Long resistant to drawing the international community into the Syria crisis, the Arab top diplomats agreed to ask UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon "to take all measures to support the efforts of the Arab League to resolve the critical situation in Syria."
The Arab body's chief, Nabil al-Arabi, said the 22-member bloc has invited Syria to sign an agreement in Cairo on Friday at 1:00pm (1100 GMT) that would allow observers into the country to monitor the situation on the ground.
Finance ministers will meet on Saturday to vote on sanctions should Syria fail to sign.
Sanctions, it said, would include suspending flights to Syria as well as freezing financial transactions with its central bank and commercial deals with the government except for basic goods.
The sanctions could also include freezing the financial assets of the Damascus government.
Lebanese Foreign Minister Adnan Mansur said earlier that Beirut would not endorse any potential Arab League sanctions against Syria.
The United States and European Union have already imposed strict economic sanctions on Syria, where the United Nations estimates more than 3,500 people have been killed since March as the regime cracks down on a popular revolt.
Arab sanctions could sound the death knell for the country's economy which depends on its Arab neighbours for half or its exports and a quarter of its imports.
"If that is to happen, it will be very unfortunate because the damage will be to all sides," Economy Minister Mohammed Nidal al-Shaar told AFP in an exclusive interview.
"We don't expect all Arab countries to yield or participate in sanctions," he added. "In fact, we are almost certain that some Arab countries will not participate," he said.
On the ground, the violence claimed at least another 50 lives on Thursday, even as the Free Syrian Army called for foreign air strikes on Syria to speed up the ouster of the regime.
Eleven members of Syria's security forces and 15 deserters were killed in clashes in the flashpoint province of Homs, where at least 12 civilians also died, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
"Eleven soldiers and members of the security forces were killed in skirmishes" with deserters in the town of Huleh, the Britain-based group said.
The rights group said security forces killed at least 12 civilians around the province in central Syria, including three in the Bayyada area of the city of Homs.
The Britain-based rights group also reported five soldiers killed in an ambush in the central province of Hama.
Meanwhile, seven military pilots were killed when gunmen attacked their bus in the centre of the country on Thursday, opposition sources told AFP.
The attack, carried out by "armed Bedouins", took place near the city of Palmyra, said an opposition member based in the flashpoint region of Homs.
The killings were claimed by the rebel Free Syrian Army, which in a statement said "a brigade carried out the attack on a bus transporting pilots on the road between Palmyra and Homs, killing seven officers and the driver."
FSA chief Riyadh al-Asaad earlier Thursday called for foreign air strikes on "strategic targets" in Syria to speed up the fall of the regime.
"We are not in favour of the entry of foreign troops as was the case in Iraq but we want the international community to give us logistical support," Colonel Asaad, who is based across the border in Turkey, told AFP.
"We also want international protection, the establishment of a no-fly zone, a buffer zone and strikes on certain strategic targets considered as crucial by the regime," he said in a telephone interview.
The leader of the main Syrian opposition group in exile said after talks in Paris on Wednesday however that his organisation does not want to see rebels launch armed attacks on President Bashar al-Assad's forces.
Amid fears of the deadly anti-regime protests in Syria since mid-March turning into civil war, Burhan Ghaliun of the Syrian National Council said the FSA should try to avoid direct confrontation with regime troops
"We would like this army to carry out defensive actions to protect those who have left the (regime's) army and peaceful demonstrations, but not take on offensive actions against the army," he said.
But Asaad said limited foreign intervention would "allow us to triumph in a relatively short time" and singled out missile batteries in coastal areas as prime targets for attack.
The FSA now has 20,000 men and its ranks, which are swelling each day, according to the colonel.
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The Arab body's chief, Nabil al-Arabi, said the 22-member bloc has invited Syria to sign an agreement in Cairo on Friday at 1:00pm (1100 GMT) that would allow observers into the country to monitor the situation on the ground.
Finance ministers will meet on Saturday to vote on sanctions should Syria fail to sign.
Sanctions, it said, would include suspending flights to Syria as well as freezing financial transactions with its central bank and commercial deals with the government except for basic goods.
The sanctions could also include freezing the financial assets of the Damascus government.
Lebanese Foreign Minister Adnan Mansur said earlier that Beirut would not endorse any potential Arab League sanctions against Syria.
The United States and European Union have already imposed strict economic sanctions on Syria, where the United Nations estimates more than 3,500 people have been killed since March as the regime cracks down on a popular revolt.
Arab sanctions could sound the death knell for the country's economy which depends on its Arab neighbours for half or its exports and a quarter of its imports.
"If that is to happen, it will be very unfortunate because the damage will be to all sides," Economy Minister Mohammed Nidal al-Shaar told AFP in an exclusive interview.
"We don't expect all Arab countries to yield or participate in sanctions," he added. "In fact, we are almost certain that some Arab countries will not participate," he said.
On the ground, the violence claimed at least another 50 lives on Thursday, even as the Free Syrian Army called for foreign air strikes on Syria to speed up the ouster of the regime.
Eleven members of Syria's security forces and 15 deserters were killed in clashes in the flashpoint province of Homs, where at least 12 civilians also died, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
"Eleven soldiers and members of the security forces were killed in skirmishes" with deserters in the town of Huleh, the Britain-based group said.
The rights group said security forces killed at least 12 civilians around the province in central Syria, including three in the Bayyada area of the city of Homs.
The Britain-based rights group also reported five soldiers killed in an ambush in the central province of Hama.
Meanwhile, seven military pilots were killed when gunmen attacked their bus in the centre of the country on Thursday, opposition sources told AFP.
The attack, carried out by "armed Bedouins", took place near the city of Palmyra, said an opposition member based in the flashpoint region of Homs.
The killings were claimed by the rebel Free Syrian Army, which in a statement said "a brigade carried out the attack on a bus transporting pilots on the road between Palmyra and Homs, killing seven officers and the driver."
FSA chief Riyadh al-Asaad earlier Thursday called for foreign air strikes on "strategic targets" in Syria to speed up the fall of the regime.
"We are not in favour of the entry of foreign troops as was the case in Iraq but we want the international community to give us logistical support," Colonel Asaad, who is based across the border in Turkey, told AFP.
"We also want international protection, the establishment of a no-fly zone, a buffer zone and strikes on certain strategic targets considered as crucial by the regime," he said in a telephone interview.
The leader of the main Syrian opposition group in exile said after talks in Paris on Wednesday however that his organisation does not want to see rebels launch armed attacks on President Bashar al-Assad's forces.
Amid fears of the deadly anti-regime protests in Syria since mid-March turning into civil war, Burhan Ghaliun of the Syrian National Council said the FSA should try to avoid direct confrontation with regime troops
"We would like this army to carry out defensive actions to protect those who have left the (regime's) army and peaceful demonstrations, but not take on offensive actions against the army," he said.
But Asaad said limited foreign intervention would "allow us to triumph in a relatively short time" and singled out missile batteries in coastal areas as prime targets for attack.
The FSA now has 20,000 men and its ranks, which are swelling each day, according to the colonel.
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