By Khaled Yacoub Oweis
Syrian security forces killed at least eight civilians on
Sunday in raids on restive northwestern towns, residents and activists said,
while the authorities blamed armed gangs for a bus ambush that killed nine
people.
The civilian deaths were
reported in rural Hama and the adjacent province of Idlib, both areas that have
seen intensified raids and arrests of people involved in popular unrest since
last week's defection of Hama's attorney general.
Activists said the authorities
suspected Judge Adnan Bakkour was in hiding in the countryside around Hama.
A local activist said hundreds
of security men were conducting house to house searches in villages around
Bakkour's home town of Kfar Banouza and arresting scores of people.
Bakkour, who according to the
authorities was kidnapped by gunmen last Monday, has said in a statement
broadcast via YouTube that he had resigned because security forces had killed
72 jailed protesters and activists at Hama's central prison on the eve of a
military assault on the city on July 31.
He said at least another 420
people were killed in the operation and were buried in public parks.
Two residents contacted by
Reuters in Hama province said busloads of security forces had gone to Khan
Sheihkon, a town 50 km (30 miles) north of Hama, searching for scores of army
deserters who may have fled to their home towns in recent weeks.
Most army conscripts are from
Syria's Sunni Muslim majority and many come from rural areas shaken by military
efforts to crush six months of protests against President Bashar al-Assad.
Army commanders and security
chiefs are mostly from Assad's minority Alawite sect.
The state news agency SANA
said six military personnel and three civilian employees were killed and 17
wounded when an "armed terrorist group" ambushed their military bus
near the town of Mhardat in rural Hama. It said three of the gunmen were killed
during a chase.
Assad has repeatedly said he
is fighting agents of what he calls a foreign plot to divide Syria.
Syrian authorities have
expelled most foreign media, making it difficult to verify events in the
country.
Demonstrators have been
encouraged by the fall of Libya's Muammar Gaddafi and rising international
pressure on Syria, including a European Union embargo on Syrian oil exports.
Northwestern regions that
include the cities of Homs, Hama and Idlib have seen an uptick in daily
protests and raids.
Residents said prominent
local activists Najati Tayara and Mustafa Rustum were among scores arrested in
the Deir Balba and Khalideyah districts of Homs and in Hama province, as well
as in the southern border city of Deraa, cradle of the uprising.
"They are raiding homes
in search of wanted activists and army deserters in Jeza and across several
towns in the south," said Ahmad Hariri, a resident of Herak where more
than 1,000 women and children demonstrated for the release of detainees.
"We want the
detainees," women could be heard chanting during the telephone call.
(Additional reporting by
Suleiman al-Khalidi in Amman; Editing by Alistair Lyon)
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Source : Reuters
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