CBS/AP/ April 22, 2011, 10:54 PM

75 killed in deadliest day of Syria uprising

Updated at 10:54 p.m. ET

BEIRUT - Syrian security forces fired bullets and tear gas Friday at tens of thousands of protesters across the country, killing at least 75 people in the bloodiest day of the monthlong uprising and signaling that the authoritarian regime was prepared to turn more ruthless to put down the revolt against President Bashar Assad.

Among the dead were a 70-year-old man and two boys ages 7 and 10, Amnesty International said. In the southern town of Izraa, a man ran carrying the body of a young boy, whose hair was matted with blood from a gaping wound on his head, as another child wept and shouted, "My brother!" Footage of the scene was posted on the protest movement's main Facebook pace.

Complete coverage: Anger in the Arab World

In other towns, protesters scattered for cover from sniper bullets, then dragged corpses through the streets. Mobile phone images showed the bodies lined up on the floor inside buildings.

The rallies, most marching out from mosques after Friday's noon Muslim prayers, erupted in towns and cities stretching along the breadth of the country, including in at least two suburbs of the capital, Damascus.

The death toll was likely to rise, raising fears that there will be an explosion of violence Saturday as relatives bury their dead in funerals that in the past have turned into new protests. Ammar Qurabi, head of Syria's National Organization for Human Rights, said another 20 people were missing.

Friday's toll was double that of the previous deadliest day of the uprising, on April 8, when 37 were killed around the country. The heavier crackdown came after Assad warned a week ago that any further unrest would be considered "sabotage" after he made the gesture of lifting long-hated emergency laws, a step he ratified on Thursday.

The emergency laws gave the regime a free hand to arrest people without charge and extended the state's authority into virtually every aspect of Syrians' lives, reports CBS News' George Baghdadi.

Syrian president ratifies end of emergency rule
Syria lifts emergency laws; protesters shot

It was a clear sign that regime was prepared to escalate an already bloody response, with nearly 300 already dead in more than five weeks. Previously, Assad has mixed the crackdown with gestures of reform in a failed attempt to deflate the protests.

The bloodshed so far has only served to invigorate protesters whose demands have snowballed from modest reforms to the downfall of the 40-year Assad family dynasty. Each Friday, growing numbers of people in multiple cities have taken to the streets despite the near certainty that they would come under swift attack from security forces and shadowy pro-government gunmen known as "shabiha."

"Bullets started flying over our heads like heavy rain," said one witness in Izraa, where police opened fire on protesters marching in front of the mayor's office. The town is located in southern Daraa province where the uprising kicked off in mid-March.

Syria protests persist despite crackdown
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In Washington, President Obama condemned the latest use of force by Syria against anti-government demonstrators and said the regime's "outrageous" use of violence against the protesters must "end now."

In a statement, Mr. Obama said Syria's moves to repeal a decades-old emergency law and allow peaceful demonstrations were not serious in light of Friday's events.

He called on Assad to change course and obey the will of his people by giving them what they seek -- freedom of expression, association, peaceful assembly and the ability to choose their leaders.

Tens of thousands marched Friday in the Damascus suburbs of Douma and Hajar Aswad, the central cities of Hama and Homs, Latakia and Banias on the coast, the northern cities of Raqqa and Idlib, the northeastern Kurdish region, and in Daraa, witnesses said.

Security officials fired on protesters in Homs Tuesday, where people had a day earlier held funerals for demonstrators shot and killed by police. At least one person was killed, reports The Washington Post.

It was certainly one of the most robust gatherings to date, but it was difficult to gauge whether turnout was larger than heavy demonstrations a week ago. Because the protests were so quickly and violently dispersed Friday, it appeared that many gatherings were broken up before the masses hit the streets.

Amnesty International put the day's death toll at 75, mirroring reports from witnesses to The Associated Press.

Friday's witness accounts could not be independently confirmed because Syria has expelled journalists and restricted access to trouble spots. Witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

As it has stepped up its response, Assad's regime has seemed little affected by mounting international concern over the violence.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said the U.S. calls on the Syrian government "to cease and desist from the use of violence against peaceful protesters" and to "follow through on its promises and take action toward the kind of concrete reform that they've promised."


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© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
23 Comments Add a Comment
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robwhite2003 says:
time to rally the troops, let's stick our nose in this now.
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social_adjucator says:
Worldwide Communism is collapsing in upon itself. The US is not exempt, it's only able to buy a little time as of right now with a quasi economy.
The present and past Executive Officers worldwide in collusion with one another have encouraged and put the people into servitude to such for their own self serving interests. Their days of living "large" are nearing an end.
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fedup12 says:
OOOoh man Americans come Save us.

