Syria Live Blog

People continue to take to the streets across Syria despite the government's crackdown on protests. Reports say thousands have been killed since the demonstrations started in March 2011, on both sides.

We bring you the latest news from various sources.

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Al Jazeera's Gregg Carlstrom, currently based in Baghdad, reports that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has announced at a press conference of Arab journalists that an Iraqi political delegation is in Damascus to meet with Syrian officials and discuss an "Iraqi initiative" to deal with the crisis there.

The delegation, which is apparently headed by national security adviser Falah al-Fayyad, wants to convince the Syrian government and opposition to meet in Iraq to discuss ending Ba'ath party rule, constitutional amendments and elections.

Arab league ministers from five member states are currently meeting in Qatar to discuss the body's response to nine months of unrest in Syria, which the UN says has left more than 5,000 people dead.

For the latest: Qatar to host crisis meeting on Syria

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The Arab League expects the Damascus regime to sign up "soon" to an observer mission intended to monitor the protection of civilians, the bloc's number two Ahmed Ben Helli said on Saturday.

"There are positive signs... I expect the signing will happen soon," Ahmed Ben Helli told AFP ahead of a meeting of an Arab League ministerial commission in Qatar.

"It will not be today," he said, before the meeting, which had originally been scheduled to take place in Cairo alongside a now indefinitely postponed emergency foreign ministers' meeting.

The Arab League approved a raft of sanctions against the Damascus authorities on November 27 to punish their failure to heed an ultimatum to admit the observers but Syria said on Sunday that it would allow the mission in on certain conditions.

In a letter to the bloc's secretary general, Nabil al-Arabi, Foreign Minister Walid Muallem set a number of terms, notably the withdrawal of the sanctions package.

Ben Helli said on Thursday that the League was still holding talks with Syria on its offer.

On Friday, hundreds of thousands turned out across Syria for rallies called under the slogan: "The Arab League is killing us - enough deadlines," in protest at the bloc's failure to take a tougher stance.

Read the full story: Qatar to host crisis meeting on Syria

Arab league ministers from five member states are due to meet in Qatar to discuss the body's response to nine months of unrest in Syria, which the UN says has left more than 5,000 people dead.

"The meeting in Qatar on Saturday is going to be important because we will discuss what measures to take from now on," said Ahmed Ben Helli, the Arab League deputy secretary-general.

"We are pained by what is happening in Syria, but I am still optimistic that the Arab League initiative will work so that we can stop the bloodshed."
 
Delegates from Egypt, Algeria, Sudan and Oman will be in attendance.

Read the full story: Qatar to host crisis meeting on Syria

Amateur video of a protest that took place in Hamediah, Homs on December 16, 2011. Opposition organisers claim that 17 people were killed by government troops in Syria on Friday - nine of which were from Homs.

Anti-government protesters in Syria are expressing frustration that the Arab League isn't taking more action against the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

Thousands protested across the country on Friday, urging the League to stop extending its deadline for Damascus to end the violent crackdown and allow for an observer mission into the country. Al Jazeera's Stefanie Dekker reports

 

 

A Syrian farmer was killed on Friday when a landmine exploded as he was driving his truck across an illegal border crossing  into Lebanon, a medical source said.

"The man was transferred to a hospital in Akkar in critical condition and he died shortly thereafter of his wounds," the source said, referring to a district in northern Lebanon where several wounded refugees have received medical care.

Syrian troops on October 27 laced the northern Lebanese border with landmines in a bid to stop arms smuggling and prevent refugees and army defectors from fleeing President Bashar al-Assad's crackdown on anti-government protesters, according to Lebanese officials.

[AFP]

 

More than 4,500 Syrians fleeing a brutal crackdown on the uprising against the government of President Bashar al-Assad have found shelter in neighbouring Lebanon, with hundreds crossing the border in the last two weeks, the United Nations said on Friday.

A report released by the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said 4,510 Syrians, including women and children, had registered in northern Lebanon, up from 3,798 at the beginning of December.

The majority of those who fled to Lebanon this month hail from the central Homs region and nearby Tal Kalakh, where regime forces have sought to crush massive protests demanding Assad step down.

Most of them had settled with host families "in difficult circumstances" in villages near the border as well as in the Akkar district, located between the Lebanese-Syrian border and the coastal city of Tripoli, the report said.

Nineteen wounded Syrians, including a 11-year old girl, were also hospitalised in the north this week alone, according to UNHCR.

"Several were in coma when they reached the hospitals and one person reportedly died from his injuries," read the report.

Syria has planted landmines along its border with Lebanon in a bid to prevent weapons smuggling and dissidents from fleeing the fierce crackdown by the regime in Damascus against a nine-month revolt, Lebanese officials in the north have said.

Lebanon and Syria share a 330-kilometre border but have yet to agree on official demarcation.

Syrian troops have regularly staged incursions into neighbouring Lebanon in recent weeks, killing at least three people when they opened fire on border villages, according to Lebanese officials.

[Source: AFP]

Tunisia's new President Moncef Marzouki said in  an interview aired on Friday he was against foreign intervention in Syria,  where thousands have been killed in months of anti-government protests.
 
"Of course I am opposed to foreign intervention in Syria," he told France 24 in his first comments on the crisis in Syria since taking office Tuesday, after the first elections since the Arab Spring was unleashed in his country.
 
"I am sorry to see the Syrian revolution sliding towards violence," he said.
 
"I hope that our Syrian brothers both inside and outside the country will unite and play a moral role to ensure that this revolution is democratic, peaceful, non-ethnic and without foreign intervention."
  
Tunisia is hosting a three-day meeting of the Syrian National Council, Syria's main opposition bloc.
The chairman of Libya's National Transitional Council has called on Syria's president to step down, saying the Syrian people have the right to determine their own destiny.
 
Mustafa Abdul-Jalil said Friday that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad should quit.
 
He said Assad can always put himself up for election in a democratic vote to see if his people really want him.
 
He says "if the Syrian people are willing to choose Assad, then let it be.''
 
Abdul-Jalil spoke at a development conference in Warsaw, Poland.

Syrian government supporters wave Syrian flags during a rally today in the capital Damascus.