A man flashes a victory sign and holds up the arm of a
wounded man in Baba Amro, a neighbourhood of Homs.
REUTERS/Handout
Syrian forces have bombarded Homs, killing 50 people in a
sustained assault on several districts of the city which has
become a centre of armed opposition to President Bashar
al-Assad, the Syrian National Council opposition group said.
Western countries seeking Assad's downfall were scrambling to
find a new diplomatic strategy after failing to enact a UN
Security Council resolution that would have backed an Arab
League call for Assad to stand aside.
The United States shut its embassy in Damascus and said all
staff had left the country due to worsening security. Britain
said it withdrew its ambassador from Syria, and would seek
further European Union sanctions against Syria.
Russia fought back against blistering criticism from the West
for vetoing the resolution on Saturday. Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov, who is due in Damascus on Tuesday, said
condemnations of Moscow's veto had verged on "hysteria".
US President Barack Obama said that, however hard Western
countries are prepared to lean on Assad diplomatically, they
still have no intention of using force to topple him, as they
did against Muammar Gaddafi in Libya last year.
"I think it is very important for us to try to resolve this
without recourse to outside military intervention. And I
think that's possible," he told NBC's Today show.
Catherine al-Talli of the opposition Syrian National Council
(SNC) told Reuters bombardment of Homs resumed early on
Sunday, killing 50.
Assad's opponents say his tanks and artillery killed more
than 200 people in the city on Friday night in the bloodiest
incident of the 11-month-old uprising against his rule.
That attack, branded a "massacre" by France and "unspeakable"
by Obama, had set the stage for intense efforts over the
weekend to lobby Moscow not to block the UN Security Council
resolution.
But Russia has argued that the resolution was one-sided and
would have amounted to taking the side of Assad's opponents
in a civil war. China also vetoed the measure, by most
accounts following Russia's lead.
"It is sad that the co-authors decided to hastily put the
resolution to a vote, even though we appealed to them with a
request to give it a few more days" until after his own
planned trip to Damascus, Lavrov said.
"Some of the voices heard in the West with evaluations of the
results of the vote in the U.N. Security Council on the Syria
resolution sound, I would say, improper, somewhere on the
verge of hysteria," Lavrov told reporters after meeting the
foreign minister of Bahrain, one of the Arab states that has
sought a tougher stance against Assad.
Lavrov has said Russia favours a peace dialogue in Syria that
is free of outside interference and preconditions.
He repeated the message in a phone conversation with Arab
League chief Nabil Elaraby, the Russian Foreign Ministry
said.
The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it
had the names of 43 people killed in Monday's bombardment of
Homs. Television footage showed smoke rising from buildings,
with explosions echoing in the background.
"This is the most violent bombardment in recent days," said
one activist in Syria who was in touch with Homs residents.
Another activist said government troops were using multiple
rocket launchers in the attack.
Damascus denies firing on houses and says images of dead
bodies on the Internet have been staged. State media said on
Monday "armed terrorist groups" were firing mortars in the
city, setting fire to tyres and blowing up empty buildings to
give the impression that Homs was under fire from Assad's
forces.
State news agency SANA described attacks in the city by
"terrorists" who it said killed a textile factory worker. It
said they also killed three officers and abducted several
soldiers in Jabal al-Zawiya in the northern Idlib province.
Reports from activists and authorities are hard to verify
because Syria restricts access for independent media.
The latest assault in Homs appeared to be widely targeted,
with explosions in Khalidiya, Baba Amro, Bayada and Bab Dreib
neighbourhoods, the activists said.
"They want to drive the Free Syrian Army out," said Baba Amro
resident Hussein Nader by telephone, referring to the force
of army deserters and rebels who have held parts of Homs for
months. "Rockets are falling seconds apart on the same
target."
Another resident, Omar Shakir, said activists had obtained
information that the shelling would continue until Thursday,
when troops were expected to move into Homs. "We have no one
but God - everybody abandoned us," he said.
Activists said an blast hit an oil pipeline feeding a main
refinery in Homs, the second attack on the pipeline in a
week, and that three people died when the opposition-held
town of Zabadani, near the Lebanese border, came under fire
on Monday.
Syrian army defectors announced they were organising a new
"Higher Revolutionary Council" to supercede the Free Syrian
Army (FSA) as the main armed force battling Assad's rule. The
new body would be commanded by General Ahmed al-Sheikh, the
highest-ranking officer to defect to Turkey from government
forces.
A local wing of the FSA in Zabadani warned it would start
attacking "sensitive and strategic (targets) of the regime"
unless the army pulled back from the town by Tuesday morning.
Arab League chief Elaraby said the escalation was pushing the
country toward civil war. The League's strong stance towards
Assad - it suspended Syria last year and withdrew inspectors
last month after concluding Assad's government was not
fulfilling a peace plan - has put Assad's powerful Arab
neighbours on the same side as the West.
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