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Syria forces occupy central Hama as U.N. condemns violence (Reuters)
AMMAN (Reuters) – Syrian tanks occupied the main square in central Hama Wednesday after heavy shelling of the city, residents said, taking control of the of some of the largest protests against President Bashar al-Assad.
Human rights campaigners say more than 90 people have been killed in Hama since Assad unleashed a military assault on Sunday to regain control of the city, scene of a 1982 massacre of anti-government rebels.
At the United Nations, the Security Council condemned human rights violations and the use of force against civilians by the Syrian authorities — its first substantive action on the five-month-old uprising.
But it urged all sides to act with restraint, reflecting divisions among world powers on how to deal with the crisis.
Wednesday’s push into the heart of Hama coincided with the opening of the trial in Egypt of former President Hosni Mubarak, toppled by an uprising which shook the Arab world and inspired the protests against Assad.
“All communications have been cut off. The regime is using the media focus on the Hosni Mubarak trial to finish off Hama,” one resident told Reuters by satellite phone from the city.
He said tanks and military units including paratroopers and special forces were seen moving to the central Orontes Square from the south, accompanied by militia known as ’shabbiha’.
Residents said shelling concentrated on al-Hader district, large parts of which were razed in 1982 when Assad’s late father President Hafez al-Assad crushed an armed Islamist uprising, killing thousands.
A Syrian pharmacist who managed to talk with her family in the city told Reuters that they had tried to flee but that the ’shabbiha’ were randomly shooting residents. Several buildings in Hama had caught fire from tank shelling and snipers were in position on rooftops in Orontes Square, she said.
The Local Coordination Committees grassroots activists’ group said in a statement the authorities were trying prevent any news from emerging on the ferocity of the assault. The group could no longer contact its members in Hama.
“Communications have been totally cut off in Hama, together with water and electricity. There is a big movement of refugees trying to flee the city,” the statement said.
Authorities say the army has entered Hama to confront gunmen who were intimidating residents. State television broadcast footage of armed men in civilian clothes who it said had attacked security forces and government buildings.
Syria has expelled most independent media, making it difficult to verify accounts from activists and authorities.
The assault suggests Assad will resist calls for change that have swept Syria and much of the Arab world, and has led to Western calls for tougher international measures.
The U.N. Security Council Wednesday condemned “widespread violations of human rights and the use of force against civilians by the Syrian authorities.”
The document, agreed after three days of hard bargaining, also urges Damascus to fully respect human rights.
END ALL VIOLENCE
Syria’s neighbor Lebanon, where Damascus’ influence is strong, disassociated itself from the formal statement agreed by the other 14 members of the council. A Lebanese envoy said the Western-drafted statement would not help the situation.
The council called for “an immediate end to all violence and urges all sides to act with utmost restraint, and to refrain from reprisals, including attacks against state institutions.”
That phrase was a gesture to Russia and other countries that had called for a balanced statement that would apportion to both sides blame for the violence. Western nations say the two sides cannot be equated.
Washington says Assad has lost legitimacy and has imposed sanctions on the president and his top officials, but has stopped short of directly calling on him to leave office as it did to Mubarak and Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi.
Western officials fear instability in Syria and the wider Middle East if protesters oust Assad, whose family has ruled for four decades and kept Syria’s frontier with the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights quiet despite its anti-Israel alliance with Iran.
The White House slightly hardened its stance Wednesday, saying the United States viewed him as the cause of instability in the country.
“Syria would be a better place without President Assad,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said at a news conference.
Human rights campaigners said the assaults by Assad’s forces across Syria Monday and Tuesday had killed at least 27 civilians, including 13 in Hama. That brought the total to about 137 dead throughout Syria since Sunday, 93 of them in Hama, according to witnesses, residents and rights campaigners.
Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Arinc Bulent, whose country had grown close to Assad in recent years, issued the strongest condemnation yet of the Syrian president by a Turkish leader.
“I’m saying this on my behalf, what’s going on in Hama today is an atrocity … Whoever carries this out can’t be our friend. They are making a big mistake,” he said.
(Additional reporting by Andrew Quinn and Malathi Nayak in Washington, Patrick Worsnip in New York and Ece Toksabay in Istanbul; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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