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Rallies protest proposal for military strikes against Syrian regime

ABOVE: Ottawa has joined Barack Obama in promising action against the Syrian regime but, as the American people waver, so does Canadian support for a military strike. Cindy Pom reports.

TORONTO – Demonstrators rallied across the street from the U.S. consulate in Toronto to protest intensifying American efforts to win backing for a military strike against Syria.

Several dozen people clutched umbrellas under heavy rain Saturday in one of several protests planned across Canada.

Organizer Sid Lacombe said there’s no reason to believe evidence the U.S. claims shows Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government was behind a chemical weapons attack on civilian areas.

READ MORE: Tens of thousands pour into St. Peter’s Square for Syria peace vigil

“We are not going to support the United States government as it launches yet another incredibly brutal, immoral and illegal war based on lies,” said Lacombe, a co-ordinator with the Canadian Peace Alliance.

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The protests come as U.S. President Barack Obama presses ahead with efforts to win congressional support for military strikes in the wake of a deadly chemical weapons attack his administration blames on the Syrian government.

The U.S. says Assad’s forces fired rockets loaded with the nerve agent sarin on rebel-held areas near Damascus before dawn on Aug. 21, killing at least 1,429 people, including 426 children.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which collects information from a network of anti-regime activists, puts the toll at 502 dead.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said Canada has “no plans” for a military mission against Syria, though Canada is among the countries that have said they endorsed a military strike against the Assad regime.

Lacombe and the crowd railed against any support for military action, saying it would lead to countless civilian deaths.

“Shame on Stephen Harper for supporting this war,” Lacombe told the crowd, touching off a chant against the prime minister.

Rehab Saad, who came to Canada from Syria 17 years ago, said the Obama administration should back off its calls for military intervention.

“Barack Obama: You got the Nobel Peace Prize not to start war… Don’t start a war that nobody will know when and where it’s going to end,” she said.

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Obama has said action against Syria would not be an open-ended intervention and would not involve “boots on the ground.”

The Obama administration came under pressure Saturday from European officials to delay possible action until UN inspectors report their findings about the alleged chemical weapons use.

But European Union foreign ministers meeting in Lithuania with Secretary of State John Kerry did endorse a “clear and strong response” to an attack they said strongly points to Assad’s government.

Obama will make an address from the White House on Tuesday to make his case for military action.

TORONTO – Several dozen people rallied across from the U.S. consulate in Toronto today to speak out against proposed military action against the Syrian regime.

Organizer Sid Lacombe says such attacks would kill countless civilians.

The protests come as U.S. President Barack Obama presses ahead with efforts to win congressional support for military strikes in the wake of a deadly chemical weapons attack his administration blames on the Syrian government.

Secretary of State John Kerry today lobbied European allies to back Washington’s proposed strikes.

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Obama will make an address from the White House on Tuesday to make his case for military action.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said Canada has no plans for a military mission against Syria. But Canada is among the countries that have said they endorsed a military strike.

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