BEIRUT – In a
barrage of mortar shells, Syrian forces killed 200 people and wounded
hundreds in Homs in an offensive that appears to be the bloodiest
episode in the nearly 11-month-old uprising, activists said Saturday.
The assault in Homs, which has been one of
the main flashpoints of opposition during the uprising, comes as the
U.N. Security Council prepares to vote on a draft resolution backing an
Arab call for President Bashar Assad to give up power.
The government denied the assault. Syrian TV
said the reports were untrue and come in the context of "incitement by
the armed groups" against Syria to be exploited at the Security Council.
It claimed that corpses shown in amateur
videos posted online -- bodies that activists said were victims of the
assault -- were purportedly of people kidnapped by "terrorist armed
groups" who filmed them to portray them as victims of the alleged
shelling.
Two main opposition groups, the
British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local
Coordination Committees, said the death toll in Homs was more than 200
people and included women and children in mortar shelling that began
late Friday. More than half of the killings -- about 140 -- were
reported in the Khaldiyeh neighborhood.
"This is the worst attack of the uprising,
since the uprising began in March until now," said Rami Abdul-Rahman,
the head of the Observatory, which tracks violence through contacts on
the ground.
The reports could not be independently confirmed.
It was not immediately clear what
precipitated the attack, but there have been reports that army defectors
set up checkpoints in the area and were trying to consolidate control.
The LCC called on residents of Homs and
surrounding areas to support the people of Khaldiyeh and nearby Bayada
by donating blood and housing families fleeing from the bombing.
Earlier on Friday, deadly clashes erupted
between government troops and rebels in suburbs of the Syrian capital
and villages in the south, sparking fighting that killed at least 23
people, including nine soldiers, activists said.
Assad is trying to crush the revolt with a
sweeping crackdown that has so far claimed thousands of lives, but
neither the government nor the protesters are backing down and clashes
between the military and an increasingly bold and armed opposition has
meant many parts of the country have seen relentless violence.
The U.N. Security Council will meet Saturday
morning to take up a much-negotiated resolution on Syria, said a
diplomat for a Western nation that sits on the council.
The diplomat spoke Friday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to be quoted by the media.
The move toward a vote came after U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke by telephone with
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in an effort to overcome Russian
opposition to any statement that explicitly calls for regime change or a
military intervention in Syria.
The U.S. and its partners have ruled out
military action but want the global body to endorse an Arab League plan
that calls on Assad to hand power over to Syria's vice president.
Russia's deputy foreign minister, Gennady
Gatilov, said Friday that Moscow could not support the resolution in its
current form. But he expressed optimism that an agreement could be
reached, according to state news agency RIA Novosti.
Assad's regime has been intensifying an
assault against army defectors and protesters. The U.N. said weeks ago
that more than 5,400 people have been killed in violence since March.
Hundreds more have been killed since that tally was announced.
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