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    Assad forces bomb Syria's Homs; reporters killed

    AMMAN/BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces rained rockets and bombs down on opposition-held neighbourhoods of the city of Homs on Wednesday, reducing buildings to rubble and killing more than 80 people, including two Western journalists.

    The barrages marked an intensification of a nearly three-week offensive to crush resistance in Homs, one of the focal points of a nationwide uprising against Assad's 11-year rule, and prompted further international condemnation.

    More than 60 bodies, both rebel fighters and civilians, were recovered from one area of Homs' Baba Amro neighbourhood after an afternoon bombardment, adding to 21 killed earlier in the day, activists said.

    "Helicopters flew reconnaissance overhead then the bombardment started," Homs activist Abu Abei told Reuters.

    Videos uploaded by opposition activists showed smashed buildings, deserted streets, and doctors treating wounded civilians in primitive conditions in Baba Amro, the main target of Assad's wrath.

    For graphic of Homs http://link.reuters.com/tuc56s

    THAT'S ENOUGH

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy described the deaths of the two journalists, French photographer Remi Ochlik and American Marie Colvin of Britain's Sunday Times, as an assassination and said the Assad era had to end.

    "That's enough now," Sarkozy said. "This regime must go and there is no reason that Syrians don't have the right to live their lives and choose their destiny freely. If journalists were not there, the massacres would be a lot worse."

    The two journalists were killed when the house in which they were staying after sneaking over the Lebanese border into Homs was hit by rockets.

    Sunday Times editor John Witherow said the journalists may have been deliberately targeted.

    "Given (Syrian security forces') attitude towards the media, their hostility ...then it is quite reasonable to assume that they were targeting any journalists there," he told the BBC.

    The last dispatch from Colvin -- a veteran war reporter who wore a trademark black eye-patch since being wounded in Sri Lanka in 2001 -- described the misery inside Baba Amro.

    Women and children were crammed together into a basement, huddled in fear and a two-year-old child had died in front of her, she reported on British radio.

    Britain's foreign office summoned the Syrian ambassador to London to stress the "grief" felt over the deaths of Colvin and Ochlik, and demanded that British photographer Paul Conroy, injured in the same attack, receive medical treatment.

    Reporter Edith Bouvier for French newspaper Le Figaro and Paris-based photographer William Daniels were also wounded in the strike on the Homs house, which global advocacy group Avaaz said had been occupied by journalists and opposition activists.

    Bouvier suffered severe injuries to her hip and thigh and was at risk of bleeding to death without urgent medical care, said a member of Avaaz, which has been working with journalists and activists inside Syria.

    "We are desperately trying to get her out, doing all we can in extremely perilous circumstances," the source said.

    The Syrian Network for Human Rights said government forces killed a total of more than 80 civilians in Homs on Wednesday, mostly in bombardments on Baba Amro, a Sunni Muslim district opposed to Syria's Alawite ruling class.

    Several hundred people have been killed in the daily bombardments by the besieging forces using artillery, rockets, sniper fire and Soviet-built T-72 tanks.

    A spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay condemned the shelling of civilian areas and said the Syrian army appeared "to have sharply increased the use of artillery and other heavy weaponry."

    Residents fear Assad will subject the city to the same treatment as his late father Hafez inflicted on the rebellious town of Hama 30 years ago, when 10,000 were killed.

    Ground forces have held off from entering opposition areas as fighters allied to the opposition are ready to take them on.

    The army is blocking medical supplies and electricity is cut off 15 hours a day, activists say. Hospitals, schools and shops are shut and government offices have also closed.

    A Lebanese official who is close to the Syrian government said Assad wants to batter Homs into submission before a referendum this Sunday on a new constitution.

    Assad and his allies Russia and China say the referendum, to be followed by multi-party elections, would satisfy demands for reform as a way to resolve the crisis. Western powers have dismissed it and the Syrian opposition has called for a boycott.

    "President Assad wants to finish the Homs situation by Sunday to prepare for the constitutional referendum. Then he will turn to Idlib," the Lebanese official told Reuters in Beirut.

    HUMANITARIAN CRISIS

    The devastation in Homs has caused outcry but Wednesday's carnage only showed how helpless Western powers are in their efforts to stop the bloodshed.

