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World marks anniversary of Syria rebellion

Arab World Materials 15 March 2014 14:21 (UTC +04:00)
Across the world, charities and activist groups have marked the third anniversary of the conflict in Syria on Saturday, as the violence in the war-torn country continues unabated
World marks anniversary of Syria rebellion

Across the world, charities and activist groups have marked the third anniversary of the conflict in Syria on Saturday, as the violence in the war-torn country continues unabated, Al Arabiya reported.

Participants in the cities of Melbourne, London and Washington DC, among other cities, have held candlelit vigils to mark the day and remember victims of the three-year crisis.

More than 140,000 people have been killed in the conflict which began as peaceful protests calling for democratic change but has exploded into a civil war after the regime brutally crushed dissent.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has remained in power despite fighting that has driven millions from their homes, while rebels have seized large swathes of the country.

Assad's government is now preparing for presidential and parliamentary elections.

The Syrian parliament met on Wednesday to discuss a new election law that would let candidates run for president and permit a multi-party political system, the state SANA news agency said.

The United States said on Friday that the prospect of Assad running for a re-election would be "disgusting."

"We've been clear that Assad has lost all legitimacy to lead his people and any sort of campaign that he might run would be offensive and disgusting, I think, after what he's done to his people over the last many, many months," State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said, according to Agence France-Presse.

The opposition has repeatedly insisted that Assad must step down as part of any peace agreement, most recently in two rounds of failed talks earlier this year.

Syrian opposition chief Ahmad Jarba is expected to give a statement today on the anniversary of the uprising,

The United Nations has renewed its call for peace talks to resume

Earlier this week, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon recalled that Syria's peaceful anti-government protests in 2011 were met by oppressive violence at the hands of Assad's regime and led to a protracted conflict. The UN leader appealed to the international community to rejuvenate the Geneva Syria peace talks.

"Syria is now the biggest humanitarian and peace and security crisis facing the world, with violence reaching unthinkable levels. Syria's neighbors are bearing the increasingly unbearable humanitarian, security, political and socio-economic effects of this conflict," Ban said.

The anniversary comes a day after Syrian government forces entered the key rebel stronghold of Yabrud on Friday, one of the last opposition-held areas in the Qalamoun area near Lebanon.

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