Mystery surrounded the whereabouts of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad on Thursday, as battles raged in the center of Damascus a day
after a bomber killed his top security chiefs.
The Syrian leader
made no public appearance and no statement after a bomb in the heart of
the capital killed his powerful brother-in-law, his defense minister and
a top general, drawing fierce army retaliation with heavy artillery
against the rebels.
On Thursday morning, residents said there was
no let-up in the heaviest fighting to hit the city in a 16-month revolt
against Assad's rule, now into its fifth day.
The fighting came
within sight of the presidential palace, near the security headquarters
where the bomber struck a crisis meeting of defense and security chiefs.
Residents in the Midan and Kafr Souseh districts said they heard explosions and heavy gunfire as helicopters buzzed overhead.
Checkpoints
around Midan and the ancient walled Old City of Damascus had been
removed, they said. It was unclear if security forces had changed
tactics to prevent rebels from targeting soldiers, or if it was a
temporary move in the heat of battle.
On Wednesday, an explosion
which nearly no residents heard struck at the heart of Assad's
government. Following the attack, rebellious neighborhoods were plunged
into fierce battles.
Assad's brother-in-law Assef Shawkat, a top
commander and one of the pillars of the Assad clan's rule, was killed in
the Wednesday blast along with Defense Minister Daoud Rajha.
Another
senior general was also killed and the heads of intelligence and the
Interior Ministry were wounded, deeply damaging the security apparatus
of the Assad family, which has ruled the country with an iron fist for
four decades.
The army shelled its own capital from the
surrounding mountains as night fell on Wednesday. Government troops,
having vowed retaliation for the assassination, fired machineguns into
the city from helicopters.
Rebels, massed in several neighborhoods, are armed mostly with small arms and rocket-propelled grenades.
Activist videos posted on the Internet showed bloodied bodies lying in the street.
Local media, citing security sources, said Assad was still in the capital but gave no further details.
FEARS OF DESTABILISATION
A
security source said the bomber who struck inside the security
headquarters was a bodyguard for Assad's inner circle. Anti-Assad groups
claimed responsibility.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the Damascus blast and expressed grave concern over the use of heavy weapons.
"Time is of the essence," he said. "The Syrian people have suffered for too long. The bloodshed must end now."
The
U.N. Security Council put off a scheduled vote on a Syria resolution
until Thursday and U.S. President Barack Obama telephoned President
Vladimir Putin of Russia, Assad's main ally, to try to persuade Moscow
to drop support for him.
Western leaders fear the conflict, which
has been joined by al Qaeda-style jihadists, could destabilize Syria's
neighbors: Israel, Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Jordan.
U.S. Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta said: "This is a situation that is rapidly
spinning out of control." He called for maximum global pressure on Assad
to step down.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said "the decisive fight" was under way in Damascus.
British
Prime Minister David Cameron, whose government has sponsored the
sanctions resolution, said on Thursday it was time for Assad to go to
avoid an all-out civil war.
Reuters) - Mystery surrounded the whereabouts of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad on Thursday, as battles raged in the center of Damascus a day
after a bomber killed his top security chiefs.
The Syrian leader
made no public appearance and no statement after a bomb in the heart of
the capital killed his powerful brother-in-law, his defense minister and
a top general, drawing fierce army retaliation with heavy artillery
against the rebels.
On Thursday morning, residents said there was
no let-up in the heaviest fighting to hit the city in a 16-month revolt
against Assad's rule, now into its fifth day.
The fighting came
within sight of the presidential palace, near the security headquarters
where the bomber struck a crisis meeting of defense and security chiefs.
Residents in the Midan and Kafr Souseh districts said they heard explosions and heavy gunfire as helicopters buzzed overhead.
Checkpoints
around Midan and the ancient walled Old City of Damascus had been
removed, they said. It was unclear if security forces had changed
tactics to prevent rebels from targeting soldiers, or if it was a
temporary move in the heat of battle.
On Wednesday, an explosion
which nearly no residents heard struck at the heart of Assad's
government. Following the attack, rebellious neighborhoods were plunged
into fierce battles.
Assad's brother-in-law Assef Shawkat, a top
commander and one of the pillars of the Assad clan's rule, was killed in
the Wednesday blast along with Defense Minister Daoud Rajha.
Another
senior general was also killed and the heads of intelligence and the
Interior Ministry were wounded, deeply damaging the security apparatus
of the Assad family, which has ruled the country with an iron fist for
four decades.
The army shelled its own capital from the
surrounding mountains as night fell on Wednesday. Government troops,
having vowed retaliation for the assassination, fired machineguns into
the city from helicopters.
Rebels, massed in several neighborhoods, are armed mostly with small arms and rocket-propelled grenades.
Activist videos posted on the Internet showed bloodied bodies lying in the street.
Local media, citing security sources, said Assad was still in the capital but gave no further details.
FEARS OF DESTABILISATION
A
security source said the bomber who struck inside the security
headquarters was a bodyguard for Assad's inner circle. Anti-Assad groups
claimed responsibility.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the Damascus blast and expressed grave concern over the use of heavy weapons.
"Time is of the essence," he said. "The Syrian people have suffered for too long. The bloodshed must end now."
The
U.N. Security Council put off a scheduled vote on a Syria resolution
until Thursday and U.S. President Barack Obama telephoned President
Vladimir Putin of Russia, Assad's main ally, to try to persuade Moscow
to drop support for him.
Western leaders fear the conflict, which
has been joined by al Qaeda-style jihadists, could destabilize Syria's
neighbors: Israel, Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Jordan.
U.S. Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta said: "This is a situation that is rapidly
spinning out of control." He called for maximum global pressure on Assad
to step down.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said "the decisive fight" was under way in Damascus.
British
Prime Minister David Cameron, whose government has sponsored the
sanctions resolution, said on Thursday it was time for Assad to go to
avoid an all-out civil war.
CRISIS UNIT
The generals killed
and wounded in the bombing form the core of Assad's crisis unit to crush
the revolt, which grew out of protests inspired by Arab Spring
uprisings that unseated leaders in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.
The
armed forces chief of staff, Fahad Jassim al-Freij, quickly took over as
defense minister, avoiding any impression of official paralysis.
"This
cowardly terrorist act will not deter our men in the armed forces from
continuing their sacred mission of pursuing the remnants of these armed
terrorist criminal gangs," Freij said on state television. "They will
cut off every hand that tries to hurt the security of the nation or its
citizens."
The bombing appeared to be part of a coordinated
assault on the capital that has escalated since the start of the week.
Rebel fighters call it the "liberation of Damascus" after months of
fierce clashes which activists say have killed 17,000 people.
Neighboring Jordan's King Abdullah said violence may have ruled out the possibility of a negotiated power transition.
"The
realities on the ground may have overtaken us, therefore I think the
clock is ticking and we have... reached the point where the political
option is too late," he told CNN in an interview.
Rebels were
jubilant at their success in penetrating into the capital. Abdullah
al-Shami, a rebel commander based in Turkey, said: "I expect a speedy
collapse of the regime ... and it means we will not be in need of
outside intervention, with the regime beginning to crumble much faster
than we envisaged."
Yet some opposition figures said victory would still not be easy.
"It
is going to be difficult to sustain supply lines and the rebels may
have to make a tactical withdrawal at one point, like they did in other
cities," veteran opposition activist Fawaz Tello said from Istanbul.
"But what is clear is that Damascus has joined the revolt."
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