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    Syria troops battle to retake Damascus suburbs

    AMMAN/BEIRUT (Reuters) - Around 2,000 Syrian troops backed by tanks launched an assault to retake Damascus suburbs from rebels on Sunday, activists said, a day after the Arab League suspended its monitoring mission in Syria because of worsening violence.

    They said 19 civilians and rebel fighters were killed as the soldiers in armoured personnel carriers moved in at dawn, along with at least 50 tanks and other armoured vehicles.

    The forces of President Bashar al-Assad pushed into the Ghouta area on the eastern edge of Damascus to take part in an offensive in the suburbs of Saqba, Hammouriya and Kfar Batna.

    Tanks advanced into the centre of Saqba and Kfar Batna, the activists said, in a move to flush out fighters who had taken over districts less than eight km (five miles) from Assad's centre of power.

    "It's urban war. There are bodies in the street," said one activist, speaking from Kfar Batna. Activists said 14 civilians and five insurgents from the rebel Free Syrian Army were killed there and in other suburbs.

    Residents of central Damascus, which has remained relatively calm throughout Syria's 10-month crisis, reported seeing soldiers and police deployed around main squares to prevent unrest spreading into the heart of the capital.

    The escalating bloodshed prompted the Arab League to suspend the work of its monitors on Saturday. Arab foreign ministers, who have urged Assad to step down and make way for a government of national unity, will discuss the crisis on February 5.

    Arab League chief Nabil Elaraby left for New York where he will brief representatives of the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday to seek support for an Arab peace plan that calls on Assad to step aside after months of protests.

    He will be joined by Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, whose country heads the League's committee charged with overseeing Syria.

    Speaking shortly before he left Cairo on Sunday, Elaraby said he hoped to overcome resistance from Beijing and Moscow over endorsing the Arab proposals. "There are contacts with China and Russia on this issue," he said.

    A Syrian government official was quoted by state media as saying Damascus was surprised by the Arab League decision to suspend monitoring, which would "put pressure on (Security Council) deliberations with the aim of calling for foreign intervention and encouraging armed groups to increase violence."

    Assad blames the violence on foreign-backed militants.

    ARMY DEATHS

    The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported a total of 41 civilian deaths across Syria on Sunday, including 14 in Homs province and 12 in the city of Hama. Thirty-one soldiers and members of the security forces were also killed, most of them in two attacks by army deserters in the northern province of Idlib, it said.

    State news agency SANA reported the military funerals of 28 soldiers and police on Saturday and another 23 on Sunday.

    Faced with mass demonstrations against his rule, Assad launched a military crackdown to subdue the protests. Growing numbers of army deserters and gunmen have joined the demonstrators, increasing instability in the country of 23 million people at the heart of the Middle East.

    The insurgency has been gradually approaching the capital, whose suburbs, a series of mainly conservative Sunni Muslim towns bordering old gardens and farmland, known as the al-Ghouta, are home to the bulk of Damascus's population.

    One activist reported heavy shelling in the suburb of Saqba, and said the army was facing stiff opposition from rebels.

    Another, who identified himself as Raid, said mosques had been turned into field hospitals and were appealing for blood supplies. "They cut off the electricity. Petrol stations are empty and the army is preventing people from leaving to get fuel for generators or heating," he said.

    The Damascus suburbs have seen large demonstrations demanding the removal of Assad, a member of the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam that has dominated the mostly Sunni Muslim country for the last five decades.

    TOWN BESIEGED

    In Rankous, 30 km (20 miles) north of Damascus by the Lebanese border, Assad's forces have killed at least 33 people in recent days in an attack to dislodge army defectors and insurgents, activists and residents said on Sunday.

    Rankous, a mountain town of 25,000 people, has been under tank fire since Wednesday, when several thousand troops laid siege to it, they said.

    France, which has been leading calls for stronger international action on Syria, said the Arab League decision highlighted the need to act.

    "France vigorously condemns the dramatic escalation of violence in Syria, which has led the Arab League to suspend its observers' mission in Syria," the Foreign Ministry said.

    "Dozens of Syrian civilians have been killed in the past days by the savage repression taken by the Syrian regime ... Those responsible for these barbarous acts must answer to their crimes," it said.

    The Arab League mission was sent in at the end of last year to observe Syria's implementation of the peace plan, which failed to end the fighting. Gulf states withdrew monitors last week, saying the team could not stop the violence.

    The United Nations said in December more than 5,000 people had been killed in the protests and crackdown. Syria says more than 2,000 security force members have been killed by militants.

    On Friday, the U.N. Security Council discussed a European-Arab draft resolution aimed at halting the bloodshed. Britain and France said they hoped to put it to a vote next week.

    Russia joined China in vetoing a previous Western draft resolution in October, and has said it wants a Syrian-led political process, not "an Arab League-imposed outcome" or Libyan-style "regime change."

