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    Syrian activists: 200 dead in government assault

    BEIRUT (AP) — Syrian forces hammered restive neighborhoods in the city of Homs for hours with mortars and artillery Saturday, sending terrified residents fleeing into basements and killing more than 200 people in what appeared to be the bloodiest episode of the nearly 11-month-old uprising, activists said.

    The government denied the assault. It said the reports are part of a "hysterical campaign" of incitement by armed groups against Syria, meant to be exploited at the U.N. Security Council as it prepares to vote on a draft resolution backing an Arab call for President Bashar Assad to give up power.

    The new bloodshed added new heat to last-minute negotiations as Western and Arab countries tried to win Russian support for the resolution. A vote was scheduled at the Security Council for Saturday, but so far Russia, a strong ally of Syria, was signaling it would veto any call for Assad's removal.

    In a blunt warning to Washington, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Saturday that if the resolution is put to a vote without taking Russia's opinion into account it will only lead to "another scandal" at the Security Council.

    French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe countered that "those who block the adoption of such a resolution are taking a grave historical responsibility" in light of the Homs bloodshed, which he called a "crime against humanity."

    Tunisia decided to expel Syria's ambassador in response to the "bloody massacre" in Homs and no longer recognizes the Assad regime, the president's office said in a statement. Angry Syrians stormed their embassies in Berlin, London, Athens, Cairo and Kuwait city, clashing with guards and police and — in Cairo — setting fire to part of the embassy.

    In Homs, thousands turned out for a funeral ceremony in a city park for some of the victims of the bombardment the night before, hours after the assault eased. Large protests were reported across the country in solidarity with residents of the city.

    Outside Damascus, 12 people were killed when security forces in the suburb of Daraya opened fire on a procession for victims of a shooting in the area a day earlier, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Three others were killed in violence in other Damascus suburbs. Another activist group, the Local Coordination Committees, reported 22 killed across Syria on Saturday.

    There were signs that the bombardment in Homs, Syria's third largest city, was in response to moves by army defectors to solidify control in several neighborhoods. There were reports that defectors set up new checkpoints in several areas, and two Homs activists said defectors attacked a military checkpoint in the Khaldiyeh district Thursday night, capturing 17 soldiers. The activists spoke on condition of anonymity to protect themselves from retaliation.

    If defector activity was the spark, the assault signals a new willingness by the regime to unleash more devastating force against the dissidents. The defectors, part of a force called the Free Syrian Army, have grown increasingly bold in attacks on the military and attempts to take overt control in pro-opposition areas.

    Khaldiyeh, a mainly Sunni neighborhood in the mixed city, took the brunt of the assault. Residents described a hellish night of ceaseless shelling that sent them fleeing to lower floors and basements of buildings.

    "We were sitting at home and the mortars just started slamming into buildings around us," said Mohammad, a Khaldiyeh resident. "There was nothing that prompted it, not even protests ... people are terrified today," he added by telephone.

    Mohammad, who like other Syrians in Homs declined to be further identified, said the shelling started shortly before midnight and lasted until the early morning hours Saturday. He said residents were out Saturday inspecting the damage, looking for relatives. "It's a catastrophe, no other way to describe it."

    Online video by activists showed chaotic scenes in a makeshift clinic set up in what appeared to be a Khaldiyeh mosque, the room filled with wounded men with gashes and broken limbs being bandaged. Several dead bodies were shown. In another video, fire ravaged a house that had been shelled, as people poured water on the blaze.

    The videos could not be independently verified.

    Residents said most shelling came from a military installation west of Khaldiyeh and Alawite-dominated neighborhoods to the east. Syria's Alawite minority, who belong to an offshoot of Shiite Islam, forms the backbone of Assad's regime and the military leadership.

    The Free Syrian Army later claimed it fired on the military installation with rocket-propelled grenades in retaliation. The claim could not be confirmed.

    The government denied the Homs bombardment and said corpses shown in videos were of people kidnapped by "terrorists" who filmed them to portray them as victims of alleged shelling.

