An image grab taken from a video uploaded on YouTube shows Syrian anti-government demonstrators holding a large Syrian flag during a protest in Idlib in northwest Syria on August 26, 2011 as tens of thousands across Syria rallied on the last Friday of Ramazan, vowing to bring down the regime. -AFP Photo

BEIRUT: Syrian security forces killed at least two people as tens of thousands of anti-government protesters flooded the streets on the last Friday of the holy month of Ramazan, a time that many activists hoped would become a turning point in the uprising.

But more than five months into the revolt against President Bashar Assad, the conflict has descended into a bloody stalemate with both sides showing no sign of giving in. Activists chose ''patience and determination'' as the theme of Friday's protests across the country of 22 million.

''We are here to tell the regime that nothing is finished, nothing will finish and we will not stay at home like you want us to,'' a protester told The Associated Press by telephone from the central city of Homs, where he said thousands poured into the streets.

He asked that his name not be published for fear of government reprisals. The regime got a boost Friday from its ally in neighboring Lebanon, the Shia militant group Hezbollah.

The group's leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, echoed the regime's claims that the unrest in Syria was being driven by a foreign conspiracy seeking to destabilize the regime because of its support for anti-Israel resistance groups.

''Those who are pushing toward sectarian strife in Syria want to destroy the country,'' Nasrallah said in a nationally televised speech to mark the last Friday of Ramadan.

Assad's backers portray him as the only man who can guarantee peace in a country with a potentially volatile mix of religious groups. The opposition, however, says the protest movement is free of sectarian overtones and is simply demanding freedom and democracy.

Human rights groups say Assad's forces have killed more than 2,000 people since the uprising erupted in March, touched off by the wave of revolutions sweeping the Arab world. Friday has become the main day for protests, despite the near-certainty that tanks and snipers will respond with deadly force.

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