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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Dozens of Syrians massacred

Officials, rebels blame each other

Patrick J. Mcdonnell Los Angeles Times

BEIRUT – Dozens of civilians were murdered in the strife-torn city of Homs, the Syrian government and opposition activists said Monday, as diplomats in New York and elsewhere struggled to forge terms for a possible cease-fire.

Each side in the Syrian conflict blamed the other for the latest carnage in Homs, which has suffered the highest number of casualties in the almost yearlong rebellion against President Bashar Assad.

Opposition advocates said security services on Sunday killed at least 53 people, all but six of them women and children. Many had their throats slit, the opposition said, and most were from the Homs neighborhood of Karm Zeitoun, where armed rebels have clashed with government security forces.

The official Syrian Arab News Agency in turn reported that “terrorist armed groups” in Homs had kidnapped and killed “scores of civilians,” mutilated their bodies and filmed the corpses.

The killers’ motivation, the state media said, was public relations: using the harrowing images in a worldwide campaign to blame Syrian security personnel for coldblooded massacre.

Kofi Annan, a special envoy seeking peace in Syria, visited Qatar and Turkey today after two days of talks with Assad in Damascus that yielded no breakthrough.

“These are grave and appalling reports of atrocities and abuses” in Syria,” Annan, a former U.N. secretary-general, told reporters in Ankara, Reuters reported.

In New York, the current U.N. secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, called on the Syrian president to act within “days” on Annan’s proposals aimed at curbing the bloodshed.

At a meeting of U.N. Security Council members in New York, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called Assad “cynical” for receiving Annan even as his army was launching an assault on the northwest province of Idlib and “continuing its aggression” in the restive cities of Hama, Homs and Rastan.

The top U.S. diplomat indicated that Washington and Moscow still had major differences in their efforts to craft a diplomatic solution for Syria. Moscow and China last month vetoed a U.S.-backed proposal that would have called on Assad to cede power.

On Monday, Clinton appeared to criticize a new Russian initiative. Moscow’s proposal says nothing about Assad stepping down but mandates that both sides in the Syrian conflict withdraw their forces, subject to inspection by international monitors. Clinton drew a pointed distinction between Syrian government violence and “self defense” by civilians.

“We reject any equivalence between premeditated murders by a government’s military machine and the actions of civilians under siege driven to self defense,” Clinton said.