Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Unrest In Syria -- News Updates March 30, 2011



Syrian President Blames 'Conspirators' For Unrest -- Wall Street Journal

Syria's President Bashar al-Assad offered no concrete concessions in a much anticipated speech to parliament and blamed foreign enemies for plotting unrest in Syria through a series of antigovernment demonstrations over the past two weeks.

"I'm addressing you during extraordinary events; we are facing a test of our unity," Mr. Assad said at the start of his speech Wednesday. "But we will successfully overcome it."

Read more ....

More News On The Unrest In Syria

President Assad's defiant speech stuns Syrians who call for more protests -- Christian Science Monitor
Syrian president blames protests on 'conspirators' -- Yahoo News/AP
Syria's Assad sees unrest "plot," unyielding on emergency law -- Yahoo News/Reuters
Syria's Assad warns of 'conspiracy' -- Yahoo News/AFP
President Bashar Assad blames conspiracies for Syria unrest, reasserts regime's authority -- l.A. Times
Syria's President Assad vows to defeat 'plot' -- BBC
Syria’s president blames wave of protests on ‘conspirators’ who are trying to destroy Syria -- Washington Post/AP
Syria’s Assad offers nothing, blames protests on ‘big conspiracy’ -- Washington Post
Syrian Leader Blames Protests On 'Conspirators'; No Reforms Announced -- Radio Free Europe
Syrian president Bashar al-Assad refuses to back down amid country-wide protests -- New York Daily News
Assad blames Syria unrest on foreign plotters -- RIA Novosti
Syria's al-Assad leaves state of emergency in place -- CNN

Syrian troops 'open fire' at demo
-- Press Association
Syrian troops fire during protest in Latakia after Assad's speech -- USA Today
Protests in Syrian city Latakia after Assad speech -- Jerusalem Post
Terrorised Latakia a ghost town after attack -- The Australian

Clinton Deplores Syrian Crackdown, Urges Reform -- Voice of America
Assad Does a Mubarak -- Dominic Waghorn, SKY News
Al-Assad could unleash immense violence tomorrow -- CNN
Israel, long critical of Assad, may prefer he stay after all -- Janine Zacharia, Washington Post
Analysis: Assad the intimidator -- David Horowitz, Jerusalem Post
Analysis: Syria status quo serves Israelis and Palestinians -- Jerusalem Post/Reuters
Factbox: Syrian President Bashar al-Assad -- Reuters

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