Syrian port Latakia under heavy machine-gun fire | Inquirer News

Syrian port Latakia under heavy machine-gun fire

/ 06:26 PM August 16, 2011

NICOSIA—Heavy machine-gun fire reverberated Tuesday across the Syrian Mediterranean port of Latakia, which is engulfed by a major military offensive, activists said.

“The heavy machine gun-fire and bullets were intense in areas of Latakia, Ramel, Masbah al-Shaab and Ain Tamra for more than three hours,” said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Since Sunday, 30 civilians have been killed in Latakia in an offensive that has seen use of gunboats by Syrian security forces for the first time since the start of pro-democracy revolts in mid-March.

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Syrian official news agency SANA has denied any maritime operation.

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UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the agency for Palestinian refugees, reported that more than 5,000 refugees had fled the Ramel camp in southern Latakia under fire.

The Syrian daily Al-Watan said Tuesday Latakia was “under control” of the army.

“The situation (in Latakia) is under control, especially after the army arrested dozens of armed men during a complicated operation,” it said.

“Armed men had set up barricades for laying mines to prevent the army from advancing,” which “has led to residents fleeing the neighborhood’s,” the daily added.

Late Monday, a demonstrator was killed and 10 others wounded in the central city of Homs as security forces opened fire on the crowd, activists said.

In the nearby town of Qusayr, around 7,000 people called for the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime as they marched despite heavy presence of security forces, activists said.

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Syria has repeatedly said it is battling “armed gangs” — a claim denied by rights groups who say the crackdown has killed 1,827 civilians since mid-March, while 416 security forces also died.

The first two weeks of August, since the beginning of Ramadan, 260 people, including 14 women and 31 children have been counted dead by coordinating committees of demonstrators.

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TAGS: Conflict, Syria

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