Assad cousin Col. Jihad Hamed Makhlouf killed himself by explosives when rebels attacked his apartment in Adra al-Ummaliya, 25 km east Damascus, cyber activists circulated.
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claimed yesterday that Islamist rebels killed at
least 15 civilians from the minority Alawite and Druze sects in the central
Syrian city of Adra al-Ummaliya, predominant by Alawites, on Wednesday and Thursday.
Local activists and relief workers assured to Zaman Alwasl that most killings were from Shabiha, pro-Assad militia, who involved in clashes with rebels.
Syria's Sunni Muslim majority has
largely joined the revolt against President Bashar al-Assad, who is an Alawite,
while minority sects have largely stood behind him in the conflict that has
killed more than 125,000 since it began in March 2011.
Many cities in Syria have become
segregated along sectarian lines but Adra - strategically important as one of
the rebels' only routes into Damascus - has mostly resisted that.
Witnesses, activists and Syrian state
media accused the Islamic Front, an alliance of several large rebel groups, and
the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front of carrying out the attacks.
One woman in Adra, who said she was
too frightened to say what religious minority she was from, told Reuters armed
men from the Islamic Front and the Nusra Front entered her family's house
around 3 a.m. (0100 GMT) on Thursday and took her son.
The militants said her son would be
returned, but he was still missing on Thursday afternoon, she said.
Adra, about 20 km (12 miles)
northeast of Damascus, has a population of about 100,000 including Alawites,
Druze, Christians and Sunni Muslims.
Activists on social media said some
residents had fled the city while others were hiding in their basements.
Several blamed the Army of Islam, an
Islamic Front member group led by Zahran Alloush, and some put the death toll
as high as 40, but these reports could not be independently verified.
"Zahran Alloush has committed a
massacre," one activist based in the Damascus suburbs told Reuters.
State news agency SANA said the army
was sending troops to "restore security" in the city.
"Terrorist groups belonging to
the Nusra Front infiltrated the residential area of Adra in the suburbs of
Damascus and attacked residents in their homes," it said, using its term
for rebels fighting against Assad. (with Reuters)
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