Scattered violence broke out today in Syria ahead of Muslim prayers that are often followed by demonstrations for and against president Bashar al-Assad.
Security forces prevented prayers at the Omari mosque in the southern town of Deraa, cradle of a 10-month-old anti-Assad revolt, for the fifth Friday in a row, activists said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported a heavy security presence around mosques in the port city of Latakia and said shooting had erupted in several other restive towns.
The British-based group said a security officer had been assassinated in Deraa, possibly because he had changed sides. In the northwestern province of Idlib, security forces returned the bodies of six people who had disappeared two days earlier.
It was not possible to verify the latest accounts of unrest in Syria, where tight media restrictions are enforced.
Sudanese General Mohammed al-Dabi, head of the monitoring mission, was expected to fly to Cairo, headquarters of the Arab League, tomorrow to report on what his 165 members have witnessed since they deployed in Syria on December 26th.
Arab foreign ministers meet in Cairo on Sunday to decide whether to prolong or end a mission whose critics say it has only provided diplomatic cover for Assad to pursue a crackdown that has already killed more then 5,000 people by a UN count.
Hundreds of people have been killed since the monitors arrived in Syria, where an armed insurgency has grown in recent months, contesting Assad's grip on several parts of the country.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said the Arab League should publish the monitors' report in full and should urge the UN Security Council to impose targeted sanctions, including an arms embargo, to stop the killing in Syria.
The Syrian authorities accuse foreign-backed "terrorists" of killing 2,000 members of the security forces since the unrest began in March, inspired by Arab uprisings elsewhere.
The Security Council has been paralysed by divisions over Syria, with Russia and China opposing any tough action.
Western sanctions on Syrian oil exports have cost the country $2 billion since September, the state news agency SANA quoted oil minister Sufian Alao as saying.
Mr Alao said Syria was still trying to replace European Union crude oil contracts with new customers, but was having trouble securing shipping insurance and trade credit.
The EU, which bought most of Syria's approximately 130,000 barrels per day of oil exports, imposed sanctions on Syrian oil on September 2nd, following a similar decision by the United States.
EU governments are expected on Monday to expand a Syria sanctions list against individuals, companies and institutions.
Reuters