Syria to lift state of emergency

Protest in Syrian city Homs

Witness to Syria protests: “The shooting is hammering down on us like rain”

Syria’s government has lifted the country’s decades-old state of emergency as protests against the rule of President Bashar al-Assad continue.

The state security court, which handled the trials of political prisoners, has been abolished while a new law allowing peaceful protests has been approved.

The repeal of the emergency law was a key demand of protesters.

Earlier, unverified footage from the western city of Homs appeared to show security forces opening fire.

Analysis

It was only a few days ago that Homs began to appear in media coverage of the ongoing protests in Syria, although it wasn’t far behind Deraa in joining the current wave of protests against President Assad’s regime.

The city of Homs lies in central Syria, approximately 180km (111 miles) north of Damascus. It is the main city in the province of Homs, the largest in Syria and the third most populous, with more than a million residents.

As in Deraa, the governor of Homs is very close to President Assad, and this has played a major role in fuelling protests in both cities.

The latest protests took place mainly in the city of Homs and also in the nearby cities of al-Rastan and Talbeesa.

In the beginning, the protesters had a number of specific demands, but the deadly reaction of the authorities fuelled their anger. Those taking part in the second wave of protests are calling for the fall of the regime.

The country’s interior minister has urged people to refrain from taking part in rallies in the interests of safety and stability.

Mohammed Ibrahim al-Shaar told people “to refrain from taking part in all marches, demonstrations or sit-ins under any banner whatsoever”, in remarks carried by the official news agency, Sana.

He warned that if demonstrations were held, “the laws in force in Syria will be applied in the interest of the safety of the people and the stability of the country”.

The BBC’s Owen Bennet-Jones says the apparently contradictory moves suggest that a major debate is going on at highest levels of Syrian politics.

The indications are that the lifting of the state of emergency will not be enough to satisfy the protesters, our correspondent adds.

Activists say about 200 Syrians have died in weeks of unrest challenging the rule of President Assad.

Witnesses in Homs, the country’s third-largest city, said security forces had opened fire early on Tuesday to disperse a mass anti-government protest there.

At least 5,000 demonstrators occupied Clock Square in Homs on Monday after mass funerals for about 12 protesters reportedly killed by security forces at the weekend.

Map

Security forces swarmed into the main square before dawn. Witnesses said security forces told them through loudhailers to leave, before firing tear gas, then live ammunition.

A protester called Omar told BBC Arabic that he had seen one person shot dead.

“Listen to the shooting,” he said. “Can you hear it? It’s hammering on us like rain.

Another demonstrator in Homs told the Associated Press news agency by telephone: “I saw people on the ground, some shot in their feet, some in the stomach.”

On Saturday, Mr Assad promised an imminent end to the state of emergency, which has been in place for 48 years. The authorities have also been freeing political prisoners – another key demand of the protesters.

But Syria’s unprecedented wave of unrest shows no sign of abating.

The government has said an “armed insurrection” by Salafist groups is taking place in Homs and further north in Baniyas.

Salafism is a strict form of Sunni Islam which many Arab governments equate with militant groups like al-Qaeda.

Sana news agency has also been reporting on events in Homs.

It said three army officers, including a brigadier general, together with his two sons and a nephew, were killed on Sunday by “armed criminal gangs” which then mutilated the bodies.

State TV carried footage of large crowds expressing support for President Assad at their funerals.

Demonstrations against Mr Assad’s ruling Baath Party spread after breaking out in the southern city of Deraa in mid-March.

The unrest poses the gravest threat to his rule since he succeeded his father Hafez al-Assad 11 years ago.

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