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Syrian Forces Widen Attacks as Cease-Fire Unravels


Image taken from YouTube on April 17, 2012, shows smoke rising from reported shelling by Syrian government forces on the district of Khalidiya in the flashpoint central city of Homs
Image taken from YouTube on April 17, 2012, shows smoke rising from reported shelling by Syrian government forces on the district of Khalidiya in the flashpoint central city of Homs

With a cease-fire in Syria teetering, Syrian forces widened their attacks on opposition strongholds on Tuesday as an advance team of international observers worked to broaden its mission in the country.

Rights groups and activists say at least two people were killed in violence on Tuesday. They say forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad continued shelling in the central Homs region and in the northwestern Idlib province, in spite of a cease-fire that took effect five days ago.

The agreement, brokered by international envoy Kofi Annan, calls for government forces and the opposition to stop attacks. Annan is in Doha on Tuesday to brief the Arab League on Syria.

In Damascus, the head of an advance team of six unarmed United Nations observers said it would take time for monitors to reach the hardest hit areas. Moroccan Colonel Ahmed Himmiche said Tuesday the group's mission "is a difficult process [that] requires coordination and planning, we should move step by step."

Middle East expert Nadim Shehadi tells VOA the monitors' presence will not curb violence in Syria unless the international community unites on a plan for the country.

"The monitoring mission will not be effective if there is no international will to support it and if there is no international coherent policy on Syria," said Shehadi.

Kofi Annan's Six-Point Peace Plan

  • A Syrian-led political process to address the aspirations and concerns of the Syrian people.
  • A U.N. supervised end to armed violence by all parties in Syria.
  • Timely humanitarian assistance in all areas affected by fighting.
  • Increasing the pace and scale of release of arbitrarily detained people.
  • Ensuring freedom of movement for journalists.
  • Respecting freedom of association and the right to demonstrate peacefully.U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon voiced concern on Tuesday that the size of the monitoring mission may be too small to have an impact. He said the total mission of about 250 monitors may not be enough "considering the current situation and the vastness of the country."

Meanwhile, world powers are considering tighter economic pressure on Syria.

In Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused unspecified external forces of seeking to undermine Annan's efforts to end more than a year of bloodshed in Syria, saying support for government foes is threatening the fragile cease-fire.

In televised remarks Tuesday, Lavrov said such actors "are doing this by delivering arms to the Syrian opposition and stimulating the activity of rebels who continue to attack both government and civilian facilities."

Russia has provided Syria's government with weapons and - along with China - shielded Assad by blocking U.N. Security Council resolutions condemning his government for a crackdown which the U.N. says has killed more than 9,000 people since March 2011.
Moscow has pledged its full support for Annan's peace plan and last week called on the Syrian government to step up implementation, but Russia has also put much of the blame for the bloodshed on opposition forces.

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