UK & World News

  • 27 May 2012, 5:25

Dozens Of Children Killed In Syria Massacre

A total of 32 children under the age of 10 are among 92 people confirmed killed in fighting on a town near the city of Homs.

Activists said Syrian government forces attacked Houla with artillery.

It is the bloodiest loss of life since a ceasefire brokered by the United Nations and the Arab League was put into effect last month.

Confirming the killings, the head of the UN observer mission to Syria, General Robert Mood, in Damascus, told Sky News: "Whichever way you look at this, whoever started and whoever responded and whoever contributed, to this deplorable act of violence should be held responsible.

"This indiscriminate and disproportionate use of force is unacceptable and I would also say unforgivable."

Up to 250 UN observers are in Syria to monitor the ceasefire and a team arrived in the Houla region, which is made up of several villages in the province of Homs, on Saturday.

Gen Mood told Sky it had been impossible to send unarmed observers to the area until the violence subsided.

Amateur videos posted online showed graphic images of dead children lying on a floor. Some were wearing bloody clothes and had severe head wounds.

Another clip showed a mass grave, four bodies wide.

Foreign Secretary William Hague has called for a "strong international response" and said Britain was calling for an urgent session of the UN Security Council.

He said: "Our urgent priority is to establish a full account of this appalling crime and to move swiftly to ensure that those responsible are identified and held to account.

"We are consulting urgently with our allies on a strong international response, including at the UN Security Council, the EU and UN Human Rights bodies."

Earlier, Walid Saffour, from the Syrian Human Rights Committee, said President Bashar al Assad's forces were "continuing their onslaught" in Houla.

"The inaction of the international community helps the Syrian authorities to perpetrate these massacres on a large scale," he told Sky News.

The Syrian government, for its part, blamed the killings on "armed terrorist groups".

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon said: "This appalling and brutal crime involving indiscriminate and disproportionate use of force is a flagrant violation of international law and of the commitments of the Syrian government to cease the use of heavy weapons in population centers and violence in all its forms."

France's foreign minister Laurent Fabius condemned the massacre and said he was "making immediate arrangements for a Friends of Syria group meeting in Paris", and the White House said the attack was a "vile testament to an illegitimate regime".

Meanwhile, the rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) called for the Friends of Syria group of nations to carry out air strikes on the forces of President Assad.

The FSA has said it is no longer committed to the peace plan negotiated with the Assad regime.

Syria's main opposition bloc has also urged the UN Security Council to convene an emergency meeting to examine what happened in Houla.

"Some of the victims were hit by heavy artillery while others, entire families, were massacred," Bassma Kodmani, of the Syrian National Council, said.

The latest violence comes as tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets, and tanks were reportedly deployed to counter public action after Friday prayers.

For the first time since the uprising against President Assad's regime erupted 14 months ago, army tanks rumbled through Aleppo, the London-based Syrian Observatory said.

Update:

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what do you think?

8 comments

john

10:20am on 26/5/2012

Who is arming the "rebels"? answers please.

Score: 3

Micky Lyden

1:21pm on 26/5/2012

Nothing new then

Score: 2

Katherine Holder

6:48pm on 26/5/2012

I don't know what horrifies me more; the fact that there are children the same age as my boys lying butchered on the floor, for the crime of living in a village whose inhabitants are brave enough to protest, against the tyrrany and abuse they are habitually subjected to; or that our nation (who enjoy the safety offered to us by our democracy and the human rights act so that we dont have to fear our children being murdered if we wish to protest) are so de-sensatised to such atrocities that our responses are apathetic. Be outraged. Make a stand. Insist upon justice. There is no greater power than a collective of angry people.

Score: 5
2 replies

shamilaamna

10:02pm on 26/5/2012

Well said x

stevie may

9:12am on 29/5/2012

A point well made, put eloquently and clearly

Elaine Moore

7:10pm on 26/5/2012

This is not right

Score: 3

ronniewood99

8:32pm on 26/5/2012

the last days of this system

Score: 3

Andrew Shingleton

9:36pm on 26/5/2012

Lets hope th 'monitors', 'monitored' this!

Score: 2

Name witheld

6:39am on 27/5/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 1

stevie may

9:10am on 29/5/2012

We helped the people of Libya, we should help the people of Syria. . . Arm the Free Syrian Army now ! It is the moral duty of every democratic country to support other people who are oppressed by dictators. . . Just because Russia and China are semi dictatorships themselves, dosent mean that western civilization has to be. . . The Assad regime is evil - I hope it goes the same way as Iraq and Libya - freedom and democracy for ALL the people of the world. Forget religion, politics, culture and geography, the people of Syria are human beings, they are our responsibility. One love.

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