NGO: Troops Pound Homs, 38 Killed

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Syrian troops pounded several rebel-held districts in the central city of Homs on Tuesday, as the death toll mounted across the country, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

In total, 38 people were killed on Tuesday, bringing to more than 110 the death toll over two days, the Britain-based watchdog reported.

A civilian and a rebel were killed in Homs, as clashes raged around the neighborhood of Baba Amr, a former rebel stronghold that the army seized on March 1 after a fierce 27-day assault.

Several rebel-held districts of Homs have been besieged by the army for almost a month, activists say.

On Monday troops tried to storm the district of Jourat al-Shiah, according to the Observatory, while shelling killed a civilian in the Khalidiyeh district.

Troops also rained shells in the southern province of Daraa, cradle of the 16-month uprising against President Bashar Assad, killing five people, the watchdog said.

In the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, much of which is rebel-controlled, snipers shot dead a child and four soldiers were killed in clashes with insurgents, the Observatory said.

The Local Coordination Committees -- a network of activists on the ground -- said "125 families fled the city of Deir Ezzor and its suburbs ... as a result of the unrelenting military attacks."

Several areas of Damascus province also saw heavy violence, the Observatory said. Troops shelled the town of Arbeen, killing one child, while two people were shot dead by snipers near the city of Douma.

Of those killed on Tuesday, at least 16 were troops and four were rebel.

Earlier, the Observatory reported at least 78 people were confirmed killed across Syria on Monday, 44 of them civilians.

The watchdog also said it had received reports that 15 people were shot dead in a village in the central province of Hama, although it had been unable to confirm the names of those killed in the Sunni-populated village of Douma.

The reported killings followed the assassination in the area late on Sunday of three pro-government militiamen.

More than 16,500 people have been killed in violence in Syria since the uprising erupted in March last year, according to the Observatory.

This figure is impossible to independently verify, and the United Nations no longer publishes its own estimates of the death toll.