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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Constitution proposal fails to mollify Syrians

Civilians flee after Syrian army tanks entered the city of Idlib on Wednesday. President Bashar Assad has ordered a referendum on a new constitution. (Associated Press)
Associated Press

BEIRUT – As Syrian forces stepped up their assault Wednesday on rebellious cities, President Bashar Assad ordered a referendum on a new constitution that would create a multiparty system in a country that has been ruled by his autocratic family dynasty for 40 years.

Such a change would have been unheard of a year ago, and Assad’s regime is touting the new constitution as the centerpiece of reforms aimed at calming Syria’s upheaval. But after 11 months of bloodshed, with more than 5,000 dead in the regime’s crackdown on protesters and rebels, Assad’s opponents say the referendum and reforms are not enough and that the country’s strongman must go.

“The people in the street today have demands, and one of these demands is the departure of this regime,” said Khalaf Dahowd, a member of the National Coordination Body for Democratic Change in Syria, an umbrella for several opposition groups.

The White House also dismissed the referendum. Press Secretary Jay Carney called the move “laughable” in light of ongoing brutality by the Syrian military and said it “makes a mockery” of the uprising.

Assad’s call for a referendum, set for Feb. 26, also raises the question of how a nationwide vote could be held at a time when many areas see daily battles between Syrian troops and rebel soldiers.

Regime forces on Wednesday battered rebellious neighborhoods in the central city of Homs, pushing ahead with one of the deadliest assaults of the crackdown that activists say has killed hundreds in the past two weeks. Black smoke billowed from an oil pipeline in the city that was hit in the fighting, with each side blaming the other for attacking it.

Activists reported at least eight killed across the country on Wednesday.