The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 42 civilians were
killed in Homs alone in another day of blood-letting, and warned the death toll
was likely to rise with many of the dozens of wounded in critical condition.State
media reported the deaths of three soldiers and said a “terrorist group” blew
up an oil pipeline in Homs.The army also launched an assault on the Zabadani
area near Damascus with heavy tank shelling, killing at least ten people,
according to the Britain-based Observatory.It also reported civilian deaths in
Rastan, Hula and Qusair, all towns in Homs province, as well at Sarghaya, near
Damascus, in the northern city of Aleppo and in Idlib, northwest Syria.A
resident of Homs told AFP the latest assault began with unprecedented barrages
of rockets, mortar rounds and artillery shells.“What is happening is horrible,
it’s beyond belief,” said activist Omar Shaker, reached by telephone as loud
detonations were heard in the background.“There is nowhere to take shelter,
nowhere to hide,” he said. “We are running short of medical supplies and we are
only able to provide basic treatment to the injured.”One video posted on
YouTube apparently showed a field hospital hit by shelling in the Baba Amro
district and wounded patients lying on stretchers on the floor amid pools of
blood and shattered glass.Footage shot by a BBC undercover team in Homs showed
buildings ablaze in rebel neighborhoods as they were pounded with heavy
weapons.Damascus blamed the bloodshed in Homs on “terrorist gangs” using mortars.The
violence comes as Western powers seek new ways to punish Damascus amid growing
outrage over Saturday’s veto by Russia and China of a U.N. Security Council
resolution condemning Syria for its near 11-month crackdown on dissent.U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the veto a “travesty.”White House
spokesman Jay Carney warned Syria’s
allies that backing President Bashar al-Assad was a “losing bet.”The State
Department said it had closed the American embassy in Syria and withdrawn
remaining staff after Damascus refused to address security concerns.Senior
State Department officials told CNN that two embassy employees left by air last
week and 15 others, including Ambassador Robert Ford, left overland through
Jordan on Monday morning.The Polish government is to provide emergency consular
services to any American citizens remaining in Syria.U.S. President Barack
Obama shied away from talk of military intervention and vowed to pursue
diplomatic means.“It is important to resolve this without recourse to outside
military intervention and I think that’s possible,” he said in an NBC
television interview.Britain recalled its ambassador to Syria
“for consultations,” Foreign Secretary William Hague told parliament.“We will
use our remaining channels to the Syrian regime to make clear our abhorrence at
the violence that is utterly unacceptable to the civilized world,” Hague said.Belgium
also recalled its ambassador from Damascus.French President Nicolas Sarkozy
said, after meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel, that he would call Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev to discuss the international response to the crisis.Neither
France nor Germany, he said, would accept the “blocking” of action on Syria.Russia
and China both defended their vetoes, with Moscow condemning as “hysterical”
the West’s angry reaction.Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Foreign
Intelligence Service chief Mikhail Fradkov are due in Damascus on Tuesday, as
news reports said the mission could try to persuade Assad to quit.China called
on both sides of the conflict to halt the violence that has claimed the lives
of at least 6,000 people since March, according to opposition activists.The
Syrian National Council said the “genocide” in Homs showed the regime was
“increasing the pace of its crimes and repression.”Saudi Arabia called for
“critical measures” on Syria and warned of an impending “humanitarian disaster”
after the failure of the UN resolution.The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council,
of which Riyadh is the leading member, is to meet on Saturday on Syria, on the
eve of an Arab League ministerial meeting at the organization’s Cairo
headquarters.EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton and Brazilian foreign
minister Antonio Patriota on Monday underscored their support for the Arab
League effort to end violence in Syria.Referring to Arab League chief Nabil
al-Arabi, Ashton at a meeting in Brasilia said she and Patriota discussed “how
much we support him on the Arab League’s initiative and the importance of
seeing that leadership (being) able to support the people of Syria into a
future free of bloodshed.”Meanwhile the British-born wife of Syria’s president
has spoken in support of her husband for the first time since the uprising
began, a British newspaper reported Tuesday.“The president is the president of
Syria, not a faction of Syrians, and the first lady supports him in that role,”
The Times quoted Asma al-Assad as saying in an email sent via an intermediary
from her office.
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