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Blood, Flesh, Gore At Site Of Suspected Massacre In Syria

Late last month, people gathered near a home that had been destroyed by fighting in al-Latamneh, Hama Province, Syria.
Austin Tice
/
MCT /Landov
Late last month, people gathered near a home that had been destroyed by fighting in al-Latamneh, Hama Province, Syria.

There was "blood on the floor ... pieces of flesh ... a tablecloth filled with gore" when U.N. monitors and journalists got to one home today in a tiny central Syrian village where activists say dozens of people were killed by pro-Assad forces this week.

That's the report from NPR's Deborah Amos, one of the journalists traveling with those U.N. monitors. She spoke with our Newscast Desk just after 9 a.m. ET, from that village.

According to Deb, there were also "big clubs" with what appeared to be blood stains. And, she says, one man who claimed to be the sole survivor of the violence appeared to tell the U.N. personnel about what happened. He was in tears, she reports.

Though it has not yet been determined exactly what happened in the village of Quebir on Wednesday, the scene in that home certainly made it appear that "some serious violence took place," Deb said.

This latest scene of what appears to have been another effort by Syrian army forces or militias loyal to President Bashar Assad to put down resistance, has prompted new condemnations from the U.S., other nations and U.N.

We've been monitoring today's developments.

Our original post — " 'Heavy' Syrian Army Presence Around City Near Suspected Massacre Site" — and earlier updates:

United Nations monitors who were turned back Thursday by small arms fire are trying again today to reach a village in central Syria where activists say dozens of civilians were killed this week by army forces or militia fighters loyal to President Bashar Assad.

NPR's Deborah Amos, who is among a group of journalists following the monitors, tells our Newscast desk that as the convoy drove farther into central Syria today the army presence grew heavy.

There are "lots of soldiers" along the roads leading into the city of Hama, which is near the site of the suspected massacre, Deb reported. It is a "very, very stiff military presence."

The Assad government denies it was responsible for any mass killings in the area this week. But activists say there was shelling and that some women and children were executed by gunmen. The reports echo what happened on May 25 in Houla, Syria, when forces loyal to Assad killed more than 100 people.

It was quiet earlier today, Deb added, in Hama. There did not appear to be any anti-Assad protesters out in the streets. Since anti-Assad protests began in March 2011, Friday (the Muslim holy day) has frequently been the time for demonstrations. But that's also meant that Fridays have seen some of the most brutal force used against protesters.

Meanwhile, The New York Times reports that "fresh fighting was reported elsewhere on Friday as the authorities sought to extend their writ in an area under stubborn rebel control. The new shelling by government forces in the central city of Homs came a day after sharp denunciations of Damascus from diplomats who have struggled vainly to find a workable, consensus solution to the crisis."

According to The Associated Press, "Syrian troops on Friday shelled a rebel-held neighborhood in the flashpoint central city of Homs as Assad's troops appeared to be readying to storm the area that has been out of government control for months, activists said. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local Coordination Committees had no immediate word on casualties from the shelling of Hom's Khaldiyeh neighborhood. Amateur videos posted online showed a small white plane, apparently a drone, flying over Homs."

Update at 8:30 a.m. ET. A "Surge" By The Monitors, But Will Results Be Inconclusive?

From "a road outside the village" where the massacre reportedly occurred, Deb tells the Newscast Desk that the U.N. has mounted something of "a surge" as it tries to get monitors to the site. About 20 personnel — many more than the handful who usually travel on such missions — are on today's trip.

But she also says that the village, which she can see from her vantage point, is quite small. Probably no more than 100 or 130 people would live there. If there's no one left there, as is possible, "we could still come up with an inconclusive narrative," Deb says, with the Assad regime claiming that only about nine people died there and activists saying there were more than 80 deaths.

Update at 8 a.m. ET. Security Team Entering Village.

The BBC's Paul Danahar, another of the journalists following the monitors, writes on his Twitter page (@pdanahar) that:

"Am now on outskirts of Qubeir #Syria where Wednesday's massacre took place. The UN has sent in a forward team to assess the safety situation."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.