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Sunday, June 19, 2011

Syrian tanks enter Turkey border village

Syrian tanks enter Turkey border village

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Syrian refugee boys chant slogans during a protest, from behind a fence at the Turkish Red Crescent camp in the Altinozu district of Hatay, 30 kilometres from the Syrian border, on Friday. Nearly 10,000 Syrians have crossed the border into Turkey fleeing
   Army tanks on Saturday entered a village bordering Turkey, where 10,000 Syrians have sought refuge, an activist said, as Washington warned Damascus over its ‘continued brutality’ against protesters.
          As many as 19 people were killed in protests around the country on Friday, the Local Coordination Committee of anti-government activists said, although it added that it had collected only 12 names so far.
          Syrian soldiers in at least six tanks and 15 troop transporters entered the border village of Bdama on Saturday, widening the crackdown focused in the northwestern province of Idlib, activist Rami Abdel Rahman said.
          The head of the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said ‘heavy gunfire’ broke out as the troops entered the village, a few kilometres north of the flashpoint town of Jisr al-Shughur.
          Residents of Bdama had been supplying refugees fleeing across the border from the Jisr area, he said, contacted by telephone from Nicosia.
          Rights activists said protests broke out after the main weekly Muslim prayers on Friday as the army pressed its campaign against northern towns and the number of refugees fleeing across the border into Turkey topped 10,000.
          Abdel Rahman said the deadliest incidents on Friday took place in the central city of Homs where five people were shot dead.
          The United States is weighing whether war crimes charges can be brought against Damascus to pressure the government to end its bloody crackdown on dissent, a senior administration official said.
          Hillary on Saturday urged a transition to democracy in Syria, saying in a commentary in the Arabic-language Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper that the government’s crackdown would not quell the momentum for change.

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