BEIRUT — Syrian security forces on Wednesday undertook fewer military operations involving armor and heavy artillery ahead of Thursday’s cease-fire deadline but conducted raids and arrests in the country’s northern and central regions that left at least five people dead.
BEIRUT — Syrian security forces on Wednesday undertook fewer military operations involving armor and heavy artillery ahead of Thursday’s cease-fire deadline but conducted raids and arrests in the country’s northern and central regions that left at least five people dead.
Evidence emerged of a pair of mass executions in the city of Homs, underscoring how brutal the government’s crackdown had become in recent days, as it used the last few days ahead of the U.N.-sponsored cease-fire to try to overwhelm its foes. The 59 alleged victims of the executions were killed Monday, when the military sent ground troops into the neighborhood of Deir Balba after shelling it for a week, Syrian human rights activists said.
At least three pro-government militiamen were killed in the city of Hama on Wednesday, and the official news agency SANA said that seven members of the Syrian military killed by anti-government rebels were buried. The statement did say when they had died.
In a separate news item citing an unnamed “source at the Ministry of Defense,” SANA also reported that the Syrian military would abide by the cease-fire proposed by U.N. Syria envoy Kofi Annan and agreed to by Syrian President Bashar Assad last month. That item warned, however, that the military would respond if provoked by anti-Assad rebels.
“It has been decided to halt the armed forces’ missions starting Thursday morning, after they carried out successful missions in combating criminal acts by armed terrorist groups and enforced the authority of the state on all its territories,” the statement read. “The armed forces will be on alert to confront any attack by armed terrorist groups against civilians, law enforcement members, the armed forces and private and public facilities.”
Heavy shelling continued in Homs, the country’s third-largest city, which has been a main center of anti-Assad forces since last year.
Sami Ibrahim, who documents deaths for the London-based Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, said he’d interviewed a half-dozen witnesses to the executions of anti-Assad activists in Homs on Monday and that other members of his organization also had spoken to eyewitnesses.
“They told us they gathered them and made one grave for all and then they burned them. Among them were five women and five children,” Ibrahim said.
The alleged killings took place in two neighborhoods in Homs, where more than a half-dozen neighborhoods have been heavily shelled since February as the Syrian government has escalated its military campaign against the Free Syrian Army, the name widely adopted by the loosely organized and lightly armed army defectors and volunteers who have taken up arms against the government.
Many of Homs’ residents have fled, and on Wednesday, Ibrahim said shelling continued in three other of the city’s neighborhoods. Ibrahim said that he feared the result would be similar to what had transpired in Deir Balba for anyone who remained.
“They are shelling from outside the neighborhoods. When they want to enter they will enter. Almost all the people there are civilians,” he said. “There are also army defectors.”
Ibrahim said Free Syrian Army fighters in Homs had stopped attacking the government forces in observance of the U.N. cease-fire plan.