DAMASCUS // Syrian tanks stormed the flashpoint city of Banias Saturday, rights activists said, as President Bashar al-Assad ignored growing world outrage to press a violent crackdown on anti-regime protesters.
Heavy gunfire was heard in Banias's south, a seaside sector of the city where most of the protesters live, while navy boats patrolled offshore, the activists said, reached by telephone from Nicosia.
An Internet-based Syrian opposition group, meanwhile, proposed Saturday that embattled Assad offer to hold elections in six months in order to bring to an end the crisis that has engulfed his country for more than seven weeks.
The military assault on Banias, in northwestern Syria on the Mediterranean coast, came after security forces shot dead 26 protesters Friday during a huge "Day of Defiance" against the regime, according to a toll by rights groups.
The rights activists said residents of Banias formed human chains in a desperate bid to halt the military operation when it began very early Saturday.
Electricity and communications were cut as the tanks entered from three directions. The activists spoke of tens of tanks and armoured vehicles in the city. Tanks also encircled the nearby town of Baida.
The military sweep into Banias comes two days after a convoy of 40 military vehicles pulled out of the southern town of Daraa, another protest centre, which the military had locked down since April 25.
On Wednesday, residents of Banias said dozens of armoured vehicles, including tanks and troops reinforcements, had been deployed on the outskirts of Banias.
"It looks like they are preparing to attack the town, like they did in Daraa," one activist said.
Dozens of people were killed during the 10-day military assault on Daraa, launched with what activists termed "indiscriminate" shelling of the town.
But General Riad Haddad, the military's political department chief, insisted that troops in Daraa "did not confront the protesters. We continue searching for terrorists hidden in several places. As the army, we never confronted the protesters."
Human rights groups say that more than 600 people have been killed and 8,000 jailed or gone missing in the crackdown on protesters since demonstrations erupted in mid-March.
The Syrian Revolution 2011, a Facebook group that has been a motor of the protests, urged Assad to "stop shooting at demonstrators, allow peaceful demonstrations ... release all political prisoners, allow political pluralism and free elections in six months."
In a statement posted on its Facebook page, the Syrian Revolution 2011 told Assad he could be the "pride of contemporary Syria" if he transformed Syria "from a dictatorship to a democracy."
"The Syrians will be grateful and it is possible to do," said the statement.
The group had called for Friday's "Day of Defiance" demonstrations, which saw tens of thousands of people take to the streets in centres across Syria calling for democratic reforms.
Security forces cracked down heavily on the rallies, with Syrian rights group Insan putting the death toll at 26 killed.
The toll included 16 protesters killed in the central city of Homs, six in Hama, north of Damascus, two in Jableh on the Mediterranean and another two for which it gave no details.
The military announced that 10 soldiers and policemen were killed in Homs by "armed terrorist groups", and said the bodies of some of them were mutilated by the assailants.
The United States warned it would take "additional steps" against Syria if it continues its brutal crackdown on protesters, a week after imposing tough sanctions on the Arab nation.
"The United States believes that Syria's deplorable actions toward its people warrant a strong international response," the White House said in one of its strongest statements yet since the outbreak of unrest in the Arab state.
It warned that unless Assad's government halted its repression of peaceful pro-democracy protests, "the United States and its international partners will take additional steps to make clear our strong opposition to the Syrian government's treatment of its people."
It also welcomed the European Union's decision to impose sanctions on Syrian officials "responsible for human rights abuses."
The EU on Friday agreed to impose sanctions on 13 Syrian officials involved in the regime's brutal crackdown on protests and will meet Monday to discuss whether to target Assad as well, diplomats said.
Advocacy group Human Rights Watch meanwhile called on the UN General Assembly to strongly reject Syria's candidacy for the UN Human Rights Council.
"Syria's candidacy is an affront to all those facing its brutal repression, and to human rights supporters everywhere, and should be decisively rejected," said Peggy Hicks, global advocacy director at Human Rights Watch.
New members to the UN Human Rights Council are to be elected on May 20 and Syria is one of the candidates.
