Most Syrians killed in massacre shot at close range - Action News
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Most Syrians killed in massacre shot at close range

Most of the 108 victims of a massacre in Syria last week were shot at close range, some of them women, children and entire families gunned down in their own homes, the UN's human rights office says.

Children, women, among those summarily executed at Houla, UN reports

UN mediator Kofi Annan, left, meets Tuesday with Syrian President Bashar Assad in Damascus, delivering a grave message. NATO countries ordered Syrian diplomats out of their countries on the same day. (SANA/Associated Press)

Most of the 108 victims of a massacre in Syria last week were shot at close range, some of them women, children and entire families gunned down in their own homes, the UN's human rights office says.

The massacre on Friday in Houla drew new international outrage, with more than half a dozen countries including Canada and Britain expelling Syrian diplomats in protest.

"We are at a tipping point," special envoy Kofi Annan told reporters Tuesday in Damascus, following a meeting with Syria's President Bashar Assad. "The Syrian people do not want the future to be one of bloodshed and division. Yet the killings continue and the abuses are still with us today.

"As I reminded the president, the international community will soon be reviewing the situation."

This frame grab made from an amateur video provided by Syrian activists on Monday claims to show the massacre in Houla on May 25 that killed more than 100 people, many of them children. The amateur footage shows people running along a street, purportedly just after the attack on Houla started. (Associated Press)

He called on the government and the armed opposition to stop all violence.

The UN report indicated that most of the dead were killed execution-style. The UN cited survivors and witnesses blaming the house-to-house killings on pro-government thugs known as shabiha, who often operate as hired muscle for the regime.

"What is very clear is this was an absolutely abominable event that took place in Houla, and at least a substantial part of it was summary executions of civilians, women and children," said Rupert Colville, spokesman for the UN High commissioner for Human Rights.

"At this point, it looks like entire families were shot in their houses."

The brutality of the Houla killings, documented in gruesome amateur videos of scores of bodies laid out before burial,raised new questions about the ability of a UN-brokered plan to end 15-months of violence in Syria.

The UN said that at least 108 people, including 34 women and 49 children, were killed in an attack that began on Friday and continued through the night on Houla, a group of poor farming villages northwest of the central Syrian city of Homs.

Most shot at close range

Speaking to reporters Tuesday in Geneva, Colville said UN monitors who visited the area found that fewer than 20 of the dead were killed by artillery fire. The rest appeared to have been shot at close range.

He said information from UN observers and other sources indicated that many of the victims were killed in the Houla village of Taldaw in two separate incidents.

He said a fuller investigation was needed, and called on Syria to allow free access to UN investigators.

Videos posted online by anti-regime activists show explosions in Houla, dismembered bodies lying in the streets, then row upon row of the dead laid out before being buried in a mass grave. Some of the videos showed dozens of dead children, some with gaping wounds.

Houla activists reached by Skype said government troops shelled the area after anti-government protests on Friday and clashed with local rebels. Later, shabiha from nearby villages swept through the area, stabbing residents and shooting them at close range.

Pro-regime thugs, militias

The Syrian regime has denied any role in the massacre, blaming the killings on "armed terrorists" who attacked army positions in the area and slaughtered innocent civilians. But it has provided no evidence to support its narrative nor has it given a death toll.

UN observers said they found tank and artillery shells in Houla after the attack, but stopped short of blaming regime forces for Friday's killings.

The new information provided by the UN draws attention to the role of the shabiha in 15 months of violence in Syria. Assad's government often deploys pro-regime thugs or armed militias to repress protests or carry out more military-style attacks on opposition areas.

They frequently work closely with soldiers and security forces, but the regime never acknowledges their existence, allowing it to deny responsibility for their actions.

A Syrian official on Tuesday again denied any involvement.

"It is irrational that any party who wants to make Annan's mission a success would ever commit such a massacre," Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad told reporters. He said Syria remained committed to Annan's plan and "had not committed a single violation."

Activists have posted videos of tanks and armoured vehicles in the middle of cities, a violation of the plan, and UN observers said they found spent tank and artillery shells in Houla after the massacre there. Funeral videos also showed local rebels among the mourners making it unlikely they carried out the killings.

Anti-regime rebels around the country regularly attack military convoys and checkpoints, killing soldiers.

7 nations expel Syrian envoys

Syria's international isolation deepened Tuesday in response to the killings, as France, Britain, Germany, Italy, Spain, Canada and Australia expelled Syrian diplomats.

French President Francois Hollande said Paris was expelling the Syrian ambassador and that France will host a meeting in early July of the so-called Friends of Syria, a group of nations seeking to resolve the crisis.

Britain expelled three diplomats; Australia kicked out two.

Austria said it cannot expel its Syrian ambassador because he is also the representative to UN organizations in Geneva. But Foreign Ministry spokesman Nikolaus Lutterotti said the ambassador would be summoned so officials could protest the Houla killings.

Longtime Syrian ally Russia has largely stood by Damascus, although Moscow is growing increasingly critical particularly over the Houla massacre. On Tuesday, however, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov accused unnamed countries of trying to use the Houla killings "as a pretext for taking military measures."

He said such nations sought to impede Annan's peace plan because it seeks dialogue between Syrians, not regime change.

The White House said Tuesday it remains opposed to military action in Syria, reasoning that would only lead to more carnage.

Spokesman Jay Carney said the Obama administration will continue offering non-lethal assistance to the Syrian people.He saidthe U.S. is working with its allies to assess further action, but he offered no specific detail about what those next steps might include.

Carney reaffirmed U.S. calls for Assad to leave power.

Syria's unrest began in March 2011, with protests calling for political change. Government troops swiftly cracked down at the uprising spread, and many in the opposition have taken up arms to defend their towns and attack government troops.

Annan said Tuesdaythat Assadagreed with him on the importance of humanitarian aid flowing to all parts of the country, including unfettered access for the UN and aid agencies.