We only need a few billion. I dont care if you cant even pay your own teachers.
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scabbard2 says:
Sober Up Holy Voice......
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SandmanUSMC says:
While scaling back in Iraq here in 2011, on the way home we may as well take away Syria's big weapons and at least give those democratic protesters a fair chance of fighting their corrupt, brutal leader. Hopefully we can get some help from NATO.

These Arab countries are falling like dominoes!!! It's hard to keep up with all the demonstrations. Hats off to democracy!
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curse914 replies:
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Sure, it was the failures of 30 plus year dynasties, not Bush that made this possible. Iran was on the verge of a similar revolution in the 70's.
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dgarza7 says:
i don't care about their human rights, i just want cheaper gas prices.
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SandmanUSMC replies:
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Typical arrogant western attitude.
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K. Daraa says:
These protests in Syria are spawned on Friday's prayer day, in Sunni mosques throughout Syria, against a non-Sunni Alawite government. I question the motives being 'personal freedom' and 'democracy'. Any Sunni Islamic government, or Shi'ite government for that matter, impose Islamic fascism on the people. Don't judge Syrians by US cultural standards, and question anyone in our government that suggests deeper involvement in support of the Syrian protests.
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HolyVoice replies:
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I tend to see it the same way.
askagain replies:
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K. Daraa - This is a major concerm for me as well. My fear is that we are being sold a bill of goods by people justifying their actions in the name of democracy with little or no intent to see democracy in the middle east. Do we really know what these people plan if they get control of their governments?
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scabbard2 says:
MEXICAN CITIZEN DEATHS from brutality and incompetence FAR EXCEED those in Syria and threaten our BORDER and our citizens, yet Commander 'Yes We Can" schmoozes Calderone as if he were some potential ally. That's change we can believe in?? Maybe Obama should get fitted for a 'jet flyin suit' so he can be more like George W. Bush...the do absolutely nothing dullard we had for eight years. George W. is the reason Obama is president, maybe Obama is salving Bush's sores now that he's one of the boys. Obama would do well to help the common American, instead of continuing to infuriate them. I'll give you a head start Barack, JOBS, you missed that day one, NAFTA, penalize, heavily, American corporations that farm jobs in other countries and then dump cheap goods on the American consumer...the more the widget costs, the more the tax the monkeys in Washington get...rearm America with jobs, fund hydrogen as the fuel of choice, that would really redistribute wealth, and stop social entitlements. As well, left alone as a contributor program, Social Security would far out perform any other retirement fund, dollar on dollar. Thanks....
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HolyVoice replies:
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You're confused a bit here. We are funding the Mexico situation, through drug usage in a black market. Practically all the money they receive is laundered and used to buy guns, which of course we provide too. Is that double dipping?
scabbard2 replies:
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Yea HolyVoice, it's The U.S. and not those greedy leftover conquistadors, and not the French blood that boils hot in the veins of the murderers that kill their countrymen in Mexico. The Church, apparently will do anything to hide its heinous behavior, even create a myth that reverses victim and perpetrator. Apparently, if you do your job in Mexico, without your hand extended, 'the open palm of desire' toward the U.S., maybe Mexico would have a real government, instead of one exchanged ever so often by thugs.
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askagain says:
These demonstrators must know that they will get our synpathy if they call themselves pro-Democracy. But is that what they are really after? We should know thise answers before becoming embroiled in the internal workings of the Egyptians, the Libyans, the Yeminites,the Syrians, and elsewhere.
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nottblu replies:
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Is Assad pro-democracy? Oh I forgot he is just another Sadam, never mind.
askagain replies:
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nottblu - That is not the point. We should not be supporting any group in the Middle East until we are sure of their intentions. Middle East countries do not have a history of democratic institutions but they do have a history of kings, dictators, and radical Islam. Any one of these countries could end up like Iran causing trouble throughout the region for us.
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wfw3536 says:
Now they are reporting 50 people killed. I suppose Obama will use this as an excuse to start another war in Syria.
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nottblu replies:
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Just out of curiousity, how many innocent peaceful protesters have to be slaughtered before you would recommend intervention? 500? 5,000? no amount? Why is the UN silent on this? When will they tell Obama to attack? How many died before the UN instructed Obama to get involved?
HolyVoice replies:
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No, but they have some really great peppers. Tasty!
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