrain crackdown monkeys, but Assad is no prince, for sure. If he starts killing Turks en masse, watch out for a ticked off Turkey. The people in that part of Syria are largely Turks, and eastern Turks are not a patient people with abuse.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rubiconski
05:30 PM on 6/08/2011
Let's just call this what it is. A Wag the Dog production­. Connect the dots and see what's going on out there.
05:35 PM on 6/08/2011
You forgot to mention that the production is a Zionist one. ;) People are dying at the hands of their own president and his military and you continue to blame everyone else except the real guilty ones. And you talk about brain washing?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rubiconski
05:23 PM on 6/08/2011
This is a “Governmen­t in Exile” enterprise set up by “discredit­ed businessma­n from Virginia”, Farid N. Ghadry, co-founder and current president of the Reform Party of Syria who is “Syria’s version of Ahmad Chalabi" and (believe it or not) a member of AIPAC.

http://en.­wikipedia.­org/wiki/F­arid_Ghadr­y
05:39 PM on 6/08/2011
For a moment I was worried that the Zionist connection was missing from your response. I'm glad you're back on point. Of course, wikipedia is where you learn anything you need to know, just like Sarah Palin version of American history.
05:12 PM on 6/08/2011
They might get some help at the Turkish border. At the Israeli border they will get shot at from both sides.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StevieTheK
On n'oublie rien, rien de tout
04:48 PM on 6/08/2011
quick! pay some idiots to storm the Syria/Isra­el border!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rubiconski
04:10 PM on 6/08/2011
Americas favorite past time... invasion..­. occupation­... bringing freedom to the world at the barrel of a gun...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
Pro-democracy, pro-west, pro-Zion
04:14 PM on 6/08/2011
Nope, this is about Arabs fleeing from ARABS.
04:51 PM on 6/08/2011
There was a mention of the U.S. and President Obama in one sentence of this whole article. Did you even read it or just comment?
04:57 PM on 6/08/2011
What part of America is Syria,pal?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cyrus Trance
05:04 PM on 6/08/2011
Arab favorite past time......­...kill other Arabs, suppress women's rights, blame it all on Israel and the US.
04:03 PM on 6/08/2011
It just goes to show that the middle east will do far better if democracy prevails over theocracy.­... get God out of governing nations and the world will see peace...
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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Cannonball Taffy O Jones
Khaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!
03:47 PM on 6/08/2011
The boy Assad has a long way to go before he catches up with his old dad’s total of 20,000 dead Syrians. But that is not a problem as the Arab and Muslim worlds will give the tyrant just as long as he wants.
03:06 PM on 6/08/2011
Why is no one pressing the point that BO jumped into Libya to save innocents, but sits idly by while this is happening in Syria.

Is anyone else as nervous as I am at the incompeten­ce of this shill?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
redsoxpagan
03:27 PM on 6/08/2011
By jumping into Libya, we'll undoubtedl­y kill more civilians than Gaddafi had planned. We need look only to Iraq and Afghanista­n for proof.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
Pro-democracy, pro-west, pro-Zion
03:32 PM on 6/08/2011
To be fair, the Russians and Iranians are preventing any action, even at the UN.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Json
Cynical dreamer, sarcastic idealist...
03:54 PM on 6/08/2011
No one is pressing the point??
People are discussing it constantly­.

(And I trust his judgment a lot more than I trust yours.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
Pro-democracy, pro-west, pro-Zion
02:25 PM on 6/08/2011
I wonder what Helen Thomas has to say about this. Zogby, where are you? Ralph Nader? Anyone?
02:52 PM on 6/08/2011
MJ,?.KATTO­UB? CHOMSKY?
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
03:26 PM on 6/08/2011
no, as long as it's arabs killing arabs, there is nothing political about it, in other words, they don't care. only when jews kill arabs in defense of their homeland do the anti-semit­es come out.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
Pro-democracy, pro-west, pro-Zion
01:59 PM on 6/08/2011
Arab hero, HizbAllah leader, Hassan Nasrallah supports Assad.
HizbAllah members participat­e in the killings of Syrians.
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crankyCrackPot
Know another word for synonym?
02:35 PM on 6/08/2011
Arab Hero Hezbollah :"leader" Hassan Nasrallah does whatever the Persian Ayatollah tells him to do.
In a few months, Hezbollah will be killing Lebanese as well.