Syrian security forces open fire on sit-in
By ZEINA KARAM, Associated Press
Apr 19, 2011 7:06 AM CDT
In this citizen journalism image made on a mobile phone and acquired by the AP, Syrian anti-government protesters, some of them wearing their death shroud, march during a demonstration in Banias, Syria, Sunday, April 17, 2011. Gunmen opened fire during a funeral for a slain anti-government protester...   (Associated Press)

Syria issued a stern warning to the nation Tuesday to stop protesting, hours after security forces opened fire with live ammunition and tear gas on hundreds of anti-government demonstrators during a pre-dawn raid that killed at least one person, witnesses said.

The statement raised the specter of an increasingly violent crackdown on the monthlong protest movement against President Bashar Assad's authoritarian regime. The uprising is posing the most serious threat to the Assad family's ruling dynasty.

The death toll from a security crackdown over the past four weeks has topped 200, human rights groups say.

The Interior Ministry called on Syrians to "assist" authorities in preserving national security by refraining from taking part in any protests or sit-ins under any pretext. In a statement broadcast on Syrian Television, the ministry said all laws will be implemented to safeguard the people's security and the country's stability.

Hours earlier, security forces fired on anti-government protesters staging a sit-in in a square in the central city of Homs, chasing them through the streets for hours.

Witnesses said at least one person was killed and many others wounded.

"They shot at everything, there was smoke everywhere," an activist in Homs told The Associated Press by telephone, asking that his name not be used because he feared for his personal safety. "I saw people on the ground, some shot in their feet, some in the stomach."

The streets were largely deserted by early afternoon, with people staying inside their homes.

Hundreds of people had gathered Monday at Clock Square in the center of Homs, bringing mattresses, food and water to the site for an Egypt-style standoff. They vowed to stay until President Bashar Assad is ousted _ a brazen escalation of the monthlong uprising against the country's authoritarian regime.

An eyewitness said police used loudspeakers to call on protesters to evacuate the area around 2 a.m. Shortly afterward, security forces moved in, firing first tear gas, then live ammunition at fleeing protesters.

"They went up to people's homes, they arrested many," a Homs resident said by telephone. "We heard ambulances all night."

Three people in Homs confirmed the account, all of them asking for anonymity for fear of government reprisals.

The witnesses' accounts could not be independently confirmed because Syria has placed tight restrictions on media outlets and expelled foreign journalists.

At least 200 people have been killed over the past month as security forces have launched a deadly crackdown on a growing protest movement, human rights groups say. The government has coupled dry promises of reform with brutal tactics to quell the unrest, using the widely despised security forces and unleashing pro-regime thugs known as shabiha.

On Monday, the government blamed the weeks of unrest on ultraconservative Muslims seeking to establish a fundamentalist state _ the latest effort to portray the reform movement as populated by extremists.

Assad has been playing on fears of sectarian warfare as he works to crush any popular support for the uprising.

The Egypt-style standoff in Homs followed funeral processions by more than 10,000 mourners for some of those killed in clashes Sunday that a rights group said left at least 12 people dead.

The protesters, mostly young men but including women and children, had set up tents, bringing in mattresses, food and drinks. One tent was named "National Unity Tent." Another "Martyrs" tent was set up to offer condolences for those killed a day earlier, according to an eyewitness.

"Please Go," one banner implored Assad.

The government has in the past blamed "armed gangs" seeking to stir up unrest for many of the killings.

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