The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Suicide bomber strikes in Syria

Protests continue as ‘intolerabl­e’ crackdown goes on.

- By Karin Laub Associated Press

BEIRUT — Two weeks into a cease-fire agreement, there still was no peace Friday in Syria: Security agents in Damascus collected the remains of 10 people killed in a suicide bombing. Activists reported troops firing on protesters. Video showed a crowd carrying a slain boy to U.N. observers as proof of regime violence.

The head of the United Nations said Syrian President Bashar Assad’s continued crackdown on protests has reached an “intolerabl­e stage,” and that the U.N. will try to speed up the deployment of up to 300 monitors to Syria. Only 15 are there now.

“The government of Syria must live up to its promises to the world,” U.N. Secretary-general Ban Ki-moon said Friday.

Tens of thousands of people poured into the streets across Syria for weekly anti-regime marches after Muslim noon prayers Friday. Amateur video from the central city of Homs, where the presence of U.N. observers helped halt weeks of artillery attacks, showed rows of men lining up in a main street, holding each other by the shoulders as they sang and danced.

In another protest, demonstrat­ors held up 45 squares of cardboard with writing and drawings that — when viewed together from above — showed a picture of Assad and the words “oppression, corruption, despotism, demolition.” When they simultaneo­usly flipped over the squares, it created a new message that read: “Toward a modern society that is more developed and sensible.”

Troops have routinely opened fire on protests since the uprising against Assad began 13 months ago, but there appeared to be fewer violent incidents Friday than in previous weeks. Still, the Britainbas­ed Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said five protesters were killed by fire from the security forces, including a 10-year-old boy.

A plan brokered by special envoy Kofi Annan proposed an April 12 ceasefire, to be followed by talks between the regime and the opposition. Since that date, the U.N. has said the regime has broken many of its truce promises, such as withdrawin­g forces from towns and cities. Rebel fighters have also kept up shooting and bombing attacks on Syrian security forces.

The suicide bomber in Damascus detonated an explosives belt Friday near members of the security forces, killing at least 10 people and wounding 26, the staterun news agency SANA reported.

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