Wednesday December 28, 2011
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Homs has been the epicenter of the anti-government protest movement in Syria
- A filmmaker finds bullet-pocked walls along streets where snipers reign
- The United Nations says more than 5,000 people have been killed nationwide
- Syria has restricted access since it began cracking down on protests in March
More recently, defectors from the military have begun organizing armed resistance. Meanwhile, government forces have tightened their siege of rebellious neighborhoods that are now under the control of the opposition.
A freelance journalist and filmmaker -- who is not named for his own security -- has just left Homs, and over the next few days CNN will be showcasing his remarkable stories from the front lines of a city at war.
Among the bullet-scarred walls of neighborhoods under siege, he encountered the government snipers who prowl the city picking off their victims apparently indiscriminately and at will.
He found snipers stationed on almost every main street, manning checkpoints on both sides and firing at anybody crossing the street between 4 p.m. and 8 a.m. the next day -- imposing a kind of unofficial curfew.
He spoke to one woman whose daughter was seven months pregnant when she was shot in the head as she tried to venture out of the house to do some shopping. The snipers kept shooting as relatives tried to reach the pregnant woman where she lay dead in the street, before finally they were able to bring her body back to her mother's home.
To film what was going on, the journalist too had to risk his life on the streets of Homs, with about 1 million inhabitants the country's third-largest city.
Journalist: Post-curfew deaths in Syria
View his images in hi-res A Free Syrian Army checkpoint is pictured in the liberated quarter of Baba Amr in Homs. All photos taken between December 15 and 20 with an iPhone 4S using the Hipstamatic app.
A Free Syrian Army street checkpoint is pictured in the liberated quarter of Baba Amr in Homs.
A Free Syrian Army street checkpoint is pictured in the liberated quarter of Baba Amr in Homs.
A Friday demonstration takes place in Baba Amr in Homs.
A Friday demonstration takes place in Baba Amr in Homs.
A demonstration takes place in Baba Amr in Homs.
A Free Syrian Army checkpoint is pictured in the liberated quarter of Baba Amr in Homs.
A wrecked bus lies abandoned in Baba Amr in Homs.
Army defectors, members of the Free Syrian Army, pictured during an exchange of fire in Baba Amr.
A funeral procession takes place in Dar Kabir for "Malik," killed by government forces.
A funeral procession takes place in Dar Kabir in Homs for "Malik," who was killed by government forces.
A funeral procession takes place in Dar Kabir, Homs, for "Malik," killed by government forces. His younger brother holds a photograph of Malik in his hands.
A funeral procession takes place in Dar Kabir for "Malik," killed by government forces.
Despite the threat from snipers, a family makes its way down Cairo Street in Al Khaledia in Homs, Syria.
Residents from the Al Khaledia suburb surround a coffin in Khaledia, Homs.
An old man prays at a night demonstration in the Al Khaledia neighborhood in Homs, Syria
The remains of a resident from the Al Khaledia suburb lie in a coffin, Khaledia, Homs.
Warning: Multiple graphic images
HIDE CAPTION
Defiance and death in besieged Syrian city of Homs
Gunfire near Arab League observers
"Me crossing the street, I was feeling literally that the sniper is aiming at me and it is up to him if he is going to pull the trigger or not."Russia doesn't want NATO option in Syria
Residents describe the daily struggle of life in the cross-hairs, some telling how they throw bread and other supplies across the street to others who cannot safely traverse to reach a shop.A monitoring mission from the Arab League arrived in the city Tuesday but opposition activists fear they will not see the full extent of a brutal government crackdown that the United Nations says has claimed more than 5,000 lives nationwide.
Despite the days-long military siege, thousands turned out for anti-government demonstrations as the Arab League team entered the city.
The fact-finding team is monitoring an Arab League initiative that calls for Al-Assad's security forces to withdraw from cities, release detainees and end violence.
But from what he has seen in Homs, the journalist thinks the point of no return has already been reached. So many people have been killed already that those going out to protest don't believe the authorities would let them live even if they stayed at home, he said.
His is a rare insight into the realities of the situation in Homs. The Syrian government has limited journalists' access to the country since its crackdown on protests began, making it impossible to verify many reports. Most information has come from activist groups seeking to keep the world informed of the ongoing violence. They put the death toll at more than 6,000.
The unrest began in March when protesters, emboldened by democracy movements in Tunisia and Egypt, called for open elections and an increase in political freedoms, and demanded an end to brutal regime actions.
The movement quickly spiraled into a call for the ouster of al-Assad, and the regime cracked down on peaceful demonstrators. The government says it is combating "armed terrorist groups."
No comments:
Post a Comment