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President Barack Obama
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Syrian President Bashar Assad
AFP/Syrian TV

US, EU impose sanctions on Syria

Washington, Europe announce new set of sanctions on Syria over brutal suppression of protesters

The United States announced in will imposed new sanctions on Syria over its brutal repression of mass protests, and again singled out Iran's Revolutionary Guard, which it said was aiding the crackdown.

 

Europe also imposed an arms embargo and considered additional sanctions against Bashar Assad's government, hardening the international front against Damascus on another day of bloody violence in Syria.

 

President Barack Obama's asset freezes and restrictions on financial transactions notably targeted Maher Assad, the powerful brother of the president, who commands Syria's feared Fourth Armored Division.

 

Also named in Obama's executive order enshrining the sanctions were Ali Mamluk, director of Syria's Intelligence Directorate, and Atif Najib, the ex-head of intelligence in Daraa province, the epicenter of political violence.

 

The Syrian intelligence directorate as a whole was also targeted by the sanctions, which come after US calls for restraint in Syria went unheeded and as Obama came under increased pressure for a more robust response.

 

"The United States strongly condemns the Syrian government's continued use of violence and intimidation against the Syrian people," the White House said in a statement.

 

"We call upon the Syrian regime and its supporters to refrain from further acts of violence and other human rights abuses against Syrian citizens seeking to express their political aspirations."

 

The statement also singled out Iran's Revolutionary Guards, saying the Corps was acting as a conduit for material support for the Syrian government which was helping it enforce the crackdown.

 

"Iran's actions in support of the Syrian regime place it in stark opposition to the will of the Syrian people," the White House said.

 

The Revolutionary Guards have previously been sanctioned by Washington for providing support to terrorism.

 

The new measures block any property in the United States or in the possession or control of Americans belonging to the named individuals and entities and prevents them entering transactions with US individuals.

 

State Department Policy Planning Director Jacob J. Sullivan said that Washington was specifically targeting individuals and entities it believed responsible for violence.'

 

"If they continue this violence...., we have the flexibility to add additional designations," said Sullivan.

 

Washington has repeatedly called on Assad to change course, embrace reform and allow Syrians their human and political rights, but has so far not called for Assad to go.

 

Obama also renewed previously imposed sanctions on Syria, imposed by former president George W. Bush in 2005 as Washington accused Damascus of involvement in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri.

 

The sanctions were unveiled as tens of thousands of protesters poured onto the streets across Syria following a call for a "day of rage" against the Assad government after weekly Muslim prayers.

 

Earlier, the 47-nation UN Human Rights Council voted for a revised US-led resolution on the crackdown in Syria that asked the UN rights chief to send an investigative mission to the country.

 

The resolution also "unequivocally condemns the use of lethal violence against peaceful protesters by the Syrian authorities... and urges the Syrian government to immediately put an end to all human rights violations."

 

It also "requests the office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to urgently dispatch a mission to the Syrian Arab Republic to investigate all alleged violations of international human rights law," according to the text released by the United Nations.

 

Twenty-six countries, mainly Western, African and Latin American nations, voted for the text, and nine voted against.

 

Seven countries abstained, while five were absent at the time of the vote, including Bahrain, Jordan and Qatar.

 

Yitzhak Benhorin in Washington contributed to this report

 

 


פרסום ראשון: 04.30.11, 08:09
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