Friday, April 29, 2011

The Muslim Brotherhood called the Syrian people to the streets

The Muslim Brotherhood had appealed to the Syrian population to take to the streets. The Islamist group banned in Syria and the prime targets of repression by President Bashar Assad has encouraged citizens to demand more freedom in the streets on Friday, a day of prayers. "Do not let the regime harass your fellow countrymen.

Sing with one voice for freedom and dignity. Do not let the tyrants enslave you," reads the manifesto sent Thursday to the agency. It is the first time that the Muslim Brotherhood, whose leadership is in exile, called specifically to demonstrate in Syria since the beginning of the protests for six weeks.

Approximately five hundred people have been killed by security forces in the riots, according to human rights organization Sawasiah. About 200 members of the Baath party, the President El-Assad on Wednesday submitted his resignation in the province of Deraa for this reason. Tens of thousands of people attended the crowded funeral of nearly one hundred dead April 22.

The brotherhood of the Muslim Brotherhood operates in Syria, Egypt, Palestine (Hamas movement is a son of the Muslim Brotherhood), Jordan and Gulf countries. It is the oldest fundamentalist organization and influential Arab and Muslim world, the mother or grandmother of almost all groups, moderate or radical mediopensionistas strictly sociopolitical or practitioners of violence, which in recent years have been very international prominence preaching the need for their countries back to practice pure Islam and rigorous overthrow the autocrats who govern and become independent of U.S.

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