Syrian president sends tanks into major city

AMMAN, (Reuters) – President Bashar al-Assad has sent  tanks deep into Syria’s third city Homs, escalating a military  campaign to crush a seven-week-old uprising against his  autocratic rule.

Syrians demanding political freedom and an end to corruption  have held weeks of what they say are peaceful demonstrations in  the face of government repression, despite a civilian death toll  that has reached 800, according to the Syrian human rights  organisation Sawasiah.

Yesterday, Homs residents told Reuters they heard machinegun  fire and shelling as troops made their first incursion into  residential areas of the city of one million people, 165 km (100  miles) north of Damascus.

Bashar al-Assad

At least one person, a 12-year-old child, was killed when  tanks and troops charged into the Bab Sebaa, Bab Amro and Tal  al-Sour districts of Homs overnight, according to the Syrian  Observatory for Human Rights.

“The areas have been under total siege since yesterday.  There is a total blackout on the numbers of dead and injured,  Telecommunications and electricity are repeatedly being cut in  those districts,” the Observatory said in a statement.

Elsewhere, a witness said security forces killed at least  two unarmed demonstrators on Sunday when they fired on a night  rally in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor.

Assad, who has maintained the autocratic political system  inherited from his father, began by making vague promises of  reforms, but when that failed to stop the protests, he made  clear he will not tolerate dissent or risk losing the tight  control his family has had over Syria for the past 41 years.

The pro-democracy upheaval that began in Deraa on March 18,  inspired by similar revolts across the Arab world, intensified  on Friday across Hauran, an agricultural belt bordering Jordan  to the south and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights to the west.

In the south, tanks swept into several towns on Sunday. A  man was killed when security forces smashed their way into his  home in the southern town of Tafas, a rights campaigner in the  region said.