35 Killed as Syrian Army Pounds Rebel-held Towns

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Syrian forces pounded rebel-held towns Tuesday and blasted a bridge used by refugees to escape to Lebanon, killing 35 people across the country, monitors said.

Twenty-three people were killed in the central province of Homs, seven in the southern province of Daraa, four in the northwestern province of Idlib and one in Damascus province, the Local Coordination Committees, the main activist group spurring protests on the ground, said.

Regime troops launched a major assault on Herak, a town in the southern province of Daraa, a monitoring group said.

A girl was shot dead there by a sniper and five soldiers were killed in clashes with the rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA), the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

"Large military forces, including tanks and armored troop carriers, launched an assault on Herak," the Britain-based monitoring group added, citing residents.

And in Maaret al-Numan, a town in the northwestern province of Idlib, a 23-year-old man was shot dead by sniper fire, according to the Observatory. Security forces also killed two others in Idlib.

After fleeing the battered Baba Amr district in the flashpoint central city of Homs, the rebels regrouped in nearby Rastan, which the Observatory and activists said came under artillery fire on Sunday and Monday.

Rastan, bombed intermittently since February 5, is located on the motorway linking Damascus to northern Syria.

Qusayr, another town in Homs province that has fallen mainly under rebel control, was also targeted by heavy bombardment, according to Anas Abu Ali, an official with the FSA.

Observatory chief Rami Abdul Rahman told Agence France Presse in Beirut that Syrian forces bombed a bridge used to evacuate the wounded and refugees to Lebanon from Homs province.

The violence comes amid a flurry of diplomatic initiatives launched separately by the Arab League, the United Nations, Russia and China -- all aimed at ending the year-long tumult in Syria.

The International Committee of the Red Cross, meanwhile, was negotiating with Syria authorities for a fourth day to be allowed to deliver aid and evacuate the wounded from Baba Amr.

Rebel fighters retreated from Baba Amr last Thursday in the face of a ground assault by Syrian forces after almost a month of shelling, with fleeing residents giving terrifying accounts of atrocities committed by government troops.

The ICRC and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent Society have since sought in vain permission to enter the Homs district with a seven-truck aid convoy.

With the convoy stalled, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged the international community on Tuesday to put pressure on Damascus to allow the delivery of relief supplies to civilians.

In New York, U.N. humanitarian chief Valerie Amos said she had been granted permission by Damascus to go to Syria from Wednesday to Friday.

The aim of the visit, she said, would be "to urge all parties to allow unhindered access for humanitarian relief workers so that they can evacuate the wounded and deliver essential supplies."

The violence in Homs province has sent more than 1,500 Syrian refugees, mainly women and children, fleeing across the border into Lebanon in the past few days, U.N. and Lebanese officials said.

With diplomatic efforts so far stymied, U.S. Senator John McCain, an influential Republican, called on Monday for American air strikes on Syrian forces to protect population centers and create safe havens.

At the request of the Syrian opposition, he said "the United States should lead an international effort to protect key population centers in Syria, especially in the north, through air strikes on Assad's forces."

On Wednesday, former U.N. chief Kofi Annan is to launch a mission aimed at Assad to silence the guns blamed for thousands of deaths since anti-regime protests broke out last March.

He is to hold talks with Arab leaders in Cairo before he heads to the Syrian capital on Saturday as joint special envoy for the United Nations and the 22-member Arab League.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, meanwhile, said he was to meet his Arab counterparts on Saturday in Cairo, where the League has its headquarters, to discuss Moscow's ally Syria.

China's former ambassador to Damascus, Li Huaxin, is due in Syria on Wednesday for meetings with the government and other parties.

France, meanwhile, was to close its Damascus embassy on Tuesday, the foreign ministry said, after President Nicolas Sarkozy announced the move to protest the Syrian regime's bloody crackdown.

Comments 3
Default-user-icon kafantaris (Guest) 06 March 2012, 16:57

Watching a brutal regime kill scores of people day after day with impunity, that it may stay in power, makes accomplices of us all.
History will not be kind.
Senator McCain is right. The World has sat this out too long.
The time to act on Syria is now -- and we may be already too late.

Thumb antizionist 07 March 2012, 13:36

And when will the time come to act on the US/WEST/ISRAEL/ARAB TRAITORS? The number of deaths resulting from the above is small potatoes compared to the deaths caused by those you support. How you can blatantly and ignorantly state that "the time to act on Syria is now" and forget the rest of the Satanist countries that are directly related to the deaths/murders/poverty/starvation/diseases in the world says something about what you are and where you come from.

Missing samiam 07 March 2012, 14:31

You should probably read your history books a bit more and understand that the backers of this regime (Russia, China, and Iran) have between them killed over 100 million of their own people in the last century. Estimates on how many people Mao Tze-Dong killed range from 50-80 million people; Joseph Stalin was responsible for killing over 20 million of his own people. These two countries don't value human life which is why they back the Syrians.

You want to talk about traitors--consider those that turn their backs not only against their people, but the human race. The atrocities by these type of regimes should not be tolerated anywhere, by anyone.