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."

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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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