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European nations summoned Syrian ambassadors last week in a coordinated demand that Assad stop gunning down his people, and Germany said sanctions were possible if the crackdown did not ease. "The ongoing brutal actions of the Syrian government leave the European Union no other choice than to push forward forcefully now with targeted sanctions against the regime," Germany's deputy foreign minister, Werner Hoyer, said Tuesday. The situation in Daraa "allows no doubt about the brutality and uncompromising nature of the regime," Hoyer said in a statement. "Europe must now respond to this with sanctions." European sanctions could strengthen the effect of U.S. trade and financial sanctions slapped on Syria in 2004 and 2006, mainly on counterterrorism grounds. Daraa, a drought-plagued city near the border with Jordan, has been under siege for a week since the regime sent in troops backed by tanks and snipers to crush protests. Electricity, power and fuel have been cut and the military has largely sealed off the area. The International Committee of the Red Cross on Tuesday called on Syria to allow it "immediate and unimpeded" access to those injured in clashes between protesters and government forces. A spokesman for the Geneva-based relief group, Hisham Hassan, says the Red Cross and Syrian Red Crescent have only been able to reach those injured who are in hospitals around the capital Damascus.
[Associated
Press;
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