Activists Accuse Regime of 'Massacres' as Fighting Rages across Syria

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Deadly violence raged across Syria on Sunday as regime shelling killed at least 18 civilians in the northwest while 28 rebels died in Damascus battling government forces, a monitoring group said.

The latest bloodshed came as Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil was due to travel Monday to Moscow for talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on ways of ending the 28-month conflict.

At total of at least 82 people were killed in violence across Syria on Sunday, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights which relies on a network of activists and medics for its information.

The deadly shelling of Ariha by regime forces in the northwestern province of Idlib also left dozens wounded, said the Observatory, as activists denounced a "massacre" in a video posted online that showed people carrying corpses and bloodied body parts.

Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said regime forces opened fire on the main market in central Ariha from positions they control on the edges of town.

It was not immediately clear what triggered the shelling, but rebels control part of Ariha while regime forces man three checkpoints inside the town.

The Observatory said clashes had erupted in Ariha over the week, as rebels try to expand their control over the town.

In the northeast Damascus flashpoint area of Adra, fierce fighting at dawn between rebels and government troops killed 28 insurgents and a member of the elite Republican Guards, Abdel Rahman said.

Adra is an entry point to the capital's Abbasiyeen Square, the target of several rebel attacks in recent months.

State news agency SANA said the army "captured several terrorists from (the Islamist) al-Nusra Front, some of them foreign nationals," west of Adra.

Further north, the battle for Syria's second city and commercial hub Aleppo entered its second year with fighting raging around the city's international airport and nearby Nairab air base, said the Britain-based Observatory.

The violence in Aleppo comes a year after a massive rebel advance on the city, where both sides have been mired in a stalemate which insurgents have tried to break by infiltrating the regime-held Rashidin district.

Over the past year, insurgents have also fought to take Aleppo's airports, aiming to stop regime warplanes from bombing rebel areas.

The city's international airport has been closed since January.

Tens of thousands of Aleppo residents have fled the fighting which has badly damaged one of the Middle East's richest cities in terms of culture and history.

The Observatory also reported deadly violence on Sunday in the rebel-held village of Suran, in the central province of Hama, where seven civilians were killed in shelling.

It also said that six people were killed in the southern Damascus district of Yarmuk while the opposition National Coalition claimed regime forces had used "chemical weapons" in shelling Yarmuk.

Activists in Suran said all seven victims in Hama were members of the same family who had taken shelter in a makeshift shelter.

Thirteen other family members, six of them children, were also killed in the Mediterranean coastal town of Bayda -- itself the scene of a massacre in May -- and their bodies found on Sunday, the Observatory said.

First three unarmed men were shot dead outside their home in Bayda and "militiamen then broke in, and killed the women and the children," according to Abdel Rahman, who blamed the excesses on sectarian hatred.

It was unclear how the women and children died, Abdel Rahman said. "We have conflicting reports. Some say they were shot dead, others that they were burnt alive."

Elsewhere, the Observatory said that Islamists battling Kurdish fighters in the northern town of Tal Abyad freed 300 Kurdish civilians they were holding prisoner in exchange for a rebel chief.

Imprisoned by Kurdish fighters late on Saturday, jihadist commander Abu Musab was reportedly released on Sunday after a night of heavy clashes between the two sides.

The violence came just days after fighters loyal to the Committees for the Protection of the Kurdish People (YPG) expelled Islamist fighters from the strategic Kurdish town of Ras al-Ain in Hasake province.

On the political front, the new leader of Syria's main opposition coalition, Ahmad Jarba, has been meeting with Egyptian and Saudi leaders ahead of a trip to Paris for talks with French President Francois Hollande.

Newspapers have quoted Jarba as saying his priority is to secure arms for the rebels and that energy-rich Gulf monarchies could set up a $400-million fund to back the opposition coalition.

The Observatory, which relies on a wide network of medics and activists on the ground, estimates that more than 100,000 people have been killed in the war.

Comments 19
Thumb Roaring-FlameThrower 21 July 2013, 18:56

Hmmmmm;;;; does this qualify as a "Massacre"? Let's ask our resident Human Rights Watchdog.

Thumb Senescence 21 July 2013, 19:08

Reference me some "organization" other than the "observatory" then I might heed these claims, preferably one that is unbiased.

Other than that, the whole war's despicable and a shame. Assad should have peacefully resigned and made way for the moderates. With not doing this, he has invited extremists from all around the world and even pushed quite a bit of moderates to extremism. This is still gonna take at least a year, though hopefully that Geneva thing would solve some things ... speaking of, does anyone have any idea as to its status ? Haven't heard much about it since last month.

Thumb Senescence 21 July 2013, 19:12

Save me your nonsense.

Thumb EagleDawn 21 July 2013, 20:47

@endless: Now that you have seen the video, is that a good enough reference for you, or you still need an "unbiased" organization?

Thumb Senescence 22 July 2013, 02:46

Didn't have the chance,but clearing these up may help:

-"We have conflicting reports. Some say they were shot dead, others that they were burnt alive."-
How would one possibly confuse the two? Have you seen a burnt body? And one that was shot? Impossible to get confused, unless there's something else afoot. Being burned and shot, perhaps? Or maybe something else.

