The Washington Times

Rights group: Dozens killed in clashes in Syria

Protesters shout slogans against Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime after prayers in Tripoli, Lebanon, on Friday, Oct, 7, 2011. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)Protesters shout slogans against Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime after prayers in Tripoli, Lebanon, on Friday, Oct, 7, 2011. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

BEIRUT (AP) — Clashes over the weekend between Syrian soldiers and army defectors and a shooting at a funeral have killed at least 17 members of the military and 14 civilians, the latest sign of the militarization of the uprising against President Bashar Assad’s regime, a human rights group said Monday.

The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the latest fighting took place on Sunday in the northwestern province of Idlib, the central province of Homs, and the southern village of Dael. The activist group said the shooting continued on Monday.

The uprising against Mr. Assad’s regime began in mid-March amid a wave of anti-government protests in the Arab world that toppled autocrats in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Mr. Assad has reacted with deadly force that the U.N. estimates has left some 2,900 people dead.

“The situation has been terrible since yesterday,” said a resident of the central city of Homs, where the observatory reported at least seven civilians were killed on Sunday. “The clashes were very intense yesterday, and I heard shooting this morning as well.”

The man, who asked that his name not be used for fear of government reprisals, said he saw troops in armored personnel carriers around tense areas of Homs, such as Khaldiyeh and Baba Amr. “The army is isolating some areas,” he said.

The rights group said five soldiers and three civilians were killed in Dael, while the rest were killed in the Jabal al-Zawiyah areas in Idlib. Also Sunday, a shooting at a funeral in the Damascus suburb of Dumair left three dead, it said.

The fighting was the worst since last moth’s clashes in the central town of Rastan, which the army retook after five days of intense fighting. The Syrian government denies any defections and blames terrorists and Muslim extremists for the violence.

The trend toward militarization of the uprising has raised fears that Syria may be sliding toward civil war.

In Turkey, the state-run Anatolia Agency news service said Syrian soldiers fired on a makeshift camp on the Syrian side of the border on Sunday, wounding a man who later died in Turkey. It said family members were brought to Turkey, where he was hospitalized but could not be saved.

Meanwhile, Britain condemned the assassination of Kurdish opposition figure Mashaal Tammo, who was shot dead by masked gunmen Friday in the northeastern town of Qamishli.

Alistair Burt, Britain’s Middle East minister, said he “deplored the circumstances of Mr. Tammo’s death” and called on Syria to conduct a thorough investigation of the killing.

“There needs to be accountability for all deaths that have occurred,” Mr. Burt said in a statement released late Sunday. “The increasing spiral of violence adds to the growing sense of the loss of legitimacy of the Assad regime. It must end meeting protest with violence.”

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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