    Two main opposition groups, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local Coordination Committees, said the death toll in Homs was more than 200 people and included women and children. More than half of the deaths — about 140 — were in Khaldiyeh, they said.

    The Syrian National Council, Syria's main opposition group, put the toll at more than 220.

    "This is the worst attack of the uprising, since the uprising began in March until now," said Rami Abdul-Rahman, the head of the Observatory, which tracks violence through contacts on the ground.

    The reports could not be independently confirmed.

    Ammar, a resident of the Bab Tadmur district of Homs, said the death toll exceeded 330.

    "A few more nights like this one and Homs will be erased from the map," said the distraught man by telephone. "We are being massacred, what is the Security Council still waiting for?"

    Homs is a hotbed of dissent to Assad's regime and is known to shelter a large number of army defectors. Despite near daily regime raids and fighting, many parts of it remain outside of government control.

    Assad has tried to crush the revolt with a sweeping crackdown since March. But neither the government nor the protesters are backing down. The opposition, which began with peaceful protests, has turned more and more to arms, and the military and security forces have responded with progressively greater force.

    But the past weeks suggest the regime is moving to qualitiatively more powerful assaults. Last week, the military launched a heavy offensive in the suburbs east of Damascus after dissidents showed greater control there. Three days of fighting saw some of the highest daily death tolls of the uprising, until the regime appeared to silence the dissidents for now.

    The U.N. said in December that that more than 5,400 people have been killed since March, but it has been unable to update its count for weeks due to the chaos. Hundreds more have been killed since that tally was announced.

    With a vote planned Saturday, diplomats tried to the last minute to avert a Russian veto of the Syria resolution. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met with Russia's Lavrov on the sidelines of a security conference in Berlin.

    Asked afterward about progress, Clinton said only, "We're working on it."

    Soon after the talks, Russia's Foreign Ministry announced Lavrov and the head of foreign intelligence would head to Damascus on Tuesday to meet with Assad. It did not give a reason for visit.

    Earlier in the day, Lavrov said the latest version of the resolution resolves "quite a number of things which were important to us." But, he said, it makes too few demands of anti-Assad armed groups, and Moscow remains concerned about whether it prejudges the outcome of a national dialogue among political forces in Syria that it is trying, with little success, to arrange.

    The U.S. and its partners have ruled out military action but want the global body to endorse an Arab League plan that calls on Assad to hand power over to his vice president.

    ___

    AP writers Elizabeth A. Kennedy in Beirut, Anita Snow at the United Nations, Aya Batrawy in Cairo and Bouazza ben Bouazza in Tunis contributed to this report.

     
    • T  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      None of our business.
    • V  •  New Delhi, India  •  3 mths ago
      "A few more nights like this one and Homs will be erased from the map," said the distraught man by telephone. "We are being massacred, what is the Security Council still waiting for?" he asked.

      Make up your minds muslims. You hate people for interfering in the middle east and you beg people for interfering too. Time you all grew a spine and fought your own battles.
      • John Jones 3 mths ago
        What does Islam have to do with this??? There are non Muslims in Syria as well.
      • A Yahoo! User 3 mths ago
        You keep using the word "Muslims". The world is so bad because of evil people like you who re divisive. It is not about Muslims or nonmuslims;it is about dictatorships that are forced upon people by big Western powers. These powers make it look like secterian conflicts. Stop being divisive. I can easily point out many problems in other religions.
      • V 3 mths ago
        So now i'm not supposed to call them muslims? That's what they call themselves. That's their sole identity on every issue, muslim this and muslim that. Why don't you go bust CAIR's balls (Council for American Islamic Relations) that claims to speak for all the world's muslims. They are themselves acting as one entity. I ain't gonna change that everytime when it suits them and when it doesn't.
    • Jo  •  White Plains, New York  •  3 mths ago
      Violence, their favorite past time and they seem to enjoy it otherwise they would get tired and stop. America, let's not even try to understand what they do and why they do things over there in the Middle East. Let's leave them alone for good. Let's not send our troops there, we'll save lives and money. We have a lot to take care over here- our people and our country the USA.
    • Robert  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      cmon man, they have always fought will continue to fight and i will continue to not care.
      • FrankenStein 3 mths ago
        You should care, you have a glimpse into the future of the USA
    • Sargon Sawa  •  3 mths ago
      Imagine a world without Islam...
      • Jaime 3 mths ago
        It would be beeeutiful!
    • Seen it commin  •  3 mths ago
      When the government is the only one with guns........

