Philippine Daily Inquirer

Syria, rebels trade blame for deadly blast

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BEIRUT—UN observers have inspected the site of an explosion that flattened a block of houses in the central Syrian city of Hama and killed at least 16 people, while the government and the opposition traded blame over the cause of the blast.

On Thursday, Syrian state-run media said rebel bomb-makers accidental­ly set off the explosives the previous day. Antiregime activists said intense shelling by government forces had caused the extensive damage. It was impossible to independen­tly verify the conflictin­g accounts because President Bashar al-assad’s regime, facing a 13-month-old uprising, has re- stricted access for journalist­s and other outside witnesses.

The spokespers­on for UN special envoy Kofi Annan, Ahmad Fawzi, said observers visited the site but he had no immediate word on what they saw.

Two UN observers are stationed in Hama, part of an advance team of 15 monitors who are visiting hot spots to try to salvage a cease-fire that is part of a peace plan aimed at ending the violence and bringing the two sides to the negotiatin­g table. The observer team is to be expanded in the coming weeks to up to 300.

Amateur videos said to be of Wednesday’s blasts in Hama showed a large cloud of white and yellow smoke rising from a neighborho­od surrounded by green fields. In a later video, dozens of people searched through the debris, including huge chunks of cement and broken cinderbloc­ks. Another clip shows the bloodied body of a little girl being carried through a crowd of wailing men.

The state-run Syrian news agency Sana said rebels mishandlin­g explosives triggered a blast that killed at least 16 people and severely damaged at least six houses.

The Local Coordinati­on Committees, a network of activists, denied that and said it was in- tense shelling from government tanks that caused the damage. The group put the death toll as high as 70, but that estimate was not confirmed by others.

Another opposition group, the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, said the cause of the destructio­n was not immediatel­y clear. The Observator­y initially cited reports by local residents that they had come under attack from regime forces.

However, the head of the group, Rami Abdul-rahman, said he could not confirm those reports and called for an investigat­ion by UN observers. He said at least 16 people were killed.

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