At least 1,383 civilians killed in Syria violence: new monitor toll

At least 1,383
civilians, the vast majority of them Alawites, were killed in a recent wave of
violence that gripped Syria's Mediterranean coast, a war monitor said
Wednesday.
The Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights said the civilians were killed in "executions by security
forces and allied groups" after the violence broke out last week in the
coastal heartland of the Alawite minority, to which toppled president Bashar
al-Assad belongs.
The Britain-based
Observatory added that even as the violence subsided, the toll was still rising
as bodies continued to be discovered, many on farmland or in their homes.
The latest deaths were
recorded in the coastal provinces of Latakia and Tartus, and in the
neighbouring central province of Hama, it said.
It accused the
security forces and allied groups of participating in "field executions,
forced displacement and burning of homes, with no legal deterrent".
The violence began on
Thursday when clashes broke out after gunmen loyal to Assad staged attacks on
the new security forces.
At least 231 security
personnel were killed in the ensuing fighting, according to an official toll.
The Observatory said 250 pro-Assad fighters were also killed.
In a widely-circulated
video verified by the Observatory, an elderly woman is seen alongside the
bodies of two men believed to be her sons.
Two fighters appear in
the background and a voice behind the camera can be heard shouting that they
will "crush" all the Alawites. AFP could not independently verify the
video.
The Observatory said
the fighters belonged to the security forces and said the woman's grandson was
also killed in the attack on a village in Latakia.
It identified the
woman as Zarqa Sebahiya, 86, and later spoke to her daughter, who told the
Observatory that she had been guarding the bodies for four days in the hopes of
burying them.
The UN Human Rights
Office said it had documented "summary executions" that appeared
"to have been carried out on a sectarian basis".
Since Assad was ousted
in December, many Alawites have lived in fear of reprisals for his brutal rule.
Interim President
Ahmad al-Sharaa, who led the Sunni Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS)
that toppled Assad, has vowed to prosecute those behind the "bloodshed of
civilians" and has set up a fact-finding committee.
The spokesman for the
committee, Yasser al-Farhan, has said Syria is determined to "prevent
unlawful revenge and guarantee that there is no impunity".
The authorities have
also announced the arrest of at least seven people since Monday on suspicion of
"violations" against civilians.
HTS, an offshoot of
the former Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda, is still proscribed as a terrorist
organisation by several governments including the United States.
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