Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad has warned that any Western intervention would cause an “earthquake” inflaming the region, after dozens died in one of the bloodiest days of the uprising against his rule.
In an interview with Britain’s Sunday Telegraph newspaper, Assad warned of “another Afghanistan” if foreign forces intervened in his country as they had with the Libyan uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi. “Syria is the hub now in this region,” the paper quoted Assad as telling one of its journalists in Damascus. “It is the fault line, and if you play with the ground you will cause an earthquake – do you want to see another Afghanistan, or tens of Afghanistans?
“Any problem in Syria will burn the whole region. If the plan is to divide Syria, that is to divide the whole region.” His warning came as 20 Syrian soldiers were killed on Saturday and 53 wounded in clashes with presumed army deserters in Homs, while 10 security agents and a deserter were killed in a bus ambush, activists said. The violence, in which loyalist and anti-regime casualties predominated in what is the worst surge of killing in six months, came as 12 civilians died and several were wounded by government gunfire.
In the area of Homs, at least 12 civilians died from fire by snipers and machineguns, while an undetermined number of others were killed in their homes by security forces, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged Syria “immediately” to end attacks on civilians after dozens died in a fierce crackdown on dissent by Syria’s security forces on Friday, which was also condemned by the Arab League. Ban’s appeal came after activists said 36 people were killed on Friday by security forces during mass protests calling for the imposition of a Libya-style no-fly zone on Syria.
Ban “appeals for military operations against civilians to stop at once,” said his spokesman Martin Nesirky. Friday’s violence prompted fresh condemnation from the foreign ministers of the 22-strong Arab League, which has been trying to broker an end to the unrest that has rocked Syria since anti-regime protests erupted in March. An Arab League task force met Assad on Wednesday in Damascus and was due to hold talks Sunday in Qatar with top Syrian officials to try to reach “serious results and an exit to the Syrian crisis,” it said.
But Syria’s foreign ministry accused the Arab committee of stoking dissent, having been influenced by “lies spread by television channels”. The latest violence was the deadliest in nearly six months to occur on a Friday, the day worshippers emerging from weekly prayers at mosques defy the security forces and swarm the streets to rally against the regime.