Syria faces new sanctions, activists urge ‘death’ demos

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Syria on Friday faced fresh sanctions targeting its oil exports, as activists called fresh anti-regime protests under the banner of “death rather than humiliation.”
The European Union was to formally adopt an embargo on Syrian oil, but the sanctions would not take effect until November 15 for existing contracts after Italy insisted on a delay, according to diplomats in Brussels.
They told AFP that the EU would also expand its list of people targeted by an assets freeze and travel ban.
The announcement of the oil embargo coincides with a key meeting of EU foreign ministers Friday in Poland. The measure will deprive President Bashar al-Assad’s regime of a vital source of cash, as the EU buys 95 percent of Syria’s crude oil.
In Paris, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the world community should escalate pressure on by targeting Syria’s oil and gas exports to force him from office. “The violence must stop and he needs to step aside,” Clinton told reporters in Paris after a meeting Thursday on Libya, where strongman Moamer Gaddafi has already been forced from office.
Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero also said the world community should support Syrians opposed to Assad, following the success of UN-backed action in Libya.
“This example should extend to other countries like Syria (where people are) fighting for freedom and to whom the international community should give its wholehearted backing,” he said.
Facebook page Syrian Revolution 2011, one of the drivers of the revolt against Assad’s hardline rule that has rocked Syria since mid-March, urged that protests take place after the Friday Muslim prayers — a weekly rallying point for demonstrations.
The rallies will be held under the slogan of “death rather than humiliation,” it said. “We are ready to die in the millions as martyrs.”
The call for protests comes as the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said four people — including an 11-year child — were killed and several more were wounded Thursday when security forces opened fire on protesters in the central region of Homs. According to the Local Coordination Committees (LCC), which groups activists on the ground, armoured cars entered the city of Homs itself. The Britain-based Observatory also reported “one dead and five wounded in an assault by the army and security forces on the village of Al-Rama” in the northwestern province of Idlib, near the Turkish border. The deceased was a man in his seventies.
And the LCC said a young man was killed by pro-regime militiamen in the eastern city of Deir Ezzor. A 10-year-old girl died there of injuries sustained a day earlier, it added.
The United Nations says that more than 2,200 people have been killed since the beginning of near-daily protests across the country against Assad’s regime in mid-March.
A senior Syrian official, meanwhile, said in a contested video posted on YouTube that he has resigned in disgust at hundreds of killings and thousands of arrests by Assad’s regime.
In the YouTube video posted late on Wednesday, the attorney general of the flashpoint rebellious province of Hama, Mohammed Adnan al-Bakkour, announced his resignation.
He said he took the decision after hundreds of jailed peaceful demonstrators were killed by the authorities and buried in mass graves, and 10,000 were arrested arbitrarily.
But the official SANA news agency, which reported on Monday that Bakkour had been kidnapped en route to work with his driver and bodyguard, quoted officials as saying his statement had been made under duress.