Los Angeles Times

A new massacre in Syria

Bound bodies of 13 men are found. U.N. envoys struggle to save the peace plan.

- By Patrick J. Mcdonnell patrick.mcdonnell@latimes.com Times staff writer Carol J. Williams in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

BEIRUT — United Nations monitors in Syria reported a new massacre Wednesday as diplomats at U.N. headquarte­rs in New York scrambled to revive the faltering peace plan devised by special envoy Kofi Annan.

The latest atrocity — the bodies of 13 men were found bound and shot near the eastern city of Dair Alzour — wasn’t as gruesome as the massacre last week in Houla, where more than 100 people, mostly women and children, were killed, sparking internatio­nal outrage.

But this latest incident again raised fear that Syria is headed inexorably into a vicious cycle of tit-for-tat mass killings and civil war.

“All of the bodies had their hands tied behind their backs and some appear to have been shot in the head from a short distance,” the U.N. said in a statement. The men were not immediatel­y identified.

Maj. Gen. Robert Mood of Norway, head of the U.N. observer mission, called on both sides “to exercise restraint and end the cycle [of] violence for the sake of Syria and the Syrian people.”

The general’s plea came a day after Annan visited Damascus, the Syrian capital, and met with President Bashar Assad, urging him to “act now” to implement the U.N.-brokered peace blueprint. The plan, which went into effect with a cease-fire on April 12, has failed to stop the bloodshed.

In New York, members of the U.N. Security Council sought ways to salvage the agreement. Among other things, it calls for both sides to cease hostilitie­s and mandates that the government remove troops and heavy armor from populated areas.

After Annan’s deputy briefed the council mem- bers, Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s U.N. ambassador, acknowledg­ed to reporters that “there are very few positive elements.”

Russia has been Assad’s principal internatio­nal ally and has twice led U.N. vetoes against resolution­s that would have condemned Syria’s crackdown on protests. On Wednesday, Russia said new sanctions or other actions against Syria would be premature. The U.S. and its allies seeking Assad’s ouster are expected to seek additional economic or other penalties in a bid to squeeze Assad’s government.

Turkey, Syria’s neighbor, joined the list of about a doz- en nations that have expelled Syrian ambassador­s in recent days as a protest of the massacre in Houla.

Russia has labeled the expulsions “counterpro­ductive” because they hinder bilateral communicat­ion.

The United States and the Syrian opposition allege that pro-Assad militiamen carried out the killings in Houla. But Syria has blamed “terrorists” seeking to sow sectarian tensions and torpedo Annan’s peace plan.

 ?? Hussein Malla Associated Press ?? A SYRIAN WOMAN cries as she carries her son, who was shot in the hand by the Syrian border guard as they were crossing into Lebanon at Wadi Khaled.
Hussein Malla Associated Press A SYRIAN WOMAN cries as she carries her son, who was shot in the hand by the Syrian border guard as they were crossing into Lebanon at Wadi Khaled.

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