EU slaps sanctions on Assad family

The European Union slapped sanctions on the mother, sister and influential wife of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad today, increasing…

The European Union slapped sanctions on the mother, sister and influential wife of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad today, increasing pressure on Syria to halt its bloody crackdown against a year-long uprising.

The trio were among 12 Syrians added to a list of figures already hit with EU travel bans and asset freezes, diplomats said. Foreign ministers in Brussels also barred European firms from trading with two Syrian oil companies.

"With this new listing we are striking at the heart of the Assad clan, sending out a loud and clear message to Mr Assad: he should step down," said Dutch foreign minister Uri Rosenthal.

The decision came on a day of renewed violence across Syria, with the army firing at least 24 mortar rounds into the rebellious city of Homs, in central Syria, killing up to eight civilians, opposition supporters said.

READ MORE

Live television feeds from around Syria showed a slew of anti-Assad rallies, including in the Damascus district of Barzeh, in the northwestern city of Hama, in Qamishli in the Kurdish east, and in the southern city of Deraa.

"Damascus here we come," read several placards held up by the relatively small crowds. Activists said eight people were wounded after demonstrations near five Damascus mosques were broken up.

On the diplomatic front, the UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan, who is leading international efforts to stop the relentless mayhem, planned to travel to Moscow and Beijing this weekend for talks on the crisis, his spokesman said.

Russia and China have resisted Western and Arab demands that Dr Assad stand down and have vetoed two UN resolutions highly critical of Damascus.

However, they supported a security council statement this week calling for peace, in a move that analysts saw as a sign they were adopting a tougher stance on Syria.

Nevertheless, both Russia and China voted against a call by the UN Human Rights Council today to extend a investigation into violations committed by Syrian forces. The motion passed regardless, with 41 of the forum's 47 members voting in favour.

More than 8,000 people have died in the rebellion, according to UN figures, but Western powers have ruled out military intervention in such a sensitive part of the world, putting the emphasis instead on economic sanctions and diplomacy.

The new EU sanctions build on 12 previous rounds of sanctions aimed at isolating Dr Assad, including an arms embargo and a ban on importing Syrian oil to the European Union.

Full details will be released tomorrow, when the measures come into force, but diplomats confirmed that Dr Assad's British-born wife was on the new list.

A former investment banker, Asma Assad cultivated the image of a glamorous yet serious-minded woman with strong Western-inspired values who was meant to humanise the isolated Assad family, which has ruled Syria with an iron fist for more than 40 years.

But that image has crumbled over the past year, and she has stood resolutely by her husband's side, describing herself as "the real dictator" in an email published by Britain's Guardian newspaper last week.

Her ancestral home is Homs, now a symbol of the revolt which has been subjected to particularly fierce government attack.

Video from the city today showed plumes of smoke rising from residential areas after being hit by apparent mortar fire.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in Britain and has a network of contacts in Syria, said the army clashed with defectors in the north-eastern town of Azaz, on the border with Turkey. Three soldiers and one defector were killed as the army fired heavy machine guns and mortar rounds, it said.

Other activists working for the Local Coordination Committees of Syria reported 15 deaths today around the country. They also said rebels had captured 17 members of the security forces in the northwestern Idlib province.

It is impossible to verify reports from Syria because authorities have denied access to independent journalists.

Syria has said 3,000 members of the security forces have died in the uprising, which Damascus blames on terrorist gangs and foreign interference.

Reuters