-It also said that six people were killed in the southern Damascus district of Yarmuk while the opposition National Coalition claimed regime forces had used "chemical weapons" in shelling Yarmuk.-
Is this not simply desperation? Do they even know how absolutely catastrophic chemical weapons are, or do they think the world simply doesn't know much about it?

-"militiamen then broke in, and killed the women and the children," according to Abdel Rahman.-
How did they derive this information? Witnesses? How did they escape? Why were they not protected by the so-called rebels? Collateral damage on their part perhaps?

Thumb Senescence 22 July 2013, 02:46

The observatory is definitely lacking in merit as it fails to deliver crucial information free of inconsistencies and bias, ergo lacking in credibility.

-Elsewhere, the Observatory said that Islamists battling Kurdish fighters in the northern town of Tal Abyad freed 300 Kurdish civilians they were holding prisoner in exchange for a rebel chief.-

Look here for new light. The observatory's statements regarding the various exploits of "Islamists" (weren't they secular rebels?) is to be trusted, more or less, seeing as how the observatory is biased towards them and would abstain from defamatory fabrications -- kidnapping/holding 300 civilians hostage in retaliation to detainment of a rebel chief (who I remember were attacking Kurdish provinces which lead the latter to take up arms against them etc.) is more or less what is harvested from this article.

Thumb Senescence 22 July 2013, 02:55

Look, it's just that there's no middle-ground in civil war. Nobody's going to have an objective outlook, nobody's going to be emotionally impenetrable; people are inclined to believe this or that instead of some such depending on their stance, which is undeniable polarized in most of the population -- which fails to set up an objective channel through which one can learn genuinely about the things afoot there.

I believe no one side, but when one reports on the doings of its support -- a doing which I view as wrong, then I'm inclined to believe it. 300 civilians for an instigator of the whole mishap? Yeah, wrong.

Missing mrelhage 21 July 2013, 20:19

Typical shia, nothing new

Thumb Maxx 22 July 2013, 00:30

Ya khayyé, why lop the whole sect together because of the crimes of Baschar's dogs? Maybe it might be shocking for you to realize, but not all Shia support or even tolerate Baschar, Hizb, Iran, and the rest of such small deer. Remember it was a shab Shi3é that got killed by Hizb in front of the Iranian embassy while protesting against Hizb's mass murders of women and children in Syria.

Thumb _mowaten_ 22 July 2013, 14:17

sickening indeed, the world sends mercenaries and fanatics to slaughter, rape and spread chaos in syria, then they act surprised when things like this happen.

Thumb geha 21 July 2013, 20:20

wait, you will have the syro/Iranians talk once more about the heart eating cannibals.
murder is murder. genocide is genocide.

Thumb EagleDawn 21 July 2013, 20:45

I just watched the video above ...... I vomited:((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((

Missing tourettes 21 July 2013, 20:52

one day assad is going to look beautiful in the grave,the day will come

Thumb Lebanon4life 21 July 2013, 22:42

:( Just look what happened to Syria !! We should our best to prevent war from happening in Lebanon !! And guys please don't come up with salafi cannibals , wahabists , shia extremists, etc.... because they are all to blame for this situation !!

Missing michel_tannous 22 July 2013, 02:53

And what did we get from baath exactly? Rape, murder, torture. The arab world would be better of with no baath and no saudi/gulf royals, no mubaraks and no ben alis. How about that instead of wanting to replace one backward leader with another? The fact that you praise baath prooves you are just as backward as the saudi royals but in a diffirent way. At the end of the day, regardless of which backwardness (baath or gulf royals) the arab people suffer.

Missing michel_tannous 22 July 2013, 02:56

And why was your precious bashar el assad allied to saudi royals for so long? All of a sudden, when saudi arabia dumped you, then you become brave and dare to speak up against them? Syrian tv didnt allow any criticism of saudi royals up until 1 or 2 years ago. Even after saudi arabia turned on you, your president and media took a very long time before they dared to even mention saudi arabia because the filthy baath was hoping to have an agreement with saudi arabia. The baath were just as much slaves of saudi arabia as those you criticise.

Default-user-icon Pezango Dwanbalu (Guest) 22 July 2013, 09:17

My compatriots of Farts 14 and Sanni First, let's all give a welcoming hand to the new inductee into the club of the NostraDamsels, TOURETTES!!! These Nostras overdo one another with their out-of-this-world confirmations. As an example, here is one such prediction by the new Nostra, to be called NostraTourettes from here on: one day assad is going to look beautiful in the grave,the day will come. THE DAY WILL COME!!! Need I say more? I guess not, considering that we no longer live in an era when some people go on living FOREVER!!! wlak eweeeeeeeeha Farts 14 and Sanni First Nostras. Keep dem predictions flowing.

Default-user-icon aminedal (Guest) 22 July 2013, 13:12

la ilaha illa bachar ou mhammad rassoul bachar.
this is the slogan used by bachar thugs to hail him

Default-user-icon E.Naseef (Guest) 23 July 2013, 05:59

إلى فخامة رئيس جمهوريتنا,,,,التوافقي,,,,كفاك دفاعآ عن حزب الشيطان,,,يوم بدك تحميهم برموش عيونك ويوم بدك تعلم أوروبا كيف لازم تكون سيساتهم الخارجية,,,رزق الله على أيام إميل لحود,,,كان عميل لبيت ألأسد و ما بعمرو نكر ذلك,,,أما فخامتك مش معروف شو لونه