Syrian security forces fired tear gas on thousands of protesters today in a restive southern city as President Bashar Assad faced down the most serious unrest of his 11 years in power with a bloody, weeklong crackdown.
Mr. Assad was expected to address the nation as early as tomorrow to try to ease the crisis by lifting a nearly 50—year state of emergency and moving to annul other harsh restrictions on civil liberties and political freedoms.
Syria has been rocked by more than a week of demonstrations that began in the drought—parched agricultural city of Daraa and exploded nationwide on Friday, with security forces opening fire on demonstrators in at least six locations. The death toll was at least 61 since March 18, according to Human Rights Watch.
The eyewitness in Daraa said up to 4,000 people were protesting there today, calling for more political freedoms.
He said security forces fired tear gas at the crowd and live ammunition in the air to disperse them.
The witness spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.
Syrian TV denied troops had fire on the demonstrators.
In the country’s main port city of Latakia, armed groups appeared to be facing off and threatening an escalation in violence.
Residents were taking up weapons and manning their own checkpoints to guard against what they say are unknown gunmen roaming the streets carrying sticks and hunting rifles, witnesses said today.
It was not clear whether the gunmen were working for the government.
The scenes in Latakia, a Mediterranean port once known as a summer tourist draw, were a remarkable display of anarchy in what had been one of the Mideast’s most tightly controlled countries.
The Latakia resident told AP that soldiers were deployed in the city and around key buildings, including the ruling Baath party headquarters and the Central Bank.
But he said that in nearby villages and entrances to the city, armed groups who appeared to be residents were blocking roads with garbage containers and large rocks and asking people for their ID.
“They are terrorizing people,” he said. “They are regular people who are taking up the role of security forces, that’s extremely dangerous,” he said.
The government has accused armed, foreign elements of working to sow sectarian strife and destabilise the country.
Syria, a predominantly Sunni country ruled by minority Alawites, has a history of suppressing dissent. Assad’s father and predecessor, Hafez, crushed an uprising in the city of Hama 1982, killing thousands.