Istanbul
(CNN) -- Turkey threatened to cut off supplies of electricity to its neighbor
Syria Tuesday, as the Damascus regime found itself under growing pressure from
Arab, Turkish, European and North American governments for its ongoing lethal
crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators.
"We
are supplying them (Syria) with electricity at the moment. If they stay on this
course, we may be forced to re-examine all of these decisions," Turkish
Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said Tuesday, according to Turkey's semi-official
Anatolian Agency.
Turkey,
once a close political ally and strong trading partner of Syria, welcomed a
decision by the Arab League last weekend to suspend Syria's membership in the
alliance.
Days
after the humiliating rebuke, a senior Arab League official told CNN the group
was floating a plan to try to send some 500 observers to protect civilians in
Syria. According to the United Nations, more than 3,500 Syrians have been
killed since anti-government protests first erupted in March.
"They are targeting innocent people"
Syria angry over Arab League suspension Arab League imposes suspension on Syria
Fresh abuses reported in Syria
"In
a meeting headed by Dr. Nabil Al Araby, the secretary-general of the Arab
League, held Monday, the Arab League and Arab human rights organizations
decided on a mechanism to protect Syrian civilians which will involve sending a
delegation of 500 representatives of Arab organizations, media organizations,
and military observers to Syria with the objective of documenting the situation
on the ground," the official said to CNN, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
The
official said the plan was to be presented at an emergency meeting of Arab
League foreign ministers in Morocco's capital Wednesday.
Jordanian
Foreign Minister Nasser Juda confirmed to CNN that his government had received
an invitation to contribute representatives to the proposed observer mission.
"We
are studying it right now," Juda said in a phone call with CNN Tuesday.
"It might be verified tomorrow," he added, at the expected Arab
League foreign ministers' meeting in Rabat.
On
Monday, Jordan's King Abdullah became the first Arab leader to publicly call
for Syrian president Bashar al-Assad to step down.
"If
Bashar has the interests of his country, he would step down, but he would also
create an ability to reach out and start a new phase of Syrian political
life," Abdullah said in an interview with the BBC.
Monday
evening, a crowd of hundreds of Syrian regime supporters gathered for a protest
outside the walls of the Jordanian embassy in Damascus.
Though
several demonstrators tried to tear down the Jordanian flag, Juda said the
protest was non-violent.
The
scene was much different on Saturday. Hours after the Arab League suspended
Syria's membership, pro-government mobs simultaneously attacked diplomatic
missions of several Arab countries as well as Turkey in the Syrian cities in
Damascus, Aleppo and Latakiya. Turkish media showed pictures of Syrian
demonstrators tearing down a Turkish flag.
"You,
Bashar, who has hundreds (of people) in jail, need to find those who attacked
the Turkish flag and punish them," said Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, addressing al-Assad. Until a few months ago, Erdogan typically
referred to the Syrian president as his friend and brother. But in the wake of
Saturday's embassy attacks, Turkey said it had no choice but to evacuate family
members of its diplomats stationed in Syria.
"Bashar
Assad should see the tragic end that meets leaders who declare war on their
people," Erdogan added, speaking at a meeting of his party in the Turkish
capital Tuesday. "Oppression does not create order and a future cannot be
built on the blood of the innocent. History will remember such leaders as those
who fed on blood. And you, Assad, are headed towards opening such a page."
Syria's
foreign minister issued a rare public apology for the embassy attacks Monday at
a press conference in Damascus.
But
Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem also called the Arab League's decision to
suspend Syria a "very dangerous step," according to the Syrian state
news agency SANA. He accused the league of ignoring Syria's release of 553
detainees, as part of a peace deal that had been brokered earlier with the Arab
League.
Hitting
a familiar defiant note, al-Moallem swore that "Syria will remain --
despite what some of the brothers throw at it -- the heart of Arabism and its
impenetrable bastion."
Since
being suspended from the Arab League, Damascus has called for a special summit
to discuss the matter. That initiative was rejected on Tuesday by Gulf Arab
countries.
"Holding
an Arab summit at present is pointless," said Abdul Latif Al-Zayani, the
head of the Gulf Cooperation Council, according to the Kuwait News Agency.
As
it finds itself on the defensive both at home and abroad, Damascus has
increasingly leaned on its historical ally Russia, which recently joined China
in vetoing a proposed United Nations Security Council resolution to punish
Syria for alleged human rights violations against anti-government protesters.
Leaders
of the opposition Syrian National Council met with Russian diplomats in Moscow
Tuesday, in a bid to drive a wedge between the two allies. That initiative
appeared to have failed, however.
Council
Chairman Burhan Ghalioun later told journalists in Moscow the talks were
"very positive," but added that the Russian government had not
changed its position, according to the Interfax news agency.
Amid
the rapidly escalating diplomatic war between Syria and its foreign opponents,
the cycle of protests and violence inside Syria continued unabated.
At
least four people were killed by security forces, including two children, said
the opposition Local Coordination Committees. Meanwhile, Syria's state news
agency reported that two law enforcement members were killed by "armed
terrorists" in southern Syria on Monday. SANA also reported that train
tracks were damaged by a series of bombs planted along a railroad in northern
Syria on Monday.
Observers
warn the protest movement in Syria, which struggled peacefully for months, is
growing increasingly "weaponized" as more and more Syrian soldiers
desert from the armed forces and join the opposition.
The
latest military officer to announce his defection was a uniformed man who
introduced himself in a YouTube video as a colonel and military attorney named
Arafar Rasheed al-Hamoud.
"I
announce my defection from the Syrian Arabic Army, after it was turned into a
gang at the hand of the regime committing the most heinous crimes, killing
women, children and elders and torturing unarmed citizens," Hamoud said,
holding up his military identification card to the camera.
Several
Syrian refugees told CNN they had met with Hamoud after he recently fled to one
of a series of refugee camps on the Turkish side of the border with Syria.
Hamoud
went on to announce he was joining the Free Syrian Army, a group of military
defectors who have declared war on the Syrian regime.
On
Monday, the opposition-aligned Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported 81
people were killed in clashes around the country, with many of the casualties
occurring due to clashes between army defectors and Syrian security forces
around the restive border city of Deraa. CNN cannot independently confirm these
reports because the Syrian government has repeatedly rejected requests for
journalist visas.
Meanwhile,
the European Union slapped sanctions against 18 more Syrians accused of
"organizing violence against demonstrators."
Most
of the individuals named in a November 14 EU regulation were officers in
military intelligence, as well as the head of a "family militia" and
three members of the so-called "Syrian electronic army." All are now
subject to an asset freeze in Europe for alleged "violence against
protesters in Syria."
The
move was applauded by Marietje Schaake, a Dutch member of the European
Parliament.
"The
EU sanctions targeting members of the Syrian Electronic Army show that the use
of ICT (information and communications technology) as weapons is taken
seriously," Schaake wrote in an e-mail to CNN. "The Syrian Electronic
Army is operating not only within Syria, but acts globally. The EU can and
should do much more to hold its own companies, who are providing ICT 'weapons'
to the Syrian Electronic Army and their collaborators, accountable."
By Ivan Watson, CNN
CNN's Rima Makhtabi in Abu Dhabi, CNN's Tracy Doueiry in Atlanta, Journalist Mohamed Fadel Fahmy in Cairo, and Journalist Gul Tuysuz in Istanbul contributed to this report
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