      Like the Liberals have been fighting for for years. You get a government like Syria.
    • Val  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Russia control the Security Council..What a shame for all others involved.!
      • JEREMIAH 3 mths ago
        I suggest that the UN Charter be changed so that the rest of the UN Security members are not held at ransom by one member with a veto vote.A 2/3 majority will do.
    • Sameer Saleem  •  3 mths ago
      Is it me or does Syria's Government never run out of people to kill ?
    • Slither Industries Inc.  •  3 mths ago
      British based human rights group... Are you sheep listening to this? Their telling us that this is an intentional PR Coup.... The British based human rights group!!! Trying to instigate over though.. This is nothing but a strategic coup!!
    • zaldy  •  3 mths ago
      Watch in your favorite Movies, coming soon, the Islamist Countries versus the World
      • Jan Trescak 3 mths ago
        That is politically incorrect.
      • John Jones 3 mths ago
        Religeon has nothing to do with this.
    • R  •  3 mths ago
      The only thing the U.N. is good for is drafting resolutions. Lets move it out of New York and put it in France where it belongs.
    • BenS  •  3 mths ago
      Let them shoot it out. Works for me.
    • Tony J.  •  Mt Hamilton, California  •  3 mths ago
      If Bashar Assad called for peaceful negotiation any time during the uprising, he would have had a chance to leave with his life intact. Now, there is way to much blood on this guys hands. He, his wife and children will be targets marked for death for the rest of their lives which will come to an end sooner than later.
    • Royal1  •  3 mths ago
      Why do they never claim crimes against humanity when it comes to the treatment of women by these men they want to save.
    • Ryan  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      The events in Syria are not costing the lives of Americans or wasting tax payer's money! Leave them to their own tribal affairs!
    • Rush  •  3 mths ago
      i wonder what the US government would do when the people will start carrying AK-47s ....
    • ROBERT  •  3 mths ago
      And these 200 are villagers with pitch forks and torches and not AK's and RPG's led by special forces and Mossad?
    • john  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      as the son of syrian immigrants to the us i have a few pieces of information to share with you people. 1st, these protesters are the same suuni moslems that were running back and forth aacross the border attacking and KILLING AMERICAN SOLDIERS in the anbar province in iraq. 2nd, this is nothing more than a suuni#$%$ conflict/civil war. 3rd, these people will be much more harsh on our ally israel and they may possibly declare war on israel if they take control of the government. we may see a repeat of the arab/israeli wars of the 60's and 70's we are already hearing war rhetoric in many arab countries INCLUDING egypt and libya. 4th, this will bring in sharia law and HARSH descrimination of non-moslem minorities. with the ethnic cleansing we see going on in iraq against its minorities (christians, yezidis, sabeans, mandeans, and shabaks) this could become a cross border ethnic cleansing campaign and is very likely to escalate into an all out genocide, especially coinsidering the dramatic rise in violence against these communities in recent years. these minority communities have mostly found refuge in syria by the way. folks, unfortunately the best case scenario is for assad and his regime to stay in place and for us to look the other way while he reestablishes order in that country. there are much worse regimes in the region that are violently repressing their own democratic protests that we could focus on. actually we conveniently ignored some of them, and unfortunately it turns out that this may have nothing to do with spreading democracy and is only a poilitcal game that is being played.
    • Gunny  •  3 mths ago
      Let the ARABS handle it.
    • mike  •  Orlando, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      Rag heads behaving badly.Just like every rag head country.
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