     

    56 comments

    • William  •  Jönköping, Sweden  •  28 days ago
      #$%$....we are not going to believe the media anymore.
    • Chris  •  London, England  •  28 days ago
      Give people guns and a lycence to kill and you will get dead people.
    • SAM  •  Reading, England  •  28 days ago
      To put this into perspective, the death toll in the 1994 Rwandan civil war was 937,000, where were the UN and NATO? They hardly made a comment!
    • DDM  •  Kampala, Uganda  •  28 days ago
      Assad staying safe from the wrath of Ocampo and his ICC is a proof that the Rome statute targets African leaders. I see worse atrocities committed by none African states but there seems to be impunity for the perpetrators. Alas! Alas! Let's stop selective justice.
    • SAM  •  Reading, England  •  28 days ago
      To put this into perspective, in 1978 the Shah of Persia’s troops killed 10,000 demonstrators, and then he was given political asylum in the US for the rest of his life.
    • Dave  •  Reading, England  •  28 days ago
      I dont think Assad calling all Sunni Muslims 'terrorists' is going to help things in Syria or his relations with other Muslim countries. He better wake up and realise Syria is going to join the ever increasing power of Sunni and there is nothing he can do to stop it. Shia is on the decline, with its main leader, Iran, in alot of trouble because of it huge population - about to go much higher - of unemployed youth.
    • DAVID  •  Auckland, New Zealand  •  28 days ago
      We here about Syria all the time but very little about Bahrain where dozens of protesters have been killed and thrown in prison. Doctors who attended the injured were tried in court for treason and given 15 year prison sentences. Saudi Arabia - like Bahrain another undemocratic feudal monarchy sent troops in force the protesters off the street. But do we hear the same international condemnation of these two brutal regimes as we do of Syria? No we do not. Because they are our "friends" who supply us with oil and naval bases. The West are hypocrits who only promote democracy when it suits them and look the other way when it does not.
    • The world's press  •  28 days ago
      errr it is NONE of our business - poking our nose into others business has cost us dearly.. LEAVE EM ALONE let em fight it out amongst themselves - we have enough wars going on internally!!!
    • Alan  •  Clitheroe, England  •  27 days ago
      Russia supplies Assad with weapons,western governments supply the rebels with weapons. Islamists kill islamists. Everyone goes home happy. Whats the problem?
    • Pasakka  •  Düsseldorf, Germany  •  27 days ago
      saudi-arabia is the next stop after this one.
    • Taylan  •  Altindag, Turkey  •  28 days ago
      i dnt get why ppl are angry about this one nobody including a lot of muslims said anything when sadia arabia crushed bahranian ressistance but yhh der wer a resistance against a more religious state
    • James  •  Ilford, England  •  28 days ago
      Thats a beautiful new gun the young man has. Do you think it came from the US, UK, France or Israel? A man in Algeria has commented that the amount of small arms going into North Africa and the Middle East has killed his arms business. You can now buy a rocket/missile for the price of 2 number AK47's. Scary stuff.
    • weapons of mass-humanitar ...  •  London, England  •  27 days ago
      Not a single photo of the 2000 soldiers or the 50 tanks. I'm not sure these "activists" are entirely trustworthy. Maybe all the murdering, kidnapping and destruction being carried out by these same "activists" gets in the way of providing any evidence whatsoever for their grossly exaggerated claims. Just a thought.
    • sparrow  •  London, England  •  27 days ago
      Has the world learnt nothing from the great wars. Some people have spent there whole lives in a war zone, children have been brought up with it, so sad that people can't live in peace.
    • Aziz  •  28 days ago
      Rebels, a new syrian flag, new Syrian transition council, France leading calls for stronger international action on Syria, the Arab League and the UN pushing for a resolution to intervene in Syria, is this a deja vue? Oh yeah it's Libya all over again.
    • James  •  Ilford, England  •  26 days ago
      This is definately a hot topic. Enjoying all comments.
    • OOR William.  •  Renfrew, Scotland  •  27 days ago
      This is not News. MUSLIMS Have Declared War on HUMANITY in GLOBAL Fashion, With there Religious Differences .There Holy Wars & There JIHADS E.t.c E.t.c...( Put an end to to it.) The Sufferance of the local Inhabitants of all these Countrys is INHUMANE. So N.A.T.O what are you Going to do . ( Wait for the Highest Bidder .) ( Like Saudia Arabain OIL Contracts.) Before you Pick a Country to Invade & Save the Unfortunate People for Democracy... A N.A.T.O waste of Space. ( PROFITS before PEOPLE,)
    • A  •  London, England  •  27 days ago
      KILL KILL KILL, FIGHT FIGHT THATS ALL HUMANS ARE GOOD AT.........UN HAS BALLS OF ICE,,,,,,MELTS WHEN TROUBLE BREWS.......UN = UNUNITED NATIONS !!
    • SIR DAVID  •  28 days ago
      I do not understand why that bloke wants us to look at memphis or maybe elvis has come back but i would like to point out that all this stuff about the arab uprisings is just a cover story to keep the people thinking about oil i.e. war with iran libya and so on,the real story is going on in italy with what andrea rossi and his energy catalizer or E-CAT will do to reshape the whole energy field, also Ni-H technology and the greek company that are doing similar that will also change everything we know about energy,isnt it funny that both the greek and italian countrys have been handed over to the I.M.F.who are both run by the federal reserve and the bank of england,so why do yahoo ignor the energy revelution that will give us near free energy by the end of 2012 or will the New World Order invoke another major war and again taking our minds onto oil yet again.
    • kovcv1  •  Manchester, England  •  28 days ago
      As with any war that involves guns, a conflict between 2 countries in a war will result with casualties and deaths yet, how the hell does this government or any law expect a British solder to fight back if he shoots and kill's a rebel in defending his unit and then having to face prosecution regardless to the situation, the fact is, give the rebels the chance and they will kill you without a second thought yet, we never hear of them getting prosecuted. Where is the law for the innocent solder that is fighting for the innocent people.