Syrians poured into the streets in some of the largest antigovernment protests yet, despite the shutdown of much of Syria’s internet network, which has been crucial to demonstrators’ ability to mobilize and a major source of information for those outside the country.
The crowds protesting the authoritarian rule of President Bashar al-Assad appeared fueled in part by escalating anger about the torture and killing of a thirteen-year-old boy. Witnesses said protesters in dozens of communities dedicated their marches to him and other children killed during the uprising. They defied the continuing brutal crackdown that has killed more than a thousand people, with hundreds more rounded up in mass arrests.
More than thirty protesters were killed in the city of Hamah, according to Rami Abdelrahman, a human rights monitor. That report could not be immediately confirmed.
The boy who was killed, Hamza Ali al-Khateeb, has become a symbol of government oppression after a video of his mutilated body was circulated on YouTube. “We won’t forgive, we will kill the child killer,” chanted protesters in Homs, a center of dissent, according to a witness who gave his name as Mohamed. “We will continue until your end.”
Earlier this week, UNICEF issued an unusual statement describing “extreme violence against children in Syria. We are particularly disturbed by the recent video images of children who were arbitrarily detained and suffered torture or ill-treatment during their detention, leading in some cases to their death,” the statement said.
Though UNICEF has issued more general warnings about the effects of recent unrest in the Middle East on the lives of children there, the statement is the first time since the Arab Spring began that the organization has called on a specific government to investigate what it called “horrific acts” against children.
The internet shutdown severely disrupted the flow of the YouTube videos and Facebook and Twitter posts that have allowed protesters and others to keep track of demonstrations, since foreign news media are banned and state media are heavily controlled. Both land lines and cellphones are so frequently monitored by Syria’s feared secret police that Skype had become a major means of communication among activists, and its loss as a tool may be a blow to the protest movement. Government websites, including those for the Ministry of Oil and the state news agency, SANA, remained online. Two-thirds of Syria’s internet network went offline at 6:35 a.m. Friday, said James Cowie, an analyst at Renesys, an Internet analytic firm, in a cascading blackout that took thirty minutes.
Forty of the country’s internet pathways were disabled, including Syria’s entire 3G mobile network, run by the country’s only telecom provider, Syriatel, which is owned by Rami Makhlouf, Mr. Assad’s cousin.
“People that want to use their smart phones to Tweet or read Web pages cannot,” Mr. Cowie said. “All of the IPs on those phones appear to be down.” Phone service was also heavily disrupted across the country, and for the past several days, rights activists have reported that water and electricity had been shut off in a string of towns in central and southern Syria.
Egypt and Libya had earlier shut off access to the internet in an attempt to crush popular uprisings led by young people and aided by social media networks. “When a government shuts down the internet, it shows the disconnection between the governing and the governed,” Alec Ross, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s senior adviser for innovation, wrote in a Twitter post.
Oula Abdulhamid, a Syrian activist who helped organize a conference for members of the Syrian opposition in Turkey this week, said the protest videos posted were mainly the work of activists who had crossed Syria’s borders. “In some of the areas on the borders, they’re using Jordanian lines and Lebanese lines,” Ms. Abdulhamid said. “They’re crossing the borders and going to internet cafes. They’re doing such hard work just to get a few videos out. They’re risking their lives.”
According to Andrew Tabler, a Syria analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, the efforts of Syria’s scattered political opposition to unite at the Turkey conference appeared to have been embraced by activists within Syria and might be helping to fuel more vigorous protests. “There’s a feeling now that everyone is united against Assad, though everyone recognizes that this effort is going to take a while, a long while,” Mr. Tabler said.
Activists in various cities reported that people had turned out, despite their fears, after weeks of suppression that has included virtual blockades of several defiant cities. The Local Coordinating Committees in Syria, a loose group of organizers, reported that turnout at Friday’s protests was as high as seventy thousand in Maarrat an Numan and fifty thousand in Ariha, both in the northwest.
“The situation is so tense here,” said Sheik Nawaf al-Bashir, an activist in Dayr az Zawr in eastern Syria. He said that four people had been injured and that eight army units appeared to be heading toward the city center. “Heavy gunfire is heard all around,” Mr. Bashir said. “I am afraid of a clash between the army and the protesters.”
Anwar Fares, a former political prisoner who spoke from Dara’a, said four groups of protesters marched in city, the birthplace of the uprising, where security forces operating checkpoints throughout the city kept them from converging. He put the number of protesters at two thousand. “Even if the demonstrations are small in Dara’a, for us it is an achievement because the person who participates is a possible martyr,” Mr. Fares said. “Those who join the demonstrations might not come back,” he added.
In recent weeks, SANA has described the protest movement as an insurgency. Syrian television has offered limited coverage of the demonstrations, describing them as peaceful protests calling for the government to speed the reform process. But Mr. Abdelrahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, described concerns that worsening attacks on the protesters by the security forces might cause the protesters to respond with violence of their own. “I have fears that things will go out of control in the street,” he said. “Not all the people participating in the rallies are intellectuals, so it’s hard to control things, especially families who lost their sons. The opposition is not leading the street, the people are, and that is my deep fear.”
07 June 2011
More trouble in Syria
Liam Stack and Katherine Zoepf have an article in The New York Times about yet more protests in Syria:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment