Activists say at least 20 people have been killed by security forces across Syria, as protesters took to the streets under the slogan "death rather than humiliation".
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said eight people were killed when security forces intervened to disperse protests in several suburbs of Damascus, including Douma and Arbeen, on Friday.
Three other people died in Homs province and three in the eastern city of Deir z-Zor, the UK-based group said.
It was not immediately clear where the other casualties occurred.
Activists said the largest protest turnout was in Homs,
where a funeral turned into a massive anti-government demonstration. Thousands
of people were taking part, calling for the regime's downfall and for President
Assad's execution, witnesses said.
Earlier on Friday, European Union governments agreed to
ban imports of Syrian oil in a move to strengthen economic pressure on
President Bashar al-Assad and his government.
EU foreign ministers met in Poland on Friday, where they
discussed a plan first announced two weeks ago to impose sweeping new economic
sanctions against Syria, including an embargo on oil imports.
David Cameron, the British prime minister, expressed his
support for new sanctions against Damascus on Thursday following the
"Friends of Libya" conference in Paris.
"We need tougher sanctions, more travel bans, more
asset freezes, a clear message that the regime and what it is doing is
unacceptable," he said.
Travel bans
The oil embargo marks a significant step for the EU,
which has so far taken an incremental approach to sanctions against Assad as
they try to force him to end a crackdown on anti-government protesters and
relinquish power.
Friday's decision also expanded the list of entities
subject to EU travel bans and asset freezes by seven, including four people.
"The sanctions have been agreed," an EU
official told the Reuters hews agency. "They ban the import of Syrian oil
and petroleum products to the EU. Four more people and three entities are also
included."
The measures will go into effect on Saturday.
International pressure appears to have had little effect
on the Syrian leadership, which intensified its crackdown on protests in
August.
Security forces killed at least seven people on Thursday,
activists said.
A senior Syrian official, meanwhile, said in a video
posted on YouTube that he had resigned in disgust at hundreds of killings and
thousands of arrests by state security forces.
**Source: Al Jazeera and agencies