World Watch
By

Tucker Reals, Alex Sundby /

CBS News/ June 8, 2012, 6:33 AM

"Smell of death" pervades Syria mass killing site

Updated at 1:31 p.m. ET

(CBS News) A "smell of death in the air" pervades areas of the Syrian village where the latest alleged mass killing in the country took place, CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer reports.

(At left, listen Palmer desribe what she saw in the village to CBS Radio News)

Palmer traveled with U.N. observers Friday to the village of al-Qubeir, where the opposition says regime forces massacred scores of people on Wednesday.

"There are no bodies here," Palmer told CBS Radio News. "They've all been buried, either in this village or in the villages around. A man I spoke to who had helped bury the bodies said that the security forces showed up after the massacre and threatened the people that all the bodies had to be buried by the time anybody from the outside world came in."

Annan blames Assad for letting Syria ceasefire fail
Syrian peace plan fails; What next for U.N.?
Complete coverage: The Arab Spring

In total, three teams -- from Damascus, Hama and Homs -- accessed the village in 11 vehicles. Upon arrival, people from nearby villages approached Palmer and the U.N. monitors to describe what they saw and heard. These witnesses weren't in the village during the attack, watching from nearby hillsides or farms for survival, but they consistently described what happened in al-Qubeir.

Their accounts portray a two-pronged attack, starting with heavy bombardment from some sort of large artillery followed by a ground attack carried out by pro-government militiamen, known as shabiha.

"There are, apparently, some people who did escape alive, but they have gone to neighboring villages," said Palmer. "They didn't stick around in the center of the destruction, but I must say that most of these buildings are so destroyed that they're uninhabitable. They've been blown-up. They're cracked and broken and scorched, you know, covered with burn marks and bloodied material and bedding."

The residents said 78 people died as far as they could tell, of which around 20 were children.

"One of the houses that was particularly badly burned and bombed had been used to store 20 bodies until they could be moved in great piles of bloodied and torched pillowcases and blankets, and the whole place just reeked of death," said Palmer. "There was one dead and bloated cow but apart from that no signs of life."

The area residents directed Palmer to one room in particular where they said children were shot to death. Large blood stains were visible on the floor, and the wall was dented with bullet marks.

The witnesses told Palmer of finding four family members who sought refuge in a mosque and were executed by shabiha inside the house of worship.

"Then their bodies were burned inside the mosque," said Palmer. "Certainly there were extensive scorch marks in the mosque, and the holy books were burned, which is a real desecration in Muslim villages."

On Thursday, a contingent of U.N. staff was blocked from the village by Syrian military personnel at checkpoints and by mobs of angry locals chanting slogans in support of Syrian President Bashar Assad and warning the observers that they would be met with violence if they entered al-Qubeir. Members of the U.N. mission told Palmer that some observers were detained for hours Thursday by state forces.

Gen. Robert Mood, the head of the observer mission, said Thursday that some U.N. staff have come under fire this week in Syria as they try to carry out their work. There have been no reported casualties among the U.N. staff.

The city of Hama, where the observers gathered on Friday, is only about 15 miles from al-Qubeir, which also sits within the province of Hama. (Click the player at left to see Palmer's Thursday report on the alleged massacre)

Riding in the 11 armored vehicles Friday were about 20 observers and 10 additional U.N. staff, Palmer said. The observers do not carry weapons.

On Thursday night, international envoy Kofi Annan pinned the lion's share of the blame on Assad's regime for letting his six-point peace plan whither amid continuing bloodshed. Annan told the U.N. Security Council there must be "consequences" for that obstruction to his cease-fire plan -- a clear hint that further sanctions should be considered.

The al-Qubeir massacre -- which has yet to be independently confirmed -- was the third significant discovery of bodies in about a week. In each case, opposition groups say a combination of government regular forces and shabiha were behind the deaths.

