(Updates with Assad Decree today in the fifth paragraph).
April 20 (Bloomberg)--the Syria Cabinet approved a draft decree to lift a 48 years emergency legislation, the principal demand of protesters challenging the rule of President Bashar al - Assad .the Council of Ministers has also approved bills to dissolve the Court Supreme State security and regulate the right to protestMinister of Information Adnan Mahmoud said yesterday in a speech televised after the session of the Council of Ministers. The measures require the approval of the President or the Parliament to become law, former legislator George Jabbour, said in a telephone interview. Assad will give its choirs today, reported the newspaper Al Watan. "This will strengthen security and protect the dignity of citizens, Mahmoud has. The draft law on the right of protest "is similar to those in place in most countries of the world, particularly in the countries of Europe and the United States."The Syria is the last country in the Middle East to be affected by the wave of revolts that ousted leaders of Egypt and Tunisia long and sparked an armed conflict in Libya. Plan Assad is an ally of the Iran and a power broker in neighbouring countries to the Lebanon, where it supports Hezbollah, a group armed with Shia Muslims.Assad will issue a decree approving the lifting of the emergency law, Al Watan, today official who is close to the regime, has reported, quoting an unidentified top. The Act be replaced by a special Act of the fight against terrorism and an existing General punishment law applies to crimes of terrorism, said the private newspaper. Assad will also issue a decree dissolving the Court Supreme Security of the State and the Organization of peaceful rallies, Al Watan said.Not enough "the number of deaths and injuries suffered by demonstrators at the hands of the month security forces has angered and galvanized the opposition to demand much more than the modest reforms that they wanted to start", some even calling for regime change "Chris Phillips, an analyst with the Economist Intelligence Unit in London, said yesterday." "Now, the official end of the emergency law is unlikely to meet the demonstrators unless it is accompanied by a significant change in the behaviour of the security services".Demonstrations erupted in mid-March, triggering a crackdown by the Government which led to dozens of deaths across the country. Assad ordered his ministers to prepare the legal framework for the demolition of the State of emergency, in a speech on April 16 without reference to other applications of protest, including the release of political prisoners.Demonstrators KilledAt at least 17 demonstrators died on April 17 in the central city of Homs anti-government gatherings, is home to one of two oil refineries in the country and Latakia, Ammar Qurabi, head of the national organization for human rights Syriasaid by telephone from Cairo. He said the security forces is separated a sit-in Homs yesterday, causing at least one death. Agency France-Press put the number of deaths yesterday in Homs to four.The Interior Ministry has accused "criminal gangs" of having killed a general and three of his parents, as well as a colonel and a soldier, in two separate attacks in Homs, in accordance with the Arab Syrian State News Agency.Assad must do more to meet the demands of the Syrian people for greater freedom and the démocratieSecrétaire foreign U.K. William Hague said after the Syrian Cabinet has approved the draft decree on the lifting of the emergency law.The move "is a step forward, there is no doubt that," Hague told Sky News television yesterday. "assad" has much more to be done to meet the legitimate aspirations of the people of his country. "Of the Baathist regime of terrorists BlamedAssad, who has been in power since 1963, has blamed the violence on the terrorists. The Ministry of the Interior announced yesterday a ban on street demonstrations. "The Department said it will not be lenient with such terrorist acts and work strictly to improve the security and stability everywhere in Syria and pursue terrorists everywhere in the world to bring to justice,"according to SANA." "Banning the demonstrations is unconstitutional, former judge Haitham al-Maleh, 80, an activist of the human rights which has been recently released from prison under an amnesty, said television Al Arabiya. "No laws or decrees have so far been enacted, so it is all the talk for the moment."The Cabinet yesterday investigated a series of decrees of project to introduce more changes, including a new right of the media to respect freedoms, said Mahmoud. The Cabinet also reviewed in the projects of laws for political parties and local authorities, said SANA.Dissatisfied with "decrees of strategic project arrived in the political reform that will help to build democracy and to increase the participation of citizens," said SANA. The Government has reviewed a draft law which would employ 10,000 graduates in public institutions, each year, he said.Government concessions do not appear to meet the demonstrators, who were always "want a little more," Theodore Karasik, Director of research at the Institute based in Dubai for the Middle East and the military analysis of the Gulf, said yesterday by phone.At least 130 people were killed in the unrest, according to Human Rights Watch. The organization based in New York, said Syrian forces have tortured the demonstrators and that it is impossible to verify how many remain in detention. Activists say the number of deaths exceed births that unrest has posed the most serious challenge to Asad, who inherited power from his father 11 years. He accused the conspirators from abroad to take advantage of the unrest to undermine the Syria, mainly because of his anti-Israel groups support.Assad issued a decree on 14 April to approve a new Government under the former Agriculture Minister Adel Safar, after protests intensified.-With the help of Lina Ibrahim in Dubai and Thomas Penny in London. Editors: Jennifer M. Freedman, Heather Langan
To contact the reporters on this story: Massoud a. Derhally to Beirut to mderhally@bloomberg.net; Nayla Razzouk in Amman at the nrazzouk2@bloomberg.net. Inal Ersan in Dubai at the iersan@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew j. Barden at barden@bloomberg.net
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