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bjbjLULU JUDY WOODRUFF: More violence and a rapidly rising death toll in Syria. Margaret
Warner has that story. MARGARET WARNER: Defiant Syrians shown in this Internet video gathered
today in what were said to be the streets of Dara a in the south. Their chants of "God
is great" were met with gunfire and more casualties. Syrian army tanks patrolled the streets of
the restive city today, where the nine-month-old uprising began. But not far from Dara a, near
the town of Busra al-Harir, army defectors from a group called the Free Syrian Army reportedly
ambushed some former comrades. The reports said 27 Syrian army soldiers were killed in
a rocket attack on a bus and the subsequent firefight. It was the latest sign that the
state no longer has a monopoly on the violence, as parts of the opposition are increasingly
armed and fighting back. But, earlier this week, the United Nations' top human rights
official, Navi Pillay, said an estimated 5,000 people have been killed by the government
in the crackdown. She repeated her call for the regime of President Bashar al-Assad to
be referred to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. That same
judgment, that the Syrian regime is responsible for most of the deaths, came in a Human Rights
Watch report issued today. It named Syrian commanders who allegedly ordered troops to
shoot demonstrators. This man defected from the army. MAN (through translator): They just
said, let us go for hunting. When the protesters go to streets, they go to roof of the building,
a high building, and they use AK-47 to shoot on the protesters on the street. MARGARET
WARNER: Joe Stork is deputy director of the group's Middle East Division. JOE STORK, Human
Rights Watch: We're identifying here the names of some 74 individual Syrian commanders who
are, in one way or another, responsible for the killings, for the torture, for the arbitrary
arrests, for the suppression of these pro-democracy protests sort of without any regard for human
life, for basic international human rights. FREDERIC HOF, U.S. State Department: I do
not see this regime surviving. MARGARET WARNER: And the U.S. government is increasingly blunt
in its assessment of the Assad government's fate. A top State Department official, Frederic
Hof, appeared at a House hearing yesterday. FREDERIC HOF: Our view is that this regime
is the equivalent of dead man walking. But the real question is how many steps remain.
I think it is very, very, very difficult to predict or project how much time this regime
has. MARGARET WARNER: For now, the U.S., European Union, Arab League and Turkey have tightened
sanctions on Syria. Action by the U.N. Security Council, however, has been stymied by opposition
from Russia and China. gdfJ urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags country-region urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags
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