Tanks Rumble into Homs as 33 Killed across Syria

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Tanks rumbled into the central city of Homs at dawn Saturday, a day after security forces killed at least 33 anti-regime protesters across Syria, adding urgency to a U.N. mission expected this weekend.

"Several tanks took up positions at dawn in the district of Al-Khalidiyeh" in the central city of Homs, Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told Agence France Presse.

"Throughout the night and this morning shots were heard from Al-Khalidiyeh to Baba Amr and Inshaat," he added, referring to two other central locations in the city.

Regime forces were also conducting arrests in the city of Latakia early Saturday, the Observatory said, adding that many of those picked up were minors.

According to the rights advocacy group the death toll from Friday's crackdown on protesters rose to 33, including 15 people who were killed in the southern province of Daraa where 25 others were also wounded.

It said security forces had also killed 15 civilians in the central province of Homs, including five in the flashpoint neighborhood of Al-Khalidiyeh.

Three protesters were also shot dead on Friday in the Damascus suburbs of Harasta and Douma, the Observatory said.

The United Nations said that a U.N. humanitarian mission would visit Syria this weekend to witness the effects of the crackdown on protesters.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay told the Security Council on Thursday there was "reliable corroborative evidence" that Syrian forces are deliberately shooting anti-regime demonstrators.

Pillay also said in an interview with France 24 television that her body had drawn up a list of 50 Syrians in senior positions that she said were responsible for violent repression.

The civilian death toll from the security force crackdown on the protests has now passed 2,000, U.N. Under Secretary General B. Lynn Pascoe also told the Security Council on Thursday.

On Friday the Observatory reported that 20,000 people had marched in Al-Khalidiyeh alone on a day of protest demanding the fall of Assad's autocratic regime.

People poured into the streets of major towns as they emerged from Friday prayers, with the largest anti-regime demonstration reported in Homs.

Friday's rallies put to the test a commitment given by embattled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon the previous day that his security forces have ended operations against civilians.

Meanwhile, Russia and Turkey dismissed growing calls led by U.S. President Barack Obama for Assad to quit, offering the Syrian leader rare support despite a damning U.N. report on his "apparent shoot to kill" policy.

"We do not share the United States and the European Union's point of view regarding President al-Assad and will continue to pursue our consistent and principled stance on Syria," the foreign ministry said in Moscow.

A government official in Ankara agreed and told AFP a call for Assad's ouster must come from the Syrian people themselves.

"The Syrian opposition is not united and we haven't seen yet a collective call from Syrians to tell Assad to go, like in Egypt and Libya," he said.