Syrian National Coalition appeals to UN and West to protect civilians in rebel-held areas being shelled by Assad forces.
Syria's main opposition bloc has
urged the international community to take action to protect civilians in the
embattled city of Homs.
The
Syrian National Coalition on Friday appealed to the United Nations and Western
countries that have supported the opposition in Syria's civil war “to intervene
immediately'' and provide food and medicine to the besieged, rebel-held areas
of the central city.
Assad's
forces have been bombarding Homs for five straight days, the coalition said in
a statement. It said clashes between rebels and President Bashar al-Assad
troops flared up again in Friday morning.
The appeal comes as opposition
figures are meeting in Turkey to elect a new leadership.
Activists
on Friday posted videos from al-Khalidiyeh
neighbourhood purporting to show shelling that targeted the opposition
stronghold.
Homs,
dubbed the "capital of the revolution", has paid an enormous human
and material price for the uprising against Assad's regime that began in March
2011 and has since evolved into fully-fledged civil war.
Activists
claim that fighters from Lebanon's Hezbollah Shia armed movement, which has
sided with Assad's forces, have been battling rebels in the city.
Hezbollah
fighters helped the Syrian army capture Qusayr, a key town near
Lebanon's border last month, dealing a blow to opposition fighters who
have been ferrying supplies and fighters over the border.
'Critical juncture'
Khalid
Saleh, a spokesperson for the Syrian National Coalition, warned that the fall
of Homs would jeopardise any political solution for the country.
The