Mass anti-regime protest in the Saqba area of Damascus on Friday
See also Syria 1st-Hand: The Bombings That Broke "Peaceful" Salamiyeh br>
Bahrain (and Beyond) Live Coverage: Protests and Clashes Continue br>
Friday's Syria Live Coverage: Insurgents Advance in South and East, Down Regime Jets
2100 GMT: Blackout. Electricity has been cut in the capital tonight --- the BBC's Lina Sinjab reports:
Black out in #Damascus power shut down almost all over the city. Was planning to read a book :-(
— Lina Sinjab (@BBCLinaSinjab) February 16, 2013
As ever social life in #Damascus is what keeps us going within minutes friends nearby gather on candle light and laugh despite darkness
— Lina Sinjab (@BBCLinaSinjab) February 16, 2013
1656 GMT: The Islamic Movement. Claimed footage has been posted of supporters of the Islamist insurgent movement Jabhat al-Nusra calling for an attack on the town of Fou'a, which has a mainly-Shia population.
1208 GMT: Weapons. Bjørn H Jespersen and Mads Dahl have pointed to videos indicating the first appearance among insurgents of foreign-made MANPADS (man-portable air-defence systems).
Blogger Brown Moses evaluates that the MANPADS are Chinese-made, and "the nearest country to Syria that uses this weapon is Sudan, with Malaysia, Cambodia, Peru, and Pakistan being other users". Given this, there are "some big questions with regards to [the] source".
0748 GMT: Casualties. The Local Coordination Committees claim 89 people were killed on Friday, including 29 in Damascus and its suburbs and 20 in Idlib Province.
0618 GMT: No Negotiations. An eight-point plan for the resolution of the crisis, released by the opposition National Coalition on Friday, has effectively put any notion of negotiation into the dustbin. In its most striking point, the Coalition insists, "Bashar Assad and [the] security leadership who are responsible for the current destruction of the country are outside the political process and must be held accountable for their crimes."
So not only will Assad be forced to step aside in any transitional Government --- a condition firmly rejected by the regime and countries such as Russia --- the President will face trial on charges such as murder, if not the general "crimes of war".
Earlier this month, opposition head Moaz al-Khatib had offered talks with the regime if it met conditions such as the release of political prisoners. If that was an opening --- and it probably was not, given Assad's refusal to engage it directly --- it is now closed.