Assad's regime, however, dismisses any culpability, claiming that "terrorists" -- a word the government uses to describe opposition members -- are behind the deaths. In al-Qubeir, the government says Syrian soldiers entered the village on Wednesday to find nine civilian bodies already dead, their bodies burned.

Even with U.N. monitors accessing the village, the vastly different accounts of what happened in al-Qubeir coming from the regime and the opposition cannot be reconciled. Questions remain about what may have taken place in the village between the incident and the arrival of those first impartial eyes. For two days, only the Syrian government had access to al-Qubeir.

Meanwhile, videos posted online Friday showed what activist groups claim was renewed shelling by state forces in the already-battered central city of Homs. The reports could not be immediately confirmed. Homs, parts of which have been held by rebel forces for months, has seen some of the worst violence in the 15-month-old Syrian uprising.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
22 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
wattshappening says:
Glad you are reporting on Syria to the U.S. people... wish you would report on what Israel does to the Palestinians with U.S. money
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Overruled1 says:
Russia and China should abdicate their responsibilities at the UN and leave. We know they are both backstabbing thieves who hope to overthrow our position in democratic development of the world.
Nevermind that theirs has oppressed their peoples yet while as corrupted ours is, we still have rights and liberities the people of those countries desire more than even they realize.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
CuriousServant says:
Offer a thousand dollars for anyone (hopefully an embedded soldier) for video of this tuff so Assad loses all excuses.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
jcnbma says:
ASSASSINATE ASSAD!
reply
Overruled1 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
While we can say that and I admire your enthusiasm ....but because of our responsibility, we simply must not go in half cocked like Bush fell into.
The USSR has a naval port there with observers who I hope lose it when the government is overthrown.
I do encourage the syrians to rebel against this terrorist leader Assad and his supporting barbarians.
If you're thinking of using drones even that is an act of war with consequences for us everywhere. We are not the unjust, which is why we have a U.N.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
vicchrreb1 says:
This is heartbreaking. I don't have the answers.... but I wish something would be done quickly before more innocent children are murdered.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
awenshok says:
If this conflict really does harbor significant regional risk why, once again, are the compassionate, the charitable, the devout Muslims waiting for the rest of the world (especially non-Muslims) to step up?
Billions spent on the purchase of arms and not one country in the region makes a move?
What should we learn (again and again) from that?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
silvalgal says:
Commercial satellites are positioned on Syria: the results should be interesting. Syria is slightly smaller than Montana ... the whole world -- even school kids -- are wondering why, in 2012, this rampant slaughter and crime is allowed to go on and on in Syria. Letting Assad and his regime get away with gruesome mass murder over and over and over again means we haven't learned a thing.
reply
awenshok replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Haven't learned a thing? Do you mean since Rwanda, South Sudan, Serbia, etc, etc, etc? The thing to learn is that ONLY when it is in anyone's inescapable best interests will action take place, and that has NOTHING to do with human life or it's loss. The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior. Auschwitz.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
silvalgal says:
Commercial satellites are positioned on Syria: the results should be interesting. Syria is slightly smaller than Montana ... the whole world — even school kids — are wondering why, in 2012, this rampant slaughter and crime is allowed to go on and on in Syria. Letting Assad and his regime get away with gruesome mass murder over and over and over again means we haven't learned a thing.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
mrmouth says:
Russia is standing firm with the excuse that they were sold a no fly zone in Libya and ultimately got regime change. China is more or less along for the ride.

For the most part Russia is correct. Although they complained early on as if they didn't know what a no fly zone entailed. Ultimately NATO sat back for months and watched a stalemate develop - then we acted to end the thing. Apparently Russia wanted something different...

Anyhow this is about contracts and the fact that Russia does not really have a lot of allies. Under Putin even less. The list is less than impressive, and must at some point be embarrassing. But nonetheless they cannot afford to lose the allies they have.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
the_egret says:
Surely we can get enough intelligence to ascertain Assad's location and send a Drone with his coordidnates on it. . . .
reply
See all 22 Comments