Friday, April 6, 2012 - 8:48 AM

Syrian security forces have stepped up attacks in several parts of the country ahead of the April 10 scheduled troop withdrawal agreed to by President Bashar al Assad. United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the "sources of violence are proliferating" and the conflict is worsening despite the Syrian government's claim that it has begun pulling out troops from Idlib, Zabadani, and Daraa. Activists reported tank fire in Homs, Rastan, and the Damascus suburb of Douma. Heavy shelling in the northwestern Idlib province has sparked an intense flow of refugees into Turkey with over 2,300 people fleeing just on Thursday. The total number of refugees since the uprising began last year is believed to be over 42,000, and the United Nations estimates more than 9,000 people have been killed. The U.N. Security Council issued a statement calling on both the regime and the opposition to halt all violence by April 12 and threatened to take "further steps" if Syria does not adhere to Kofi Annan's six-point plan.
Headlines
Arguments & Analysis
'Egypt's presidential race: Battle of the beards' (The Economist)
"Until recently, Western diplomats expected the Muslim Brotherhood,
Egypt's Islamist mainstream, to stay politely out of the race and pave
the way for a secular president. Now some see it as the only way to stop
Mr Abu Ismail's rise. They positively sighed with relief when the
Brotherhood's number two, Khairat al-Shater, a 62-year-old self-made
millionaire, backtracked on a previous pledge and entered the race.
On paper he should fare well: the Brotherhood took almost twice as
many seats-close to 47%-as the Salafists in the parliamentary elections
that ended in January. Yet the announcement surprised many as a risky
gamble. Fear that a secret society such as the Brotherhood might capture
the presidency as well as parliament could boost rival candidates,
among them Amr Moussa, the former Secretary General of the Arab League,
who led in early polls, and Abdel Moneim Abolfotoh, a former senior
Brother who was expelled for choosing to vie for the presidency without
permission from the Brotherhood's leadership."
'Houses divided: the splintering of Bahrain's political camps' (Laurence Louer, Sada -- Carnegie Endowment for Int'l Peace)
"Though present before the protests of the past year, the extent of the
current fragmentation is unprecedented in Bahrain's recent history and
deeply complicates negotiations for a solution to the current stalemate.
In the unlikely case that dialogue between the regime hardliners and
al-Wefaq were to achieve anything tangible, both camps will be hard
pressed to sell it to multiplicity of subgroups that have sprouted up."
'Loyalty to Syrian President could isolate Hezbollah' (Anne Barnard, New York Times)
"Deprived of Hamas's political cover, Hezbollah has been accused of
sectarian hatred, and has been its target as well. Syrian rebels have
burned the Hezbollah flag, claimed that its snipers are killing
civilians in Syria, and named their brigades after historic warriors who
defeated Shiites in Islam's early schismatic battles. Early on, some
analysts thought that if a Sunni government would arise in Damascus it
might support Hezbollah against Israel. But now, says Michael Wahid
Hanna of the Century Foundation, Hezbollah may have missed a chance to
hedge its bets."
--Tom Kutsch & Mary Casey

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