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Etihad said Monday it was reviewing its flights to Syria as a result of the sanctions. The government-owned airline, based in the Emirati capital Abu Dhabi, urged passengers booked on flights to Damascus to get in touch if they want to change their flight plans. It noted that an Arab League decision to ban flights could be made within a week. An Etihad spokesman said Wednesday the carrier is sticking to its previous statement. Emirates didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday. Also Wednesday, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said dozens of tanks and armored personnel carriers stormed the village of Dael in the southern Daraa province early in the morning amid heavy gunfire. All communications with the village were cut at dawn, including mobile, land lines as well as electricity, the observatory said. Another activist coalition, called the Local Coordination Committees, also reported explosions and deployment of military in Dael and said communications had been cut. Assad has tried to contain the uprising in part by promising reform, but the opposition has largely brushed them off as too little, too late. On Wednesday, state-run TV announced that more than 900 detainees involved in the uprising were released from prison in an act of amnesty.
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