Damascus: Syrian leader Ahmed Shara called for peace on Sunday, hundreds of people died in the most deadly violence in the 13-year civil war, raising the loyalists of President Bashar al-Assad against the new Islamist rulers of the country.
The conflict, which a war monitoring group said that 1,000 people were already killed, most of the citizens continued on the fourth day in the coastal heart region of Assad.
A Syrian security source said that the speed of the fight had slowed around the cities of Latakia, Jala and Balis, while the forces had searched the surrounding mountainous areas where the estimated 5,000 supporters were hiding asad rebels.
Interim President Shara urged the Syrian people not to destabilize communal tension more.
“We have to preserve national unity and domestic peace, we can live together,” Shara said in a circular video, speaking in a mosque in his childhood neighborhood in Damascus.
“The rest is confident about Syria, this country has characteristics for existence … what is currently happening in Syria is within the expected challenges.”
The rebels under the leadership of Shara’s Sunni Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham Group topped the Assad government in December. Asad fled to Russia, leaving behind some of his close advisors and supporters, while Shara’s group led the appointment of an interim government and captured Syria’s armed forces.
Asad’s uprooted decades were marked by his family for decades and marked by a disastrous civil war, which began in 2011 as a peaceful rebellion.
War – in which Western countries, Arab states and Turkey supported rebels, while Russia, Iran and Military, supported Assad – became a theater for a proxy struggle between various loyalty and a polymorphic of armed groups with various loyalty and agenda. It has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced millions of Syrians.
Furnace growing
Following Assad’s relatives after the removal of the Assad, violence this week spirals because the forces associated with the new Islamist rulers launched a crack on the growing extremism from the Alvite sect of Asad in the Mediterranean provinces of Latakia and Tartha.
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based war monitor, said on Saturday that more than 1,000 people were killed in two days of the fight. It said that there were 745 citizens, 125 members of Syrian security forces and loyal to 148 fighters per Assad.
Rami Abdulrahman, the head of the observatory, said that the citizens include alvite women and children.
Abdulrahman told Reuters on Sunday that the death toll was the highest in 2013 since the chemical weapons attack by Asad’s forces, killing about 1,400 people in Damascus’ suburbs.
European Union, whose
Hit-and-Run Attack, Revenge Killing
Syrian security sources said that at least 200 members were killed in a conflict with the former army personnel towards Assad after coordinated attacks on their forces on Thursday.
The attacks split into the killings of revenge, when thousands of armed supporters of new Syrian leaders across the country landed in coastal areas to support the new administration.
Authorities blamed the execution of dozens of youth and deadly raids at homes in Syria and towns, once settled by Siral minorities on Syrian armed militia, who had come to help the security forces and blamed Assad’s supporters for the previous crimes.
The Syrian security source told Reuters on Sunday that clashes in many cities continued overnight in several cities, where armed groups opened fire on security forces and ambushed cars on highways, a Syrian security source told Reuters on Sunday.
A security source said that Assad Pro-miscreants staged attacks and attacks on several public utilities in the last 24 hours.
They damaged a main power station, which cut power into some parts of the province, while one main water pumping station and several fuel depots were interrupted.
“They are now trying to wreak havoc, disrupt life and attack important installations,” he said.
In Latakia, the police placed new posts inside the city. Two residents said that bullets and artillery sounds can be heard on the outskirts of the coastal city.
Another police source said that Damascus officials were also sending reinforcement to increase their security presence in the hill province, where the coarse forests in the rugged area were helping anti -government fighters.