15 Dead in Syria as Regime Forces Bombard Rebel-held Rastan

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
  • W460
  • W460

Syrian artillery gunners pounded the mainly rebel-held city of Rastan on Sunday, as 15 people were killed across the country and the Red Cross began delivering aid to refugees from the battered Homs district of Baba Amr, monitors said.

The Local Coordination Committees, the main activist group spurring protests on the ground, said security forces killed seven people in the central province of Homs, three in the restive countryside around Damascus, one in the northern province of Aleppo, one in the central province of Hama, one in the southern province of Daraa and another in the eastern province of Deir al-Zour.

The aid distribution came as relief agencies waited for a third straight day for the go-ahead to enter Baba Amr, where hundreds of people are reported to have been killed and even more wounded in an almost month-long shelling blitz.

The shelling of Rastan, which the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said killed at least three civilians including a woman, coincided with a call by China on all parties in Syria to "unconditionally" end the violence.

"Since dawn, the positions of deserters in the north of Rastan have been subject to intensive shelling," Rami Abdul Rahman, head of the Britain-based Observatory, told Agence France Presse.

The rebel fighters on February 5 declared Rastan to be "liberated" from President Bashar al-Assad's control, but since Homs was overrun by regime forces on Thursday, the deserters have been bracing for an onslaught on Rastan and on Qusayr, also near Homs.

Rastan is a strategic city as, like Homs, it falls on the main road linking Damascus with northern Syria.

The Observatory had on Friday reported 12 civilians, including five children, killed when a rocket slammed into a crowd of protesters in Rastan.

The rebels fled the Baba Amr section of Homs on Thursday in the face of a ground assault by regime forces following a shelling blitz since early February that the U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said had killed some 700 people.

HRW said shells sometimes fell in Baba Amr at a rate of 100 an hour and that satellite images showed 640 buildings visibly damaged, but stressed that the real picture could be worse.

The Syrian authorities have been condemned by the international community for barring Red Cross convoys from entering Baba Amr to evacuate the wounded and deliver relief supplies.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it delivered relief supplies on Sunday to refugees from Baba Amr in a nearby village of central Syria.

"We have started to distribute humanitarian aid in Abel village, three kilometers (two miles) from Baba Amr," ICRC spokesman Saleh Dabbakeh told AFP.

"Many refugees from Baba Amr are in Abel," he said, adding they were being supplied with food products and blankets.

Dabbakeh said a similar operation would take place in Inshaat, another district of Homs, while the ICRC and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent Society awaited the go-ahead from authorities to enter Baba Amr itself.

A seven-truck convoy organized by the aid groups has been waiting since Friday to enter Baba Amr, with the authorities saying they were being barred for their own safety because of the presence of bombs and landmines.

Amid international outrage over the delay, ICRC president Jakob Kellenberger has said: "It is unacceptable that people who have been in need of emergency assistance for weeks have still not received any help."

Opposition activists charge the regime's aim is to cover up its crimes in Baba Amr before allowing access to relief workers.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has demanded unconditional humanitarian access to Syrian cities, saying there were "grisly" reports of summary executions and torture in Homs, Syria's third largest city.

British photographer Paul Conroy, wounded in a rocket attack in Baba Amr on February 22 that killed two colleagues, said the bombardment of the besieged city amounted to a "medieval siege and slaughter," and denounced the Damascus government as "murderers".

The bodies of American journalist Marie Colvin and French photographer Remi Ochlik, killed in the rocket attack, were flown into Paris from Damascus on Sunday.

China, which twice joined Russia in blocking U.N. Security Council resolutions against Syria's lethal crackdown on dissent, urged an end to the violence.

Xinhua news agency cited a foreign ministry statement attributed to an unnamed official calling for dialogue between the Syrian regime and those expressing "political aspirations."

But the official reportedly added: "We oppose anyone interfering in Syria's internal affairs under the pretext of 'humanitarian' issues."

The Syrian Observatory reported at least 44 people killed in Syria on Saturday, including 14 members of the security forces who died in clashes with deserters near Daraa, the cradle of the anti-regime uprising.

Most of the 30 civilian deaths were the result of raids carried out by security agents in the Damascus region, it said.

The United Nations says more than 7,500 people have been killed since March last year in a crackdown by Syrian forces on anti-regime demonstrations.

Comments 5
Thumb beiruti 04 March 2012, 19:12

We were wrong to think that in 2012, Assad the Son could not create a massacre as did Assad the Father did in 1982 in Hama. Thirty years later Bashar el Assad is creating multiple Hamas. Homs was first, then Rastan, then Idlib and Daraa. He will have massacres all over Syria, where ever he finds opposition, which is everywhere.

Like Michael Corleone in Godfather, Bashar is now killing his own family out of some misguided idea of a failure of loyalty. How strange that with the Mafia, Family is First - its protection and promotion. It is an insult to the Mafia to call the Assads mafiosa. The Assads find anyone and everyone expendible for the sake of the pursuit of power and survival.
That the rest of the world cannot see the danger and act upon it, this is the true shame arising from events in Syria.

Default-user-icon svs (Guest) 04 March 2012, 19:28

truth
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/javier-espinosa-escaped-syria-but-syrian-news-outlet-reported-his-death/2012/03/02/gIQA8YsfmR_blog.html

vs

fantasy
http://sana.sy/eng/21/2012/03/02/403709.htm

Missing helicopter 05 March 2012, 00:45

True. Unfortunately it is also true that the opposition is not going to be Democratic either. Most likely it is going to be like the Egypt model, where the secular citizens spearheaded the revolution but the islamists took over power and they will write a constitution that is going to be just as dictatorial and unfair, except it will be so for the minorities. The culprit lies in the upbringing and religious teachings that preaches rigid thoughts, non-tolerance of diversity,, as well ass violence. The Middle East is doomed to become the place for fanatics while the enlightened minds are either killed or leave to the west. It is a gloomy but likely scenario that I am painting. I wish Lebanon can immunize itself from such trend, but I am seeing it in Lebanon to. The pre-1975 Lebanon was a place for thinkers and minorities escaping their regimes. Today's Lebanon is fertile ground for fanaticism and intolerance.

Missing helicopter 05 March 2012, 02:44

Name calling is embedded in the intolerant mentality I described. Sometimes it is used in liue of a weak argument, other times used to simply force their argument.
To respond to Mr. hasanxxxx- The West also has solid constitution that is supreme, protective of all citizens, and ensures democratic practicces regardless of who wins elections. Also the Western mentality is very protective of minority rights, both are missing in the M.E. mentality (again teachings and upbringing).

Default-user-icon The Truth (Guest) 05 March 2012, 06:23

@helicopter: Last time i Checked there were free elections in Egypt and the Muslim Brotherhood won the most seats, how are they not democratic? If in the future they try to take away the rights of Egyptians to vote (as Mubarak did before) then we'll talk.

All the Syrians want is democracy, elections, freedom of speech and freedom from oppression. These are basic human rights that every people should have.

This is a golden opportunity for Lebanon, if the Assad regime falls they won't be meddling in Lebanon as they have for decades and the fake resistance will lose one of its two main pillars of support which hopefully will make them negotiate instead of hold Lebanon hostage.