By Khaled Yacoub Oweis
AMMAN | Friday, 4 November 2011 10: 01 pm EDT
AMMAN (Reuters) - killed Syrian security forces at least 19 people and wounded dozens, as she said after Friday prayers, hard activists to protests, throwing doubt on whether a plan of the Arab League can stop bloodshed in months.
The Government offered an amnesty to anyone with weapons, if she reported police within a week, "as long as they don't kill no crimes committed," State television reported.
The gesture was not displayed, part of which would begin a plan of the Arab League, Wednesday, under which the army would leave free way, and a dialogue with the opposition period of two weeks, would turbulent cities, political prisoners of Syria to be accepted.
State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland dismissively responded, when asked whether she thought Syrians should take part in the amnesty, saying: "I would not recommend anyone to make authorities regime at the moment."
She threw out the Syrian Government on the plan of the Arab League to wear, and said that the United States have no confidence that it would. "We have a long and deep history of broken promises by the Assad regime," told reporters.
Violence has, if anything, increased since announcement of the Arab League agreement amid reports of sectarian murders.
Troops fired on protests, which broke people nine in the city of Hims, where tanks were again in action, and in Saqba, near the capital after Friday prayers in many cities, killing at least seven activists in Kanaker, South of Damascus.
A further two demonstrators in the city of Hama, 240 km (155 miles) North of Damascus, were killed when security forces several thousand demonstrators, the, March, large demonstrations before the tanks that stormed the city three months ago fired at Hauptplatz of Orontes, scene which, they said.
"Many people fell to the ground with gunshot wounds, and we fear that some will not make it," Mohammed, a resident said by phone Kanaker.
Citing activists in Kanaker, the Syrian information centre for human rights, that the 20-year-old a-year soldier mutinied a colonel said during his unit from protesters in the city was fire and killed five members of the security forces, including, before he shot and killed.
Hard media curbs have hard to check the events in Syria since the beginning of the protests against President Bashar al-Assad in March, inspired by revolts against Arab autocrats elsewhere.
GOVERNMENT DENIES TÖTUNGEN
Syrian State television denied all killings and broadcast of recordings, which were one from areas where protests, result masses were reported quiet from mosques after prayers. It said that four police were injured by shots from "armed terrorist groups in Kanaker."
But YouTube allegedly waving material, flags of many cities and towns, thousands of people, with some shouting: "don't cry mother, Bashar of the days are numbered."
A clip from the town of Taybet al-Imam, was close to Hama, masses marched along a main road, where huge Syrian flags from the pre-Ba'ath era were over buildings, adopted crashed the Muammar al-Gaddafi with the Libyan flag through those draped.
"People want the execution of Assad," screamed people at a rally in the town of Deir Baalba near the city of Homs.
Homs has established itself as a flash point of the protest and a Centre for emerging armed resistance against the Government. Activists tank and sniper said at least 22 people in the central city fire Thursday, killed in the old town of Bab AMRO.
The violence in Homs, where tanks for the second day were just bombed the indicates how difficult it will be, to the plan of the Arab League in a country locked in a deadly struggle between Assad and enemies to implement his 11-year rule.
Diplomats who have seen the agreement, saying that there was no any timetable for implementation.
SECTARIAN MORDE
This week in reports of the murders of members of the minority Alawite Assad and counter killings of Sunnis, the a majority of Syria are fears that unrest will have a sectarian turn 20 million mounted.
State News Agency SANA quoted several inhabitants of Hims, which describes attacks by armed taxis Thursday.
A woman named Ikhlas Ashour, said armed forced passengers from the taxi and robbing them of their money and identity cards before killing all the men.
"It was an incredibly ugly scene, I felt like I was living a nightmare," she was quoted.
Another resident, Ghayath Darwish, said SANA armed some male passengers killed at random and dragged their bodies way.
The opposition has talks with Assad rejected so far, as long as the violence continue and said that the only way to peace for the President to resign immediately.
The United Nations says that since the uprising against the 41 years of Assad family reign began in March more than 3000 people have been killed. The authorities blame Islamic militants and foreign-backed armed gangs to kill 1,100 security forces.
Western sanctions and growing criticism from Turkey and Arab neighbors raised have pressure on Syria to stop the bloodshed.
(Additional Erika Solomon and Mariam Karouny in Beirut;) (Editing by Alistair Lyon and Rosalind Russell)
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