    The United States, which so far has been against military intervention in Syria, hinted however that if a political solution was impossible it might have to consider other options.

    "We do not believe that adding to the militarisation of Syria is the right approach," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters on Wednesday, but he reiterated that Washington was not "ruling actions out in the future."

    The worsening humanitarian situation in Homs and other embattled towns will dominate "Friends of Syria" talks in Tunis on Friday involving the United States, European and Arab countries, Syria's neighbour Turkey and other nations clamouring for Assad to halt the violence and relinquish power.

    In an effort to bring relief to hungry and bloodied civilians in Homs, the International Committee of the Red Cross was in talks with the Syrian government and opposition figures on Wednesday to clinch a pause in the fighting.

    Russia, Syria's main arms supplier, said it was seeking safe passage of aid convoys to civilians trapped in the violence. France also appealed to Assad to halt the onslaught to allow safe passage for aid.

    U.N. humanitarian chief Valerie Amos will head to Syria soon in an attempt to secure access for aid workers seeking to deliver emergency relief to people trapped in conflict zones, the United Nations said on Wednesday.

    RED CROSS APPEAL

    ICRC President Jakob Kellenberger held talks in Geneva with Basma Kodmani, a senior official of the main opposition Syrian National Council (SNC), about its initiative for a daily two-hour cessation of hostilities.

    Kodmani said the SNC wanted at least three safe passages for humanitarian convoys into battered Syrian cities -- from Lebanon into Homs, from Jordan into Deraa and from Turkey into Idlib.

    ICRC spokeswoman Carla Haddad said she was unable to say if and when a ceasefire deal might be clinched.

    "The situation is difficult and we are worried it is deteriorating," she told Reuters on Wednesday. "Everybody is focused on Homs but we shouldn't turn a blind eye to what is happening in other areas."

    Army bombardments on the town of Khan Sheikhoun, north of Homs on the Damascus-Aleppo highway in Idlib province, killed two people on Wednesday, the London-based Syrian Network said.

    Elsewhere in Idlib, seven people, including a five-year-old boy, were killed by gunfire during security force raids, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

    In Moscow, Russia said it was working on ensuring the secure transit of humanitarian aid but safe corridors themselves were not a good idea because they might lead to further violence.

    Although some say support around Assad is crumbling and the military is tiring, others say he could hang on for many months more before he joins Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, Egypt's Hosni Mubarak and Tunisia's Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali on the list of deposed Arab leaders, if he does at all.

    There are also fears the revolt could flare into a religion-based civil war and spread across the volatile Middle East.

    (Additional reporting by Erika Solomon and Mariam Karouny in Beirut, John Irish in Paris; Steve Gutterman in Moscow, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Peter Griffiths in London; Editing by Rosalind Russell; khaled.oweis@reuters.com; +962 6 4623776)

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    9 comments

    • Orly C  •  Manila, Philippines  •  2 months ago
      Russia must be punished also for supplying the needed arms to Syrian army to massacre its own people. The loyal military to Assad has become instrument of a tyrant leader, are there no patriots left in this country...what a shame for Arabs to kill his fellow Arabs. This is already Arabs blood spring.
      • d' Elect 2 months ago
        they need to receive the Spirit of understanding...
    • ahmad  •  Damascus, Syria  •  2 months ago
      The most important question: If these journalists (if they are not intelligence agents) presumably were Syrians and entered in this way and without the knowledge of the state to America or Europe, what they will do with them, and what confirms that the Syrian forces that killed them with the knowledge that there are terrorist gangs waging war on the Syrian forces and alleged these journalists put themselves amid the battle is not guaranteed results, they should assume burden of the result
    • randy c  •  Manila, Philippines  •  2 months ago
      stop the killing, have mercy mr syrian president
    • Dan  •  2 months ago
      Anyway, an update to the situation in Homs, Syria: The city is now under control of the Syrian Arab Army and only a very small sporadic fighting is occurring. This was confirmed by Russia Today channel and other international media outlets. You can't see and read this update today or in a few days to come in western-controlled medias like CNN, Fox, BBC, Al Jazeera etc. 'cause they don't want this kind of story which is not favoring their objective in Syria which is to oust Pres. al-Assad whatever the cost to the Syrian populace.
      • BILL 2 months ago
        Dan is an Arab, probably a Syrian fan of the Pres.
      • Flay 2 months ago
        Oh ffs! Yeah right, because “RUSSIA TODAY” is the most credible source of news and information on everything Syria. *snark off* Tell that to all the correspondents and journalists lying in their graves who have covered the unspeakable atrocities of Assad’s brutal dictatorship: Marie Colvin (Sunday Times): 22 February 2012, Homs; Remi Ochlik (freelance photographer): 22 February 2012, Homs; Rami al-Sayed (video blogger): 21 February, 2012, Homs; Anthony Shadid (New York Times): 17 February 2012, near Turkish border; Mazhar Tayyara (freelance): 4 February 2012, Homs; Shukri Abu al-Burghul (al-Thawra and Radio Damascus): 3 January 2012, Damascus; Basil al-Sayed (freelance): 27 December 2011, Homs; Ferzat Jarban (freelance): 19 or 20 November 2011, Al-Qasir

