Dozens massacred as Syrian forces storm coastal village
Human rights group says women and children among at least 50 people executed but warns final death toll may exceed 100
A
Free Syrian Army commander reacts after they failed to capture a Syrian
Amry tank during clashes with forces loyal to Syria’s president Bashar
al-Assad in Aleppo’s neighbourhood of Salaheddine. Photograph: Ammar
Abdullah/Reuters
State forces and militias loyal to Syrian president
Bashar al-Assad stormed the coastal village of Baida today, killing at
least 50 people including women and children, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said.
The pro-opposition monitoring group said the
final death toll was likely to exceed 100. Many of those killed appeared
to have been executed by shooting or stabbing, it said, and other
bodies were found burned.
Activist reports on the killings could not be
independently verified as the Syrian government restricts access for
independent media. Hours earlier, rebels had attacked a busload of
pro-Assad militiamen, known as shabbiha, killing at least six and
wounding 20.
In response, government forces and shabbiha
surrounded Baida and nearby Maqreb, near the city of Banias, and
pummelled them with mortar fire before raiding Baida.
Assad’s forces have mounted a string of
attacks reaching from the capital Damascus and the central city of Homs
out to the Mediterranean coast, homeland of the Alawite minority sect to
which Assad himself belongs.
The two-year uprising against four decades of Assad family rule has been led by Syria’s Sunni Muslim
majority, and sectarian clashes and alleged massacres have become
increasingly common in a conflict that has killed more than 70,000
people.
Baida was the site of one of the first
sectarian clashes, when Alawite shabbiha fighters attacked Sunni street
protesters in the first few months of the uprising, killing several
people.
The city of Banias and surrounding villages are
a largely Sunni pocket surrounded by Alawite towns. “The fate of dozens
of residents is still unknown,” said the British-based Observatory,
which collates reports from a network of activists across Syria.
“Several homes were also destroyed by regime
forces and loyalist gunmen from the surrounding Alawite villages.
Information is still scarce because phone and internet lines have been
cut.”
State forces and loyalist militias appear to
have made substantial gains in recent weeks, seizing several suburbs
outside Damascus and recapturing territory in Homs, birthplace of the
armed insurgency.
Fighters and activists said pro-Assad forces
had retaken a central district of Homs today, driving a wedge between
two pockets of rebel resistance.
The Observatory said the attack had been supported by Iranian and Lebanese Hizbullah co-ordinators. Shia Iran and Hizbullah have denied sending forces to fight alongside Assad’s troops, but Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah
has been increasingly open about the group’s presence in Syria, where
he says it is defending Lebanese and Shia communities from attack by
Sunni Muslim rebels.
The recapture of Wadi al-Sayeh, which links the
besieged rebel stronghold of Khalidiyah to the opposition-held old
city, appears to be one of a series of focused counter-offensives that
mark a shift from the indiscriminate campaigns seen earlier in the
conflict.
Homs sits on the main road connecting Assad’s Damascus powerbase with the Alawite-dominated coast.
Assad’s forces also seized the town of Qaysa on
the eastern edge of Damascus today, part of a steady move north from
the airport on the city’s southeastern edge that aims to lock down the
eastern approaches to the city and close off weapons supplies from the
Jordanian border.
A call issued by several activists in the area
warned the disparate rebel forces to pull together or face defeat. “If
you do not unite under one flag, the regime is going to hunt you down,
one brigade after another,” it said.
Separately, US defense secretary Chuck Hagel said the US is rethinking its opposition to arming the Syrian rebels as pressure builds for a US response to
Syria’s suspected use of chemical weapons in its civil war.
Mr Hagel stressed that no decision by US president Barack Obama had been made and did not signal whether one was likely soon on arming opposition fighters trying to overthrow president Assad.
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