New
massacre in Syria amid UN Security Council talks
The
Syrian opposition claims government forces stormed Tremseh village in
the province of Hama, killing up to 200 people. One activist said the
majority of those killed were rebels while seven were civilians.
RT,
14
July, 2012
“The
army staged a counter-attack with the support of [pro-regime]
reinforcements from [nearby] Alawite villages. The FSA resisted for
an hour before it was defeated,” said
an opposition activist named Jaafar, as reported by AFP.
The
Syrian Observatory for Human R“An
army convoy was on its way to the region of Hama when it was attacked
by the FSA,” he said.ights
also reported that “several
dozen rebel fighters were among those killed."
According
to the UK-based group’s information, 40 of the rebels killed have
been identified. They add that 18 were“summarily
executed” and
that 30 corpses were burned.
The
so-called Revolution Leadership Council of Hama told Reuters that the
village of Tremseh had been attacked by helicopter gunships and
tanks, and was later stormed by pro-government militia.
Scores
of dead bodies were scattered in buildings across Tremseh, Al Arabiya
quoted opposition activists as saying. More than 150 bodies were
piled up in the local mosque and the local school was allegedly
destroyed too. These reports could not be independently confirmed.
State
television, meanwhile, has put the blame for the massacre
on “terrorists” and
described the massacre as a“deliberate
provocation”,
adding that government forces only entered the village after
residents asked for their help.
Damascus
says the armed opposition massacred the villagers to swing public
opinion against the government ahead of the forthcoming UN Security
Council meeting, and make a case for foreign intervention before the
UN Security Council.
The
UN Security Council started a new round of negotiations on Thursday
to discuss two competing drafts of a resolution aimed at breaking the
diplomatic gridlock surrounding Syria as violence continued to rack
the country.
The
draft resolution, introduced by Britain, suggests a mission
extension, but with harsh sanctions which come under Chapter 7. The
latter allows the authorization of actions ranging from diplomatic
and economic sanctions to military intervention.
If
this draft is passed, the sanctions will take effect immediately if a
ceasefire does not take hold within ten days and government forces do
not withdraw heavy weapons from populated areas.
The
second draft, proposed by Russia, opposes sanctions. Moscow says it
will not accept the Western-proposed resolution. The UN has to agree
on further actions by July 20, when the mandate for the UN monitoring
mission in Syria expires.
Timing of atrocities coincidental – again?
The
commander of the United Nations Observers Mission in Syria said that
his team had confirmed there had been fighting in Tremseh.
Speaking
to reporters in Damascus on Friday, General Robert Mood verified that
the assault on Tremseh had been targeted, "involving
mechanized units, involving indirect fire impact and involving
helicopters. This is what we have seen from a distance of 5 to 6
kilometers [about 3 to 4 miles]."
The
UN Syria mission team reported that they observed an “ongoing
military operation” around the village, saying that they heard more
than 100 explosions.
General
Mood said that observers were ready to send a larger team to the
village once there is a "credible
cessation of violence and a local ceasefire."
Meanwhile,
Reuters news agency claims to have obtained the UN mission’s
‘flash’ report , which says that the attack on the village
was “an
extension of the SAAF [Syrian Arab Air Force] operation in Khan
Sheikhoun to Souran over the recent number of days," adding
that "the
situation in Hama province continues to be highly volatile and
unpredictable."
Russia
has harshly condemned the massacre in Tremseh and expressed its
solidarity with the Syrian people, saying that “the
immediate cessation of bloodshed and armed violence against the
civilian population by all parties is necessary.”
In
addition, Russia’s Foreign Ministry pointed to the fact that the
latest atrocities “again” coincided
with important discussions on Syria in the UN Security Council. It
pointed out that the massacre in Houla on May 25, which claimed lives
of dozens of civilians, also took place during crucial negotiations
in the UNSC.
“Without
prejudging the outcome of the investigation of the crime, on the
conduction of which we insist, we would like to emphasize that we
have no doubt that this atrocity is of advantage to the forces that
do not seek peace, but persist in trying to grow on Syrian soil the
seeds of sectarian animosity and civil conflict, those for whom the
grief and suffering of the Syrian people do not mean anything,” said
Foreign Ministry spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich.