        Your appeasement of the butchers of Syria has never looked as feeble as today.
      • Reece 2 months ago
        You’re a piss poor imitation of a human being dan. 28,000 civilians in Homs, men, women and children hiding, defenseless, being shelled every day. Every house in the city had been hit. Like reporter Marie Calvin said, just hours before she died when her own shelter was shelled by Syrian forces, “It’s a complete and utter lie they’re only going after terrorists. The Syrian Army is simply shelling a city of cold, starving civilians.” You know, a terrorist is one that commits or supports acts of terror against others. So, where do you see yourself?
    • Joe Dimango  •  2 months ago
      NATO should intervene now!!! People are dying there, and countries in the west and Arab nations must help...They should arm the civilians so they could defend themselves...Assad must go by any means!!! Calling on the US gov't. protect those innocent civilians from being massacred...
      • Dan 2 months ago
        Don't believe in every word the Western-sponsored media is throwing at you. The reality is there is an on-going armed rebellion inside Syria, funded by the west & some Gulf countries, directed by foreign Special Operations groups, reinforced by foreign mercenaries and supported by Al-Qaeda with fighters already inside (Zawahiri, the new head of Al-Qaeda broadcasted this on their website).

        Syria is a sovereign country, any government under siege from rebellion have all the rights to defend itself. Foreign military intervention and sending more arms to the rebels and foreign mercenaries will in no way solve the problem rather it will worsen and will turn Syria into rubles and more death. See what happened in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya.

        Civilians caught and killed in the crossfire is a collateral damaged that must be minimized, this is the role the international community must perform, not supporting only one side of the conflict.
      • BILL 2 months ago
        Dan is a typical Arab, a Syrian, who do not value human life like the communists
    • Dan  •  2 months ago
      First and foremost there are no foreign medias allowed inside Syria, how they get there is suspicious. Whose bomb or bullet killed them is still unfounded. They are in the crossfire of a conflict, they know what risk they are taking. May they Rest in Peace.
      • BILL 2 months ago
        Russia and China did not want the killing to stop. They vetoed a UN resolution. Both are communists who do not value human life
    • Russell  •  2 months ago
      dont also listen to china and russia they are just nuissance in the united nation
    • sprtn frd  •  2 months ago
      wtw! This news is too ordinary in the Philippines, Media Killings here is rampant! (the Mastermind are the Politicians!).
    • MR. GREATMIND  •  2 months ago
      A SCOOP FOR A LIFE!!!
      JOURNALISTS ENDANGER THEMSELVES JUST TO GET A SCOOP!!!
      THEY COURT DANGER AND THEY TOY WITH DEATH JUST TO CAPTURE A SCOOP!!!
      WHAT A DEDICATION, WHAT A LOVE FOR ONE'S CALLING!!!
      A JOURNALIST'S DEATH IN PURSUIT OF HIS CALLING IS WHAT I CALL THE HEIGHT OF HIS PASSION!!!
      THE ZENITH OF LOVE FOR HIS VOCATION!!!
      IS THAT IDIOCY OR HEROISM?
      take your pick!!!
      • MR. GREATMIND 2 months ago
        I WON'T!!!
      • Michael 2 months ago
        get a life.
      • BILL 2 months ago
        Idiocy to cowards like you hiding in an Alias