Heavy Fire in Homs as Regime Denies Navy Attack on Latakia
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةSyrian troops backed by tanks clamped down Monday on the flashpoint province of Homs, a day after gunboats joined an assault that killed more than 20 people in Latakia city, activists said.
As the country's anti-regime uprising turned five months old, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said snipers shot dead an old man in the provincial town of Hula and reported another killing in Latakia.
"The community of Hula is under siege ... The army is carrying out raids and arrests under the cover of heavy gunfire" in Homs province, said the Britain-based rights group.
Another rights monitoring group said "a large number of tanks entered Hula this morning."
"Security agents encircled all the entrances to Hula and they started shooting to terrify local residents. Then the army went in to make raids and arrests," said the Observatory.
The operation came a day after gunboats joined the pounding of the port city of Latakia that killed as many as 26 people, in the first attack from the sea since Syria's anti-regime revolt erupted March 15, according to activists.
Many residents were allowed to flee the worst-hit districts of Latakia at dawn on Monday, but soldiers opened fire at a checkpoint, killing a man and wounding five other people, the Observatory said.
President Bashar Assad has appointed a new governor for Aleppo province in northern Syria, the state news agency SANA announced.
The decree followed the naming of new governors for Homs and Hama in the center of the country as well as for Daraa in the south, scene of the first major bloodshed of the uprising.
SANA also ran a denial that the navy had attacked Latakia, however, quoting its correspondent in the Mediterranean city as saying security forces had battled gunmen.
Activists said four more people were killed elsewhere on Sunday.
The Syrian Observatory said at least 23 people died and dozens more were wounded in Latakia, while the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria (NOHRS) put the Latakia death toll for Sunday at 26.
The Syrian Observatory said the vessels opened up with heavy machine guns.
The NOHRS, backing up the report, gave a list of 26 victims -- including two Palestinian men from the Ramel refugee camp in southern Latakia -- and said one more person was killed in Homs and another in Idlib, northwest Syria.
A spokesman for the U.N. refugee agency UNRWA, Chris Gunness, said reports from the Ramel camp spoke of "fire from tanks which have encircled the area as well as fire from ships at sea."
SANA denied naval vessels had opened fire on the city. "Law enforcement members are pursuing armed men who are using machine guns, grenades and bombs in Ramel from rooftops and from behind barricades," it said.
The head of medical services in Latakia was quoted as saying that two members of the security forces were killed and 41 others wounded "while chasing armed men."
On Saturday, U.S. President Barack Obama, Saudi King Abdullah and Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron called for an "immediate" end to the Syrian government's deadly crackdown.
The violence has killed around 2,200 people, including some 400 members of the security forces, according to rights activists. Syrian authorities have blamed the bloodshed on armed gangs and Islamist militants.
The U.N. Security Council is due to hold a special meeting on Thursday to discuss human rights and the humanitarian emergency in Syria.
Assad is copying the brutal Basij tactics in suppressing Green Revolution I in 2009. Little he knows that soon the oppressed Iranian people will be copying the brave Syrian people's peaceful tactics to depose a ruthless tyrant and his mafia entourage. The Syrian Spring will certainly lead to Green Revolution II in Iran, and as the worst two remaining tyrants in the region are deposed, so will their creation in Hizbollahstan so Lebanese Shia can once again reconcile with their culture and heritage of freedom and democracy that the Iranian people have sacrificed so much to achieve.
You must visit this bloodshed in Syria on US President Obama and his failure to take any sort of action to stop it. To date, though Secretary Clinton has spoken out boldly, she she is not receiving support from her President, who instead is waiting for the Turks to act first before engaging the US. On August 11, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan gave Assad 15 days to start reforms. Well, my friend in 15 days Ramadan will almost be over and when it ends, the focus and the push of the protest movement will have lost its best change to tip the balance against Assad.
By the US inaction and deferrence to Turkey, which itself has given Assad 15 days to "hurry up and finish" the same deference that was given Israel in the July 2006 War is now being allowed to Assad. Amoral policies lead to amoral results.