Pakistan Today

Damascus denies role in Houla massacre amid outcry

The Syrian government denied on Sunday its forces were responsible for killing 92 people, a third of them children, in the central city of Houla as Arab and Western states accused it of a massacre.
The government was “not at all” responsible for the massacre in the central town of Houla that sparked an international outcry, foreign ministry spokesman Jihad al-Makdissi said.
Blaming “terrorists” for the killings on Friday and Saturday, the spokesman said the government had opened an investigation.
Makdissi added that UN-Arab envoy to Syria, Kofi Annan, was expected to arrive in Damascus on Monday, although there was no confirmation from the peace envoy’s spokesman.
“We are under strict instructions not to disclose travel plans,” said Ahmad Fawzi in Geneva. Arab and Western governments have expressed outrage at the “massacre” in Houla.
The rebel Free Syrian Army warned that unless the international community took concrete action it would no longer be bound by Annan’s UN-backed peace plan that was supposed to start with a ceasefire last month.
Makdissi called for a return to “dialogue and the negotiation table” after people took to the streets in dozens of towns and cities across Syria on Saturday to denounce the Houla killings and call for the fall of the regime.
The head of a UN observer mission, deployed under Annan’s plan, warned on Saturday of “civil war” in Syria after his observers counted more than 92 bodies, 32 of them children, in Houla.
Amid mounting calls for world action to halt the bloodshed, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon joined the chorus of international condemnation.
“This appalling and brutal crime, involving indiscriminate and disproportionate use of force, is a flagrant violation of international law,” a UN spokesman quoted Ban and Annan as saying.

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