Los Angeles Times

Revenge killings

Opposition activists say an entire family was slain in Homs’ Baba Amr district.

- Rima Marrouch reporting from beirut Marrouch is a special correspond­ent. Atimes staff writer contribute­d to this report.

Opposition activists and the government trade blame for the attacks in Baba Amr.

A man buys bread Tuesday in Idlib, Syria, where rebels braced for an expected attack by the Syrian army. In the city of Homs, activists say government troops carried out revenge killings that claimed an entire family, among others.

Syrian authoritie­s and antigovern­ment activists accused each other Tuesday of reprisal killings in the western city of Homs, where government forces recently overran rebel-held areas and continue to deny access to outside humanitari­an aid and human rights observers.

The Syrian army has said it is “cleansing” the Homs neighborho­od of Baba Amr of mines and booby traps left behind by “terrorists” when rebel fighters with the Free Syrian Army withdrew from the area last week.

But activists and human rights groups said government troops in Baba Amr were carrying out revenge killings, which they say claimed an entire family, among others.

Eighteen Baba Amr residents, all members of the Sabouh family, ranging in age from 1 year to 85 years, were found stabbed to death after security forces raided homes in the neighborho­od, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights.

The group posted video online of what it said were six other Sabouh family members who were found slain, execution-style, five days earlier.

A pro-regime TV station also aired graphic images of bodies in a living room, with what appeared to be a halfeaten lunch visible.

The station said the victims had been killed by the Free Syrian Army, which, the station alleged, had accused the family of collaborat­ing with government forces.

With no access to Baba Amr, neither side’s version could be verified.

A statement — apparently from surviving members of the extended Sabouh family — was released by activists who had recently escaped from Homs. The statement said, in part, that the surviving Sabouhs hold President Bashar Assad’s regime “fully accountabl­e for this massacre in retaliatio­n for the support we gave to the revolution. We are going to provide all the necessary documents to bring the regime to trial.”

Across Syria, activists reported that 39 people were killed Tuesday, including 23 in Homs. Death tolls are impossible to verify because of journalist­s’ limited access.

Rebels also reported that a bridge over the Orontes River used by Syrians trying to flee across the border to Lebanon was struck by shells from an armored vehicle.

At least one man was wounded.

In the town of Herak in the southern province of Dara, homes were raided and buildings and mosques were shelled by heavy artillery, the Syrian Network for Human Rights said.

After one home was hit, five members of the Masri family and a guest ran into the street and were shot at by security forces, the rights group said. Four members of the family and the guest were killed, and the mother is in critical condition, it said.

Several cities and villages in Syria’s northern province of Idlib were also under assault by the army, activists said.

In Maarat Numan, one of the largest cities in the province, at least four people were killed and dozens injured in an ongoing bombardmen­t, according to the Local Coordinati­on Committees, an opposition coalition.

The Syrian government blames “foreign-backed terrorists” for the unrest that is challengin­g Assad, whose family has ruled the country for four decades.

 ?? Rodrigo Abd
Associated Press ??
Rodrigo Abd Associated Press
 ?? Hussein Malla
Associated Press ?? A SYRIAN WOMAN who fled the Homs region sits with her family just across the border in Lebanon. Antigovern­ment activists said 39 people were killed Tuesday across Syria, including 23 in Homs.
Hussein Malla Associated Press A SYRIAN WOMAN who fled the Homs region sits with her family just across the border in Lebanon. Antigovern­ment activists said 39 people were killed Tuesday across Syria, including 23 in Homs.

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