Updated on
Summary Red Cross urges authorities and rebels to agree daily ceasefires so medical aid can reach civilians.
Syrian government forces killed at least 100 people on Tuesday in assaults on villages and an artillery barrage in the restive city of Homs, activists said, and the Red Cross called for daily ceasefires to allow in urgently needed aid.Washington, which is preparing for a Friends of Syria meeting of Western and Arab states opposing President Bashar al-Assad, declined to rule out eventually providing arms to rebels seeking to overthrow him.U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon said he was searching for a candidate to name as a humanitarian coordinator for Syria, whose role could evolve into seeking a political solution to the conflict.Security forces killed at least 100 people in attacks on Homs and raids on villages and towns in the province of Idlib near Turkey, the Local Coordination Committees said.Ten children and three women were among the dead, the opposition activists organization, which documents what it describes as killings and human rights abuses by security forces, said in a statement.In Damascus, security forces opened fire on demonstrators overnight, wounding at least four, activists said. Violence has hit the capital over the past week, undermining Assads assertion that the 11-month-old uprising against his rule is limited to the provinces and the work of saboteurs.Activist accounts of the violence could not be confirmed. The government bars most foreign journalists from Syria.The International Committee of the Red Cross said it had asked authorities and rebels to agree daily ceasefires so life-saving aid can reach civilians in hard-hit areas including Homs.It should last at least two hours every day, so that ICRC staff and Syrian Arab Red Crescent volunteers have enough time to deliver aid and evacuate the wounded and the sick, ICRC President Jakob Kellenberger said.Western and Arab powers that are openly seeking Assads downfall are preparing for the inaugural meeting of a Friends of Syria contact group in Tunisia on Friday.Asked about the prospect of arming the rebels, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said: We dont believe that it makes sense to contribute now to the further militarization of Syria.But she added: That said... if we cant get Assad to yield to the pressure that we are all bringing to bear, we may have to consider additional measures.Russia and China back Assads own program for reforms, which includes plans for a referendum on Sunday on a new constitution which would lead to elections in 90 days. Assad says this should satisfy demands for more democracy; his opponents say the proposals are a sham.Russia said it would not attend the Friends of Syria meeting because the Syrian government would not be represented. Lebanon, which has tried to distance itself from the turmoil across its border, will also stay away from the Tunis meeting.Russia and China have faced Western and Arab criticism for blocking U.N. action against Syria. A former Syrian Defence Ministry auditor who defected in January told Reuters Moscows arms sales to Damascus - nearly $1 billion last year - had increased sharply since the start of the uprising.In an interview with Reuters, U.N. chief Ban said he was urgently contacting prospective candidates for the role of U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Syria. The U.N. General Assembly asked Ban last week to name someone for the job. Russia has said it would support a U.N. humanitarian envoy.
Featured
