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In a nationally televised speech June 20, Assad said he was forming a committee to study constitutional amendments, including one that would open the way to political parties other than the ruling Baath Party. He said a package of reforms was expected no later than the end of the year. Two days later, his foreign minister, Walid Moallem, called for regime opponents to enter into political talks. "Whoever wants to test our seriousness should come to the national dialogue to be a partner in shaping the future," he said. But some prominent dissidents rejected the overtures, citing what they said was previous Assad talk of reform that produced no political change. The regime disputes the opposition's death tolls, and says security forces have been the victims of "armed thugs" and foreign conspirators behind the unrest. Syria's military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Riad Haddad, said Sunday that 300 soldiers and 47 police officers have been killed. The European Union and the U.S., condemning the bloody crackdown, have imposed economic sanctions on Assad and other members of the Damascus leadership. The Assad regime was condemned as well on Monday in the northern Iraqi city of Sulaimaniyah, where some 200 Kurds and other members of the exiled Syrian opposition rallied to call for international military intervention in neighboring Syria, like the NATO intervention in Libya. The Kurdish minority in Syria has long faced discrimination at the hands of the country's Arab leadership. Many Kurdish members of Syrian opposition groups live in the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq.
[Associated
Press;
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