Fierce clashes in Syria as UN observers begin work

President Bashar al-Assad’s forces killed three civilians and were fighting rebels at Idlib in the northwest, while also shelling the flashpoint central city of Homs, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

 

Since a UN-backed ceasefire came into force at dawn on Thursday, at least 55 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in violence that prompted UN chief Ban Ki-moon to urge Syria to ensure the truce does not collapse.

The Observatory said yesterday that 11 117 people have been killed in 13 months of unrest — 7 972 civilians and 3 145 military and gunmen, including fewer than than 600 rebel fighters.

In Brussels, Ban called on Damascus to exercise “maximum restraint” and the opposition to “fully cooperate” to cement the shaky ceasefire.

An advance team of six international observers arrived in Damascus late on Sunday, the United Nations said.

The delegation — the first of 30 monitors the UN Security Council approved on Saturday — will set up a headquarters and prepare routines to verify a cessation of hostilities.

“They’ve arrived and they will start work (on Monday) morning,” UN peacekeeping department spokes-man Kieran Dwyer said. “The other monitors in the advance party are still expected in Syria in coming days.”

The remainder would come from around the Middle East and Africa “so we can move people quickly and they are experienced in the region,” he told AFP.

Their mission is just one part of the six-point peace plan that Syria agreed with UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan.

The former UN chief wants more than 200 observers to be deployed in Syria, but the Security Council has said there would be a full mission only if the violence halts.

The observers were welcomed by Syria, which hoped they would see for themselves the “crimes” committed by “armed terrorist groups,” said the state news agency SANA.

They face a perilous task, with Western nations doubting Assad’s commitment to the ceasefire amid reports his forces have kept battering rebel strongholds and clashed with rebels.

A spike in deadly violence forced the Arab League to end its own Syrian monitoring mission in late January, barely a month after sending them.

Yesterday, security forces killed two civilians when they fired on a car in Hama, and shot dead another in the town of Inkhel, southern Daraa province, where the uprising erupted in March 2011, said the Observatory.

Elsewhere, fierce fighting erupted at dawn between Assad’s forces and rebels in the city of Idlib, the Britain-based monitoring group said.

Regime forces resumed shelling rebel neighbourhoods of Khaldiyeh and Bayyada in the central city of Homs, a day after at least five civilians were killed there.

The authorities on Sunday charged that rebels had “intensified” attacks on security forces and civilians, warning of a response, as state media published a list of alleged acts of violence.

Security forces “will prevent the terrorist groups from continuing their criminal attacks,” said a military official quoted by state media, accusing the rebels of a deliberate escalation to wreck the truce.

“I am very much concerned about what has happened since yesterday and today,” he said. “It is important, absolutely important, that the Syrian government should take all the measures to keep this cessation of violence.”

China and Russia, which raised earlier reservations over the text of the peacekeepers resolution and had vetoed past resolutions, backed Saturday’s vote at the Security Council that approved the monitoring mission.

SANA reported, meanwhile, that Foreign Minister Walid Muallem would visit China to discuss Annan’s mission.

UN Resolution 2042 approved the sending of 30 unarmed military observers as soon as possible and called on both the government and opposition forces to halt “armed violence in all its forms.”

It also urged the government to “implement visibly” all its commitments under Annan’s peace plan, including the withdrawal of all troops and heavy guns from cities.

The resolution’s passage was welcomed by Syria’s main opposition.

“We are ready to act to make the Annan plan a success,” the Syrian National Council said in a statement signed by its leader Burhan Ghalioun. — AFP.

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