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Syrian opposition leaders urge election boycott

In this image made from amateur video released by Ugarit News and accessed Saturday, May 5, 2012, a U.N. observer, center, inspects what residents of the town of Taftanaz, Syria, tell him is a mass grave. The international group Human Rights Watch has said regime soldiers raiding the town on the Turkish border in early April killed 35 detained civilians execution-style and opened fire on others trying to flee. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via AP video) TV OUT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL

In this image made from amateur video released by Ugarit News and accessed Saturday, May 5, 2012, a U.N. observer, center, inspects what residents of the town of Taftanaz, Syria, tell him is a mass grave. The international group Human Rights Watch has said regime soldiers raiding the town on the Turkish border in early April killed 35 detained civilians execution-style and opened fire on others trying to flee. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via AP video) TV OUT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL

In this image made from amateur video released by Ugarit News and accessed Saturday, May 5, 2012, a resident of the town of Taftanaz, Syria, right, points to what is claimed to be headstones marking a mass grave as he and others explain the scene to a U.N. observer. The international group Human Rights Watch has said regime soldiers raiding the town on the Turkish border in early April killed 35 detained civilians execution-style and opened fire on others trying to flee. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via AP video) TV OUT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL

In this image made from amateur video released by Ugarit News and accessed Saturday, May 5, 2012, a U.N. observer, right, inspects what residents of the town of Taftanaz, Syria, tell him is a mass grave. The international group Human Rights Watch has said regime soldiers raiding the town on the Turkish border in early April killed 35 detained civilians execution-style and opened fire on others trying to flee. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via AP video) TV OUT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL

In this picture taken with a mobile phone, an anti-Bashar Assad mourner reacts after he sprayed a wall with Arabic graffiti reading, "down with Assad, the small donkey," during the funeral processions of the five protesters who were killed by the Syrian security forces on Friday while taking part in the funeral of activist Odai Junblat in the Kfar Suseh area in Damascus, Syria, on Saturday May 5, 2012. (AP Photo)

People look at destroyed vehicles after an explosion on al-Thawra Street in Damascus, Syria, Saturday, May 5, 2012. According to eyewitnesses, an explosive device was planted underneath a military car went off near the Social Military Institution, causing material damage only. (AP Photo/Bassem Tellawi)

(AP) ? Exiled Syrian opposition figures on Sunday urged voters to boycott an upcoming parliamentary election, dismissing it as a cynical attempt by President Bashar Assad to hold on to power.

The regime has portrayed the vote set for Monday as a sign of its willingness to carry out reforms. The election for a 250-seat parliament comes three months after the adoption of a new constitution that allows for the formation of political parties to compete with the ruling Baath party.

However, Assad's opponents say reforms without their input are a farce and that elections cannot be held under the threat of guns. A U.N.-brokered truce last month has failed to halt a brutal regime crackdown on a 14-month-old uprising against Assad.

"We are against these elections because they don't have any of the characteristics of free elections," said Haytham Manna, head of the National Coordination Body for Democratic Change in Syria, one of the main opposition groups.

"It's a kind of joke. It is a kind of propaganda from the regime," added Haitham Maleh, a human rights lawyer and former senior member of the Syrian National Council, an umbrella for several opposition factions. "The real opposition will not go to vote."

Manna spoke from Brussels and Maleh from London.

Inside Syria as well, anti-regime activists said they rejected the vote and had seen very little government preparation for elections in some opposition areas.

In the southern town of Dael, residents prevented anyone from putting up election posters and instead put up photos of the 20 people from the city who have been killed in the uprising.

"They are our candidates for parliament," said Adel, a local activist, referring to the dead. He declined to give his full name for fear of retribution.

Since the outbreak of Syria's popular revolt in March 2011, the regime has made a series of gestures to try to allay the crisis, but also kept up its attacks on centers of rebellion. The U.N. says more than 9,000 people were killed in the first year of the uprising.

In February, the new constitution was approved in a referendum. It allows for the formation of new political parties and limits the president to two seven-year terms. Syria has been ruled by the Baath party since it seized power in a coup in 1963 and the Assad family has ruled since Bashar's father Hafez took over in another coup in 1970.

Election officials say 11 new parties are participating in Monday's election, along with the 10 parties of the National Progressive Front, an alliance dominated by the Baath party. Election officials said nearly 15 million of Syria's roughly 23 million people are eligible to vote.

In a pre-election day appearance, Assad on Sunday laid a wreath at a monument for Syrian troops in the Qasioun Mountain area overlooking the capital Damascus, the state-run SANA news agency said.

Earlier this week, SANA reported that a pro-regime candidate, Abdul-Hamid al-Taha, was gunned down in the southern city of Daraa in an attack it blamed on "armed terrorists," the term the regime generally uses for opponents.

The election comes more than three weeks after an April 12 cease-fire aimed at paving the way for political talks between Assad and those trying to bring him down.

The truce, brokered by special envoy Kofi Annan, has failed to take hold, though U.N. observers say it's helped bring down the level of violence. Regime forces continue to attack opposition strongholds and carry out arrests, while refusing to withdraw troops and tanks from the streets, as required by the Annan plan. Rebel fighters continue to target soldiers in shootings and bombings.

Currently, some 40 U.N. observers are in Syria, and the contingent is to reach 300 by the end of May. U.N. officials hope the deployment of more observers will gradually calm the situation, and Annan's spokesman says the peace plan remains on track.

Activists said observers visited the town of Zabadani northwest of Damascus and Dael in the south. Regime forces fired randomly into the city after they left, injuring three people, said Adel, the activist.

The U.S. government last week offered a bleaker view of the plan's progress, saying it is perhaps time to seek another approach. However, the international community remains divided on Syria, and Assad allies Russia and China would likely block harsher U.N. Security Council measures.

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Associated Press writer Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria, and Ben Hubbard in Beirut contributed reporting.

Associated Press

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