UN monitors tour Syria as violence lulls

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United Nations ceasefire monitors were touring towns near the Syrian capital on Monday, an official said, as the European Union slapped new sanctions on the regime of Bashar al-Assad.
Neeraj Singh, spokesman for an eight-member advance team of UN observers deployed in Syria, said monitors would be visiting areas near Damascus in hopes of making sure a tenuous ceasefire that went into effect April 12 sticks.
“The advance team is continuing its work carrying out daily visits, establishing liaison with all parties and preparing for the UN supervision mission in Syria which has been established by the UN Security Council,” Singh told AFP.
He said the advance team would be joined by two additional observers on Monday.
A total 30 observers are expected in Syria in coming days pending the arrival of an expanded team of up to 300 observers as part of a truce brokered by international envoy Kofi Annan.
But it will be up to UN chief Ban Ki-moon to determine whether the situation is safe enough to deploy the 300 observers for an initial 90-day period.
Annan on Tuesday is to brief the Security Council on the situation.
The advance team last week toured several flashpoint regions across the country, including the battered city of Homs where two observers set up base on Sunday.
But despite a lull in the fighting in regions visited by the observers, the violence has continued unabated in other areas, activists say.
At least 28 people were killed at the weekend, including five soldiers, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.
The United Nations has said that more than 9,000 people have died since the revolt against President Assad’s regime broke out in March last year.
Activists and some Western countries have cast doubt on the regime’s sincerity in upholding the ceasefire and have accused Assad of simply seeking to buy time and to appease the international community.
“Shelling of the Khaldiyeh neighbourhood of Homs continued all night and could be heard and seen by the observers,” said Abu Yazan al-Homsi, an activist in the central city.
Speaking with AFP via Skype, he added that gunfire was overheard Monday in other neighborhoods of Homs.
“I really don’t understand what the observer mission is all about,” he said. “If it’s to give Assad more leeway, then we don’t need them.”
He accused the regime of failing to comply with all clauses in the six-point plan drawn up by Annan.
“The regime has not withdrawn tanks from the streets and no detainees have been released,” Homsi said.
Monitors estimate that 25,000 people are currently detained in Syria in connection with the 13-month revolt.
In a sign of Western frustration with Damascus, the European Union agreed Monday to slap new sanctions on the regime, banning luxury goods exports and further restricting the sale of items used to repress dissidents, a diplomat said.
“These sanctions will be put in place against Syria,” the diplomat told AFP after EU ambassadors endorsed the measures ahead of a meeting of foreign ministers in Luxembourg.
The extent of the luxury ban has yet to be defined but the aim is to deliver a symbolic blow against the posh lifestyle of Assad and his glamorous British-born wife Asma, another diplomat said.
“The Assad couple, as well as his inner circle and leaders of the regime must be made to understand that events in Syria will also impact their personal lives,” the source added.