Four killed in Syria, as West ups pressure

Syrian security forces killed four people yesterday, as the West ratcheted up pressure for UN Security Council action against Damascus, with France branding blocking moves by China and Russia as “indecent”. The four were killed in Jebel al-Zawiya...

Syrian security forces killed four people yesterday, as the West ratcheted up pressure for UN Security Council action against Damascus, with France branding blocking moves by China and Russia as “indecent”.

The four were killed in Jebel al-Zawiya region, where the army deployed two weeks ago to crush an anti-government revolt, Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said by phone. He said sustained gunfire was heard in the area, which lies in Idlib, a province near the northwestern border with Turkey.

An explosion, meanwhile, hit a pipeline in northeastern Syria in the first attack on the energy infrastructure since unprecedented protests against Mr Assad’s rule erupted in mid-March, state media and activists said.

And the Arab League of Human Rights head said security forces wielding batons dispersed 250 intellectuals and writers in Damascus’s Midan district yesterday as they gathered, sang the national anthem and chanted “God, Syria, Freedom.”

Four people were arrested, said Abdel Karim Rihawi.

France, which with other European governments has been circulating a draft resolution at the Security Council for months only to see it blocked by veto-wielding permanent members China and Russia, said it was vital the UN take action over President Bashar al-Assad’s deadly crackdown on dissent.

“It is indecent because Bashar al-Assad has mobilised incredible resources to neutralise his opposition,” said Defence Minister Gerard Longuet.

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