Syria crisis: UNHRC emergency meeting - live updates
• UNHRC set to call for investigation into Houla massacre
• US dismisses Syrian inquiry as 'blatant lie'
• Russia continues arm shipments to Assad regime
"appreciation of sacrifices of the Syrian army and law-enforcement forces", the government news agency, Sana reports.
Damascus university has organised a blood donation campaign to showDeputy rector for scientific affairs, Hiyam Bashour, said that the campaign is a humble contribution to appreciate those who offered their souls to protect the homeland.
A worker at the faculty of pharmacy, Wafaa Husaini, said that it is the duty of every Syrian citizen to express gratitude for those who sacrificed themselves to safeguard the country.
Another donator, Ammar Mhrez, stressed that the Syrian blood is united against conspiracies and schemes hatched against Syria.
Syrian Revolution General Commission claimed 12 men were shot at close range by shabiha militia - or armed supporters of President Assad, in al-Buweyda in Homs.
Another massacre has been committed in Syria according to activists. TheIn an unverified account of what took place, it said:
Around 3pm the regime army searched a bus that was carrying workers from the village fertiliser plant as it passed a checkpoint. As the bus moved on past the checkpoint, around 300m on, a yellow car with 5 armed shabiha stopped the bus and stole what was inside while verbally humiliating the passengers. They then forced everyone off the bus with their hands in the air and they were forced to chant for Bashar Al-Assad. The men were then shot at close-range which led to their death as the regime thugs emptied their bullets and beat the dead bodies.
Graphic video footage claimed to show the victims of shootings. [Warning: disturbing content].
The SRGC also claimed 12 people were killed when the army shelled the nearby town al-Qusair.
It highlights this footage which purports to show the town being shelled.
The SRGC said shelling came from the al-Mashtal military checkpoint and has continued this morning after resistance from rebel Free Syrian Army.
(all times BST) Welcome to Middle East Live.
Here's a round up of the latest developments:
Syria
• The UN human rights council in Geneva is set to call for an inquiry into the Houla massacre at an emergency session on the Syria crisis.A draft version of resolution to be put to the council "condemns in the strongest possible terms such an outrageous use of force against the civilian population which constitutes a violation of applicable international law". It also calls for an investigation by the UN.
• Syria said "preliminary" findings of it own investigation showed the massacre in Houla was the work of 600-800 "armed men". Brigadier-General Qasim Jamal Suleiman, who is leading the inquiry, said the army had not been present in the area when the killings were carried out last Friday. The victims had refused to join anti-regime demonstrations and some bodies were of armed men killed in clashes, he said. None had been killed by shellfire. Susan Rice the US ambassador to the UN dismissed the findings as a "blatant lie".
He said:
We know, and all sides agree, there was a long artillery barrage, and then we know, and all sides agree, these militia entered a zone which had been subject to heavy shelling. They conducted a massacre and not a single shell landed anywhere near them, not a single mortar, not a single bullet round - fired by the Syrian army. So you have to believe that that was either a fantastically lucky coincidence for the people doing the massacre, or they were acting in co-ordination with the army. I invite our viewers to make their own judgement.
• A previously unknown Syrian rebel group says it is holding 11 Lebanese Shia pilgrims kidnapped in Syria last week. The group, calling itself Syrian Rebels in Aleppo, said in a statement obtained by al-Jazeera TV that the hostages are in good health.
• The US described Moscow's latest arms sale to Syria as "reprehensible" after a Russian cargo ship heavily laden with weapons arrived in Syria last weekend, Reuters reports. Western officials confirmed that the ship arrived on Saturday, bringing to the Syrian port of Tartus a cache of heavy weapons for Syria.
First, the militias have not, in fact, been able to hold their own with Syria's army and security forces anywhere, with foreign guns or without them. Second, observers say that as fighting drags on and atrocities mount, the militias are growing increasingly focused on sectarian violence and local feuds. Arms sent to fight the government may well heighten killing among Syria's ethnic groups.
This could make the stability of any post-Assad settlement harder to establish, rather than easier.
Egypt
• Human rights campaigners have welcomed the end of Egypt's infamous emergency law, which was allowed to expire yesterday, the Washington Post reports. Heba Morayef, a Cairo-based researcher for Human Rights Watch, said: "It's a law that symbolized the extraordinary powers given to the police, which created an environment in which forced disappearances and torture happened regularly."
Bahrain
Buoyed by the successful convening of the Formula One Grand Prix in April, hardliners have taken a number of steps to further consolidate control. Much of the kingdom's political power resides in a conservative triumvirate comprised of Prime Minister Khalifa bin Salman al-Khalifa, Royal Court Minister Khalid bin Ahmad bin Salman al-Khalifa, and the commander of the Bahrain Defense Forces Khalifa bin Ahmed al-Khalifa—with the latter two being brothers, part of the al-Khawalid branch of the al-Khalifa family.
The Crown Prince, considered to be the member of the royal family most open to the idea of responding to the unrest with reforms and dialogue, has seen his influence steadily decline since mid-2011...
The hardline faction, which controls the security forces as well as the instruments of censorship, is now very open about its intention to silence the opposition.
Apparent concessions such as the retrial of political detainees, and the release of some prominent activists are no more than cosmetic, Wehrey said.
Given the current balance of power within the royal family, it is doubtful that these gestures presage deeper structural reforms. Most likely, as the opposition charges, they are tactical stop-gap measures to remove the regime from the spotlight of international scrutiny.
--
Ahmed Hassan Arwo
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