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    UN says 3,500 dead so far in Syria uprising

    BEIRUT (AP) — The death toll in the Syrian uprising has soared to at least 3,500 people, the United Nations said Tuesday, a sobering measure of the scope of a military crackdown that has bloodied city after city but failed to crush the 8-month-old revolt against President Bashar Assad's regime.

    Under the strain of daily killings, some Syrians see a dangerous fracturing of society as long-festering resentments over religion, sectarian identity and poverty bubble to the surface. Moreover, there were new signs that an uprising that has so far been largely unarmed is increasingly starting to fight back, threatening a rise in the bloodshed.

    The dangers have been on display this week in the country's third-largest city, Homs. This week, security forces have been besieging the city for the third time this year to stamp out what has been epicenter of the revolt.

    Most notably this time, dissident troops have been putting up a stiff defense as security forces blast their way into rebellious neighborhoods. Amid the fighting, there have been tit-for-tat sectarian killings suspected to be between Sunni Muslims, who largely back the protests, and Alawites, a Shiite sect that makes up the backbone of Assad's regime.

    In Geneva, a spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights said the count of 3,500 dead throughout the uprising was likely a conservative figure.

    "We are deeply concerned about the situation and by the government's failure to take heed of international and regional calls for an end to the bloodshed," said Ravina Shamdasani.

    She told The Associated Press the new death toll comes from a variety of credible sources on the ground both within and outside Syria that are then corroborated by the U.N. human rights office.

    Syria has seen the bloodiest crackdown against the Arab Spring's eruption of protests. Deaths in Egypt, Tunisia and Yemen have numbered in the hundreds. Libya's toll is unknown and likely higher than Syria's, but the conflict differed there: Early on it became an outright civil war between two armed sides.

    Syria, in contrast, has developed into a murderous grind. Though internationally isolated, Assad appears to have a firm grip on power with the loyalty of most of the armed forces, which in the past months have moved from city to city to put down uprisings. In each place, however, protests have resumed.

    In Homs, one of Syria's most diverse cities with a population of about a million people, security forces have been assaulting Sunni-majority districts that have been the center of protests, raiding homes and fighting dissident troops — particularly in the neighborhood of Baba Amr. At least 110 people have been killed in Homs the past week, according to activists, 40 of them from Baba Amr.

    Electricity, water and phone lines have been cut to the restive neighborhood, where a man and a woman were killed by security forces' fire on Tuesday, according to activist Salim al-Homsi.

    "There are mountains of garbage everywhere," al-Homsi said. "It is difficult to bring in medical equipment, bread and heating fuel. There is a shortage of everything."

    Amateur video posted online Tuesday showed a small group of alleged military defectors from the group known as the Syrian Free army driving through Baba Amr on Monday with automatic rifles and shoulder-carried RPGs.

    "We are here to protect the peaceful, unarmed protesters in Baba Amr," said a soldier who identified himself as a member of the Al-Farouk brigade. "We will teach them a hard lesson," he said of the attacking forces.

    Still, on Tuesday, regime forces controlled large parts of the district after defectors pulled back, said al-Homsi.

    The government has largely sealed off the country from foreign journalists and prevented independent reporting, making it difficult to confirm events on the ground. Key sources of information are amateur videos posted online and details gathered by witnesses and activist groups who then contact the media, often at great personal risk.

    It is difficult to gauge how many people have defected from the army and what kind of threat they pose to the regime. To be sure, the security forces are overextended, exhausted and underpaid.

    But Assad, and his father who ruled Syria before him, stacked key security and military posts with members of their minority Alawite sect over the past 40 years, ensuring loyalty by melding the fate of the army and the regime.

    The power structure means the army will protect the regime at all costs, for fear they will be persecuted if the country's Sunni majority gains the upper hand. Most of the army defectors, at least so far, appear to be lower-level Sunni conscripts.

    Still, the crackdown is exacerbating long-standing sectarian resentments in Syria, in Homs in particular.

    A predominantly Sunni city 100 miles (160 kilometers) north of the capital, Damascus, Homs also has a mix of Alawites and Christians, both of which generally support the regime. The communities have lived side-by-side — however uneasily at times — for decades, but last week there was an explosion of sectarian reprisal killings that killed scores of people, activists say.

