Red Cross seeks way to deliver aid in Syria
Syria: The Red Cross said it was in talks with the Syrian
authorities and rebels to halt the violence so that it can deliver aid,
amid calls to allow women and children out of the besieged city of Homs.
President Bashar al-Assad, on Monday again accused foreigners of
funding and arming “terrorist groups” with the aim of destabilising the
country, as Iranian warships docked at the port of Tartus in a show of
force. Despite a weekend appeal by a visiting Chinese envoy in Damascus
for the violence to stop, monitors said regime forces targeted the
central city of Homs for a 17th straight day.
Attacks there claimed 12 of the 24 lives lost -- 19 civilians and
five soldiers -- across the country on Monday, according to reports by
the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and state media. Four people
died, including three children from the same family, when rockets hit
the Al-Malaab district of the main rebel stronghold in Homs, said the
Britain-based Observatory.
The official SANA news agency said a lieutenant colonel and a
sergeant were killed in a clash with an “armed terrorist group” in
Athraya, central Hama province. “The International Committee of the Red
Cross is exploring several possibilities for delivering urgently needed
humanitarian aid,” said ICRC spokesman Bijan Farnoudi.
“These include the cessation of fight and ICRC access to the people
in need.”ing in the most affected areas to facilitate swift Syrian Arab
Red Crescent China's influential People's Daily newspaper warned that
any Western support for the rebels would trigger a “large-scale civil
war.” AFP |