BEIRUT (AP)
-- Pro-government gunmen killed seven members of a local Syrian
reconciliation group near the central city of Homs, activists said
Tuesday, as troops shot dead nine people including a child at a
checkpoint in a suburb of the capital.
The
latest killings coincide with an offensive by President Bashar Assad's
troops in Damascus and its surrounding suburbs, as well as in the
strategic province surrounding Homs.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the seven men,
including two retired army officers, were Sunni Muslims working to
convince gunmen to drop their weapons and return to normal life. They
were killed Monday in the village of Hajar Abyad, where residents are
known to be regime supporters, it said.
Assad's
troops have captured several nearby rebel-held areas in recent weeks
including the towns of Qusair and Talkalkh near the border with Lebanon.
Late last month, they launched an attack to try to capture rebel-held
areas of Homs, Syria's third largest city.
They have also made headway against fighter brigades on the edge of Damascus and eastern suburbs.
The
uprising against Assad's rule began in March 2011 and has deteriorated
into an insurgency with increasingly sectarian overtones. Rebels, who
are overwhelmingly Sunni, have been assisted by foreign fighters, while
government forces have been bolstered by guerrillas from the Lebanese
Shiite group Hezbollah.
The killing came three
days after rebels attacked a nearby army checkpoint, killing seven
people including members of the military. It was not immediately clear
if Monday's killings were in retaliation for Friday's ambush.
A
Syrian activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of
reprisals, said the gunmen who attacked the checkpoint had already been
cleared by the committee as they have surrendered their arms.
The Observatory said the dead included two retired army officers, a mosque preacher and a former mayor.
In
the Damascus suburb of Qarah, troops shot dead nine people including a
child at an army checkpoint in the area, the Observatory said.
It
was not clear whether those killed were fighters or civilians. An
amateur video showed seven dead men, some of them with beards, and a boy
with a bloodied face. The dead appeared to have suffered bullet wounds,
some to the head.
"These are Bashar's crimes
during Ramadan," a man could be heard saying in the video referring to
the Muslim holy month that began last week.
The Observatory also reported fighting in the town of Qahtaniyeh on the edge of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Observatory, said regime forces were attacking rebels in the town.
More than 93,000 have been killed and millions uprooted from their homes in the conflict.