‘UN should pass a resolution’
Meanwhile,
the Syrian National Council has called for a UN Security Council
emergency meeting to discuss the massacre. It is urging UN observers
to head to the site and document what happened there.
International
peace envoy Kofi Annan has condemned the mass killings in the Syrian
village, saying he is “shocked and appalled by news coming out of
the village."
"This
is in violation of the government's undertaking to cease the use of
heavy weapons in population centers and its commitment to the
six-point plan," Annan
said.
He
also said that UN observers were ready to go to Tremseh to
investigate the massacre.
Harsh
comments from the international community are also coming in.
“Reports
of Traymseh massacre are nightmarish – dramatically illustrate the
need for binding UNSC measures on Syria,” the
United States’ UN Ambassador Susan Rice wrote in her Twitter
microblog.
France
says the UN Security council must acts and pass a resolution backed
by the “threat
of sanctions from the Security Council,” said
French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero.
He
said that France was assuming its responsibilities, indirectly
criticizing Russia and China for being reluctant to support a
resolution backed by sanctions under Chapter 7.
"This
tragedy shows how much the first step towards a cessation of violence
must be taken by the Syrian government,"Valero
said.
From the Guardian
Syria
used helicopters and tanks in Tremseh 'massacre', confirms UN
Kofin
Annan 'appalled' after UN monitors verified use of heavy weaponry in
attack believed to have killed more than 140 people
13
July, 2012
The
head of the UN monitoring mission in Syria has said that helicopters
and tanks were used to shell a town in the centre of the country
before a massacre that is believed to have killed more than 140
people on Thursday.
General
Robert Mood, who has led the UN presence in Syria since April, said
his members were ready to enter the town of Tremseh if a truce there
took hold. He said monitors stationed in the area had personally
verified that heavy weapons were directed against Tremseh on
Thursday.
Late
on Friday the UN said observers had been unable to contact the local
military commander responsible for the area near Tremseh and its
members had been refused access. It claimed the Syrian air force
"continued to attack populated urban areas on a large scale"
and said its observers had logged more than 100 explosions in an
"ongoing military operation".
Residents
of the small town of around 6,000 people said they were attacked from
outlying areas late on Thursday after many hours of shelling. They
blamed the attack on loyalist forces and a pro-regime militia known
as the Shabiha which has been accused of being at the vanguard of
other mass killings during recent months.
Syrian
officials instead blamed "terrorists", who they say have
been responsible for much of the violence in Syria since the uprising
began almost 17 months ago.
The
UN's special envoy to Syria, Kofi Annan, said he was "shocked
and appalled" by "intense fighting, significant casualties,
and the confirmed use of heavy weaponry such as artillery, tanks and
helicopters" in Tremseh, which is in an ethnically mixed area,
22 miles from Hama.
Activists
in the area say around 600 casualties are being treated in field
clinics and hospitals in surrounding areas. They claim that many
bodies remain in crop fields and a final death toll will not be known
for days.
It
was difficult to obtain first-hand accounts from Tremseh were
difficult to obtain on Friday, with communications to the area down
and residents unreachable on equipment that had been given to them by
activist networks.
Mousab
al-Hamadee, an opposition activist living 12 miles away, said people
had travelled to the town early on Thursday to warn of an impending
regime assault. Hamadee said he had spoken to his sister who said the
attack had been relentless. "A big number of the young men were
killed in the field when they were trying to escape the army attack,"
he said. "Helicopters targeted them by heavy machine guns while
they were driving their motorcycles – while they were fleeing the
village.
"Today
the people of Tremseh opened a house that was burned by troops. They
found two people who were burned alive. My sister told me that the
only two doctors in the village were targeted by mortar shells. Both
doctors were killed in their houses."
The
massacre took place ahead of a UN security council meeting that is
expected to weigh a new response to the crisis in Syria, which has
morphed over the past year from a series of anti-regime
demonstrations in many towns and cities in Syria into a full-scale
insurrection.
Some
European states and the US are pushing for the UN to impose sanctions
under a Chapter Seven resolution. However, Russia and China, which
have staunchly supported Damascus throughout the uprising, have again
indicated that they will use their vetoes to block such a move.
Damascus
said earlier this week that it is committed to Annan's six-point
peace plan and nominated an interlocutor that it said would represent
the regime in discussions with the opposition to bring about a
ceasefire.
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