Dozens of children killed in new Syria attack (AP) Associated Press) By BEN HUBBARD BEIRUT, Lebanon 05/26/12 7:25 pm ET)
Source: http://old.news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120526/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_syria;_ylt=AoQeoDyyj.n2B0fqGdwhGgYLewgF;_ylu=X3oDMTJlZGMzNnUwBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTIwNTI2L21sX3N5cmlhBHBvcwMxBHNlYwN5bl9wYWdpbmF0ZV9zdW1tYXJ5X2xpc3QEc2xrA2RvemVuc29mY2hpbA--
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BEIRUT – Gruesome video Saturday showed rows of dead Syrian children
lying in a mosque in bloody shorts and T-shirts with gaping head
wounds, haunting images of what activists called one of the deadliest
regime attacks yet in Syria´s 14-month-old uprising.
The shelling attack on Houla, a group of villages northwest of the
central city of Homs, killed more than 90 people, including at least
32 children under the age of 10, the head of the U.N. observer team
in Syria said.
The attacks sparked outrage from U.S. and other international
leaders, and large protests in the suburbs of Syria´s capital of
Damascus and its largest city, Aleppo. It also renewed fears of the
relevance of a month-old international peace plan that has not
stopped almost daily violence.
The U.N. denounced the attacks in a statement that appeared to hold
President Bashar Assad´s regime responsible, and the White House
called the violence acts of "unspeakable and inhuman brutality."
"This appalling and brutal crime involving indiscriminate and
disproportionate use of force is a flagrant violation of
international law and of the commitments of the Syrian government to
cease the use of heavy weapons in population centers and violence in
all its forms," said U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and
international envoy Kofi Annan. "Those responsible for perpetrating
this crime must be held to account."
More than a dozen amateur videos posted online Saturday gave glimpses
of the carnage, showing lines of bodies laid out in simple rooms,
many with bloody faces, torsos and limbs. In some places, residents
put chunks of ice on the bodies to preserve them until burial.
One two-minute video shows at least a dozen children lined up
shoulder to shoulder on a checkered blanket on what appears to be the
floor of a mosque. Blood trickled from one girl´s mouth. One boy,
appearing to be no more than 8, had his jaw blown off. The video
shows flowered blankets and rugs covering several rows of other
bodies.
Another video posted Saturday showed a mass grave, four bodies wide
and dozens of meters (yards) long.
Activists from Houla said Saturday that regime forces peppered the
area with mortars after large demonstrations against the regime on
Friday. That evening, they said, pro-regime fighters known as shabiha
stormed the villages, gunning down men in the streets and stabbing
women and children in their homes.
A local activist reached via Skype said regime forces fired shells at
Houla, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) northwest of Homs. The shabiha
entered the villages, raiding homes and shooting at civilians, Abu
Yazan said. More than 100 people were killed, more than 40 of them
children and most of them in the village of Taldaw, he said. Many had
stab wounds, another activist said.
"They killed entire families, from parents on down to children, but
they focused on the children," Yazan said.
The Syrian government blamed the killings on "armed terrorist
groups" — a term it often uses for the opposition — but provided no
details or death toll.
But like U.N. officials, the White House issued a statement directed
at the regime.
The U.S. is "horrified" by the Houla attacks, National Security
Council spokeswoman Erin Pelton said in a statement. "These acts
serve as a vile testament to an illegitimate regime that responds to
peaceful political protest with unspeakable and inhuman brutality."
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton condemned the attack "in
the strongest possible terms," demanding that "those who perpetrated
this atrocity must be identified and held to account."
"The United States will work with the international community to
intensify our pressure on Assad and his cronies, whose rule by murder
and fear must come to an end," Clinton said in statement.
U.N. observers, among more than 250 who were dispatched in recent
weeks to salvage the cease-fire plan, found spent artillery tank
shells at the site Saturday, and U.N. officials confirmed the shells
were fired at residential neighborhoods. The head of the team, Maj.
Gen. Robert Mood, called the attack a "brutal tragedy."
The bloodshed is yet another blow to the international peace plan
brokered by Annan and cast a pall over his coming visit to check on
the plan´s progress. The cease-fire between forces loyal to the
regime of Assad and rebels seeking to topple it was supposed to start
on April 12 but has never really taken hold, with new killings every
day.
The U.N. put the death toll weeks ago at more than 9,000. Hundreds
have been killed since.
The grisly images were condemned by anti-regime groups and political
leaders around the world.
"With these new crimes, this murderous regime pushes Syria further
into horror and threatens regional stability," French Foreign
Minister Laurent Fabius said in a statement Saturday.
The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights released an
unusually harsh statement, saying Arab nations and the international
community were "partners" in the killing "because of their silence
about the massacres that the Syrian regime has committed."
The Houla villages are Sunni Muslim. The forces came from an arc of
nearby villages populated by Alawites, members of the offshoot of
Shiite Islam to which Assad belongs, the activists said.
The activists said the Houla killings appeared to be sectarian
between the two groups, raising fears that Syria´s uprising, which
started in March 2011 with protests calling for political reform, is
edging closer to the type of war that tore apart Syria´s eastern
neighbor, Iraq.
"I don´t like to talk about sectarianism, but it was clear that this
was sectarian hatred," said activist Abu Walid.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 96 people
were killed, 26 of them children and four of them army defectors.
The group´s head, Rami Abdul-Rahman, who relies on activists inside
Syria, said all were killed in shelling, but that no forces entered
Houla.
Syrian state TV condemned the opposition groups for the "massacre" in
a statement Saturday.
"The armed groups are escalating their massacres against the Syrian
people only days before international envoy Kofi Annan´s visit in a
bid to defeat his plan and a political solution to the crisis and
with the aim of exploiting the blood of Syrians in the media bazar,"
it said.
The videos could not be independently verified. The Syrian government
bars most media from operating inside the country.
The harsh condemnation from anti-regime groups reflects their growing
frustration with international reluctance to intervene in Syria´s
conflict.
World powers have fallen in behind the U.N. plan. The U.S. and
European nations say they will not intervene militarily, and while
Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Libya have said they will arm Syria´s rebels,
no country is known to be doing so.
A spokeswoman for the opposition Syrian National Council called on
the U.N. Security Council "to examine the situation in Houla and to
determine the responsibility of the United Nations in the face of
such mass killings, expulsions and forced migration from entire
neighborhoods."
Also Saturday, the story of 11 Lebanese Shiites who were reported
kidnapped in Syria this week took another strange turn.
Lebanese officials first said their expected arrival on a plane from
Turkey to Lebanon late Friday was delayed for "logistical reasons."
On Saturday, Turkey´s Foreign Ministry denied the men were in Turkey —
raising new questions about their fate.
Lebanese and Syrian officials blamed Syrian rebels for Tuesday´s
kidnapping. No group has claimed responsibility. ___ Associated
Press writers Elaine Ganley in Paris, Zeina Karam in Beirut, Anne
Gearan in Washington, Frank Jordans in Geneva and Selcan Hacaoglu in
Ankara, Turkey, contributed reporting. (© 2012 The Associated Press
05/26/12)
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