Security forces in Syria shot dead at least 17 people around the central city of Hama on Monday, a rights group said, as activists called for a day of protest against Russia for backing the regime.
“The toll of victims from the operation mounted by security forces and the army in the Hama area has risen to 17 dead,” the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human rights told reporters in Cyprus.
More than 60 people were arrested, it said.
The Observatory also reported a 12-year-old boy killed in Douma, near Damascus, by security forces who fired on a funeral, and a man and his son killed in the central province of Homs in the town of al-Rastan.
Activists organizing anti-regime protests on the ground put the day’s death toll at 19.
The latest violence came as pro-democracy activists called for a “day of anger” yesterday to protest Russia’s support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, whose regime has waged a deadly six-month crackdown on protesters.
“Do not support the killers,” activists urged Russia in a message announcing yesterday’s action posted on “The Syrian Revolution 2011,” a Facebook page that has been the engine for the revolt.
Russia has blocked attempts at the UN to sanction Assad’s regime and is promoting a separate draft resolution that simply calls on the government and the opposition to open direct talks.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Monday defended the Syrian regime against sanctions for its crackdown, warning visiting British Prime Minister David Cameron of the dangers of such a move.
Cameron met Medvedev in Moscow for talks focusing on Syria and bilateral disputes as global frustration mounted with Russia’s continued support for its ally.
A visiting Assad aide said 1,400 people — half of them Syrian security and army forces — had died in violence since the demonstrations erupted in mid-March.
However, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said on Monday that 2,600 people have been killed in the crackdown.
The president of the UN Human Rights Council has appointed three experts to examine human rights violations in Syria, as mandated during an emergency -session last month.
A council source said it would take “at least a month” before investigators go to Syria.
France has been among those to have accused Assad’s regime of crimes against humanity. On Monday, the foreign ministry in Paris said the UN Security Council’s inability to approve a resolution on Syria was “a scandal.”
“How long will the international community remain blind and dumb in the face of this endless sequence of crimes? That’s the question we’re asking today,” French foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero asked.
However, Medvedev refused to give any ground.
He insisted the Kremlin was ready to put more pressure on Assad and argued his differences with the West were “not dramatic.”
Yet he also stressed any punitive actions should be applied to both sides equally because the opposition was continuing to reject calls to engage in direct talks.
“This resolution must be strict, but it must not lead to the automatic application of sanctions,” Medvedev said in reference to action proposed by Western powers.
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