    "People who have lived in the same area for years without problems now look at each other with suspicion," an activist in Homs told The Associated Press by telephone. "There is distrust now because there is fear."

    The activist, like many people who spoke to the AP, asked that his name not be published out of fear for his safety.

    Syria blames the bloodshed on "armed gangs" and extremists acting out a foreign agenda to destabilize the regime.

    Sectarian warfare would be the worst-case scenario in Syria, evoking painful memories of the worst days of the Iraq war. The Syrian regime's supporters have exploited those fears by portraying Assad as the only force that can guarantee law and order. The protesters have been careful to portray their movement as free of any sectarian overtones.

    Homs has shown sympathy for the opposition since the early days of the uprising. In April, protesters brought mattresses, food and water to the central Clock Square in Homs, hoping to re-create the mood of Cairo's Tahrir Square. But security forces quickly raided the encampment, a move that only increased the intensity of the protests. In July, security forces moved in again in a major siege.

    The latest violence began a day after Damascus agreed to a peace plan brokered by the Arab League last week. The 22-nation body has scheduled emergency meeting for Saturday to discuss Damascus' failure to abide by its commitments to pull tanks and other armor out of cities and stop the bloodshed.

    ___

    AP writer John Heilprin contributed to this report from Geneva.

     
    • Gnosis  •  Fort Worth, United States  •  6 mths ago
      There are 202 officially recognized nations in the world today. 192 of them are members of the United Nations. There are currently 50 nations today that have a majority Muslim population, and 9 more that are a third to a half Muslim population. Only a small group of Muslim nations have elections, and only a handful of those have elections that can be considered even remotely “legitimate.” There are currently 6 Communist nations in the world, and no Communist nation allows its people to vote for its leadership. This means, counting other nations that are run by dictatorships or monarchies, about a third of all the nations represented in the United Nations are run by unelected leaders (or illegitimate ones that have fixed elections). Because the United Nations does not discriminate against any nations by the form of government they have, the vote of any country that has a legitimately elected government that represents the will and desire of its people can be canceled out by the single vote of any nation that is run by a dictatorship which represents not the will of its people but one individual. Which means, in the U.N. a vote that represents the will of millions of people can be canceled out by a vote that represents the will of one man. The very non-discriminatory nature of the rules that govern the United Nations gives an unfair advantage to unelected dictatorships. While democratically-elected governments are held accountable for the decisions they make, dictatorships are accountable to no one, so they are free to vote any way they like even if their very own people are harmed by those policies. By nature, dictatorships will always rule selfishly, be unfair, and highly corrupt. In the U.N. body they will continue to behave the same.
      • mason 6 mths ago
        Beautifully written. Excellent point. Of course, you're stating the obvious but you're doing it so well 8)
      • George 6 mths ago
        are you really so naive to think that the "democratically elected" US President or Congress are really elected? There is a shadow government in place run by the super rich in America, and they are the puppet masters.... its worse than a dictatorship, because in a dictatorship you at least know who is in charge. We have a bunch of talking heads giving one liner sound bytes to the media, when the real power holders are having meetings nobody hears about....
      • H 6 mths ago
        did you take into account the changes in Eygpt, Tunis, Libya and soon to be Syria and Yammen? do you think the first world had anything to do with the third worls (not just Muslims) being the way it is?
    • Michael From Seattle  •  Hermosillo, Mexico  •  6 mths ago
      The U.N. needs to be served a notice of eviction and sent packing.
    • T. Jefferson  •  Scranton, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Muslims are still in the Dark Ages. Bloodshed is how they show devotion to Allah.

      If America got involved, Muslims would hate us for it. If America doesn't get involved, Muslims would hate us for it.

      I say if America is going to be blamed, no matter what we do, I say let them kill each other and keep our military out of harm's way.
      • Kerim 6 mths ago
        Good thinking... but your opinion (or mine) is worthless for the US war/terror makers.
        Pr. Bush sent his troops (Christians I guess) to kill and steal the Iraqi people and not to protect America from the WMD that he kept telling the world about for more than a year. Did anyone call Pr. Bush a deceiver ... a killer... a thief... of course not... Imagine one calling Hitler this way when he was in his glory times. But Pr. Assad who is trusted and loved by almost all his people... Obama calls him a killer... a dictator though he knows that he sent him Al-Qaida and the Islamist Brotherhood to make Syria another Libya... But Jesus is protecting Syria and now the remaining Obama's terrorists are hiding near Homs, their last refuge while people in all Syrian cities live normally praying God to help their national troops, risking their life, to succeed in ending the terror that started since mid-March.
      • Moe 6 mths ago
        kerim, we stole iraqi people?
      • Kerim 6 mths ago
        Hi Moe... Were you in Iraq? who are "We"? The 1% US families did, not you!
    • Mr Six  •  De Pere, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Looks like Assad has called the Arab League's bluff.
    • d  •  Cincinnati, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Any article headline that reads "UN says" isn't worth the time to read.
      • Ed 6 mths ago
        It will be packed full of lies .
    • BallsofKungfucious  •  6 mths ago
      3500 dead? Serious? So Sorry Syria
      • uhwhat 6 mths ago
        A good start, anyway.
      • Kerim 6 mths ago
        I think now it is the turn of Obama's terrorists hiding in Homs to pay for their horrible crimes against the innocent civilians and the national troops during the last 7 months.
        The Western people are so naive now to still believe that there is a revolution in Syria though only 1 city is said to revolt while the Syrian people in all other cities live normally praying for their brave national troops, risking their life, to succeed in ending the terror of these hired criminals once for all that started since mid-march.
      • Serious Baby 6 mths ago
        Sort of makes up for the damage done by Syrian mercenaries fighting US forces in Iraq before we kicked the #$%$ out them. I don't give a popcorn fart about any dirka dirka dirka animals.
    • Solar Child  •  Atlanta, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Typical respose by the UN - IMPOTENT.
    • RiseNFallofUSA  •  Mishawaka, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Go on Obama and NATO. So quick to inject your righteousness into Libya, Syria has more innocent deaths by government than Libya did. Bunch of cowardly hypocrites.
      • tommy 6 mths ago
        would one think that the 40 million abortion so far in america count to the innocent totals
      • RiseNFallofUSA 6 mths ago
        Thats another subject and i agree Tommy, i find it repulsive that we devalue human life in such a way.
      • T. Jefferson 6 mths ago
        That's right, liberal douche bag. It's America's fault that Syria is killing its own people.

        It's not the fault of Syrian government at all. #facepalm.
    • Shawn  •  Boise, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Not a US problem, nothing to see here move along people. Take care of the US first. US FIRST!
    • Wizbang  •  Tampa, United States  •  6 mths ago
      UN= I condem this action, I SRONGLY CONDEM THIS ACTION.....I will go pound salt now because no one is listening.
    • michael  •  6 mths ago
      And the problem with this is what?
    • EHoe  •  6 mths ago
      No... Honest.... Really, it's the Religion of Peace
    • George  •  6 mths ago
      If the Arab league won't demand anything about it, then let the Syrians die.
    • jenifer  •  6 mths ago
      okay? muslims are killing muslims? So why is that a problem for the rest of the world? That is how they worship God and it makes them happy. So stay out of it and leave them alone.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Phoenix, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Oh well not our problem. Fyuck the United Nations they are a cancer to the world and to my USA.
    • HSS  •  6 mths ago
      UN condemnation expected sometime in next century...if there is anyone left to care.
    • MP  •  6 mths ago
      How's that ARAB peace brokered deal going written and signed by those who don't care about the world or a piece of paper. Guns and hammers are the only thing these people ever respect.
    • Sierra11  •  6 mths ago
      It's childish to wish anyone dead in any shape, form, or fashion.
    • Rufus  •  Millbrook, Canada  •  6 mths ago
      quick! pass a UN resolution against Isreal.
    • Ralph  •  6 mths ago
      So the U.N. can count? Big deal. if they aren't going to do anything to fix the problem they may as well just keep their mouths shut about it.
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