The Commercial Appeal

Group: More than 100,000 killed in Syria

Nearly 37K civilians dead in 2-year conflict

- By Barbara Surk

BEIRUT — More than 100,000 people have been killed since the start of Syria’s conflict over two years ago, an activist group said Wednesday.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which has been tracking the death toll in the conflict through a network of activists in Syria, released its death toll at a time when hopes for a negotiated settlement to end the civil war fade.

It said a total of 100,191 had died over the 27 months of the conflict. Of those, 36,661 were civilians, the group said.

On the government side, 25,407 are members of President Bashar Assad’s armed forces, 17,311 progovernm­ent fighters and 169 militants from Lebanon’s Hezbollah, who have fought alongside army troops.

Deaths among Assad’s opponents included 13,539 rebels, 2,015 army defectors and 2,518 foreign fighters battling against the regime.

Entry of the foreign media into Syria is severely restricted and few reports from the fighting can be independen­tly verified.

Earlier this month, the U.N. put the number of those killed in the conflict at 93,000 between March 2011 when the crisis started and end of April this year.

The government has not released death tolls. The state media published the names of the government’s dead in the first months of the crisis but stopped publishing its losses after the opposition became an armed insurgency.

Syria’s conflict began as peaceful protests against Assad’s rule. It gradually became an armed conflict after the Assad’s regime used the army to crackdown on dissent and some opposition supporters took up weapons to fight government troops.

Even the most modest internatio­nal efforts to end the Syrian conflict have failed. U.N.’s special envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, told reporters on Tuesday that an internatio­nal peace conference proposed by Russia and the U.S. will not take place until later in the summer, partly because of opposition disarray.

The fighting has increasing­ly been taking sectarian overtones. Sunni Muslims dominate the rebel ranks while Assad’s regime is dominated by Alawites, an offshoot sect of Shiite Islam.

Sunni-majority Saudi Arabia is Washington’s key ally and a foe of Iran. Tehran, a Shiite powerhouse, supports Assad.

 ?? MUHAMMED MUHEISEN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An activist group said Wednesday that more than 100,000 people have been killed since the start of Syria’s conflict more than two years ago, including 36,661 civilians.
MUHAMMED MUHEISEN / ASSOCIATED PRESS An activist group said Wednesday that more than 100,000 people have been killed since the start of Syria’s conflict more than two years ago, including 36,661 civilians.

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