Syria Urges Citizens to Vote in Municipal Elections

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The regime of President Bashar al-Assad on Wednesday urged Syrians to vote en masse in municipal elections next week, while its crackdown on dissent showed no signs of abating.

"December 12 is an important moment. All citizens must take part in the municipal elections and vote for the candidates they consider best capable of defending the public interest," wrote Al-Baath, the newspaper of the ruling party which has been in power since 1963.

Monday "is a crucial date and a very important step in the road to decentralization and democracy," it added, stressing that these elections are a means for Syrians to "participate in decision-making and building the nation."

"We are in a working process, during which everyone must redouble their efforts ... so that Syria remains a fortress of resistance and national unity," the newspaper added.

A special indelible ink will be used for the first time in the local elections "to prevent any fraud," said the Syrian local administration minister, Omar Ghalawanji.

On the ground, clashes between the regular army and a group of deserters shook the town of Saraqeb in Idlib province near the border with Turkey, a rights group said.

"A vehicle carrying army troops was destroyed," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a watchdog based in Britain.

Also in Idlib, "military forces raided houses and arrested three militants," in the vicinity of Saraqeb, while "some 50 armored vehicles, including tanks and troop carriers, came under attack in the village of al-Rami," it added.

The Observatory also said a 16-year-old girl was shot dead and 20 people were wounded near Saraqeb, and that two women died for lack of medication in the Al-Hula region of Homs province in the center of the country.

Activists say that more than 100 people have been killed in Syria since Saturday and the U.N. estimates that at least 4,000 have died since March when anti-regime protests erupted.

President Assad in a U.S. television interview released on Wednesday questioned the U.N.'s toll and denied ordering the killing of protesters, saying that only a "crazy person" would do so.

Comments 1
Default-user-icon Gabby (Guest) 07 December 2011, 19:41

How many different parties are allowed to run in these elections? Oh.....never mind.