The U.S. ambassador to Syria on Tuesday visited a town in the south of the country where 15 people were killed last week, an embassy spokesman said.
"Ambassador Robert Ford went this morning to Jassem, 65 kilometers south of Damascus as part of his routine diplomatic duties," the spokesman, who declined to be named, told Agence France Presse.
Ford returned to the embassy after the visit, the spokesman added.
Jassem is in southern Daraa province, epicenter of anti-regime protests that broke out in mid-March, where according to activists 15 people were killed on Friday by security forces when they opened fire to crush a demonstration.
Ford in July angered Syrian authorities when he visited the flashpoint central city of Hama, along with the French ambassador to Syria Eric Chevallier.
The July 7 visit came after two huge protests in Hama during which almost half a million people rallied each time against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, according to activists.
About two weeks later Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem warned Ford and Chevallier not to travel outside Damascus.
"We will impose a ban on any (diplomatic) travel more than 25 kilometers outside Damascus, if the ambassadors continue to ignore (our) guidance," Muallem said.
"I hope that we will not be forced to impose the ban," he told the envoys at a meeting broadcast by state television on July 20.
"We did not expel the two ambassadors because we had hoped to maintain better relations in future," he said.
During the visit to Hama the U.S. envoy met several protesters and the embassy later issued a statement saying Ford had wanted to see for himself developments on the ground and that the visit was not aimed at incitement.
The ambassador "wanted to see with his own eyes what was happening on the ground," said at the time U.S. embassy spokesman JJ Harder, as "the lack of uninhibited access for international media makes this even more important."
"Happily," Ford "did not witness violence from either the government or the protesters," he said at the time.
Damascus swiftly denounced the move as an incitement to violence and a meddling in Syria's internal affairs.
"The presence of the U.S. ambassador in Hama without previous permission is obvious proof of the implication of the United States in the ongoing events, and of their attempts to increase (tensions), which damage Syria's security and stability," the foreign ministry said in a statement.
Syria's interior ministry claimed that Ford had met "saboteurs" in Hama "who erected checkpoints, cut traffic and prevented citizens from going to work."
Ford "incited these saboteurs to violence, to demonstrate and to refuse dialogue" with Assad's government, the interior ministry said.
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