More than 40 dead in protests as violence erupts across Syria

By the CNN Wire Staff

April 23, 2011 -- Updated 0834 GMT (1634 HKT)

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'It was really like hell'

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

    * "It's better to die than to live without freedom," one man says
    * U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon joins chorus of international 
condemnation
    * "This is going to become worse," a human rights official predicts
    * The killings occur in several flashpoint regions as thousand

(CNN) -- Violence swept across Syria on Friday, with at least 43 people 
reported killed in another bloody day of confrontation between government 
forces and demonstrators calling for political change.

Reliable numbers were difficult to come by. CNN bases its figures on reports 
from witnesses. Amnesty International, citing local human rights activists, 
reported that at least 75 people were killed in Friday's protests. The Syrian 
government does not permit CNN to report from inside the country.

The killings occurred in several flashpoint regions as thousands of Syrian 
protesters defiantly marched after Muslims' weekly prayers in a display of mass 
discontent toward the government.

Violence ripped through the Damascus suburbs of Douma, Moademy and Zamalka, and 
other cities -- Homs, Harasta and Izraa. The state-run news agency reported 
demonstrations and clashes, citing injuries but no deaths.

Human rights groups and witnesses told a different story. "Today, they have 
killed so many people. There are so many people injured and people have been 
kidnapped," Wissam Tarif, a human rights activist, told CNN. "They are acting 
as an armed gang, not as security forces."
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In the city of Homs, near Syria's western border with Lebanon, one man said a 
fellow demonstrator was shot in the head, put into a car by other demonstrators 
and driven off as others in the crowd fell to sniper fire.

"They were shooting and people were running like hell," said the 25-year-old 
cameraman, who did not want to be identified for fear of reprisal.

The city's businesses had all shut down.

"It's a ghost town," he said.

Though he said he was frightened, he predicted that demonstrations would resume 
Saturday.

"It's better to die than to live without freedom," he told CNN's Anderson 
Cooper.

Ted Kattouf, the former U.S. ambassador to Syria, expressed admiration for the 
demonstrators' courage, but made no predictions about where it might lead.

"Unfortunately, repression, if used repeatedly, ruthlessly, brutally, can work. 
We saw that in Iran and, I'm afraid, we could see it in Syria."

The demonstrators do not have the critical mass needed to effect regime change, 
Kattouf said. He noted that massive demonstrations have yet to appear in 
Damascus or Aleppo, where millions of people reside, most of them Sunni.

President Bashar al-Assad is Alawite, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

"There's a coalition of interests here, and the demonstrations would have to 
get much, much larger and stretch the capacity of the regime's security 
services to the point where some people thought about maybe making their own 
ways and abandoning Assad."
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RELATED TOPICS

    * Damascus (Syria)
    * Syria
    * Protests and Demonstrations

The violence prompted international condemnation, with British Foreign 
Secretary William Hague calling the killings "unacceptable," and calling on 
Syrian security forces "to exercise restraint instead of repression, and on the 
Syrian authorities to respect the Syrian people's right to peaceful protest."

Before Friday's marches, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said the 
death toll had exceeded 200 since the demonstrations began in mid-March.

U.S. President Barack Obama condemned the use of force by the Syrian government 
against demonstrators.

"This outrageous use of violence to quell protests must come to an end now," he 
said in a statement. "The Syrian people have called for the freedoms that all 
individuals around the world should enjoy: freedom of expression, association, 
peaceful assembly, and the ability to freely choose their leaders. President 
Assad and the Syrian authorities have repeatedly rejected their calls and 
chosen the path of repression."

He accused Assad of "blaming outsiders while seeking Iranian assistance in 
repressing Syria's citizens through the same brutal tactics that have been used 
by his Iranian allies."

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the spokesman for France's Ministry of 
European and Foreign Affairs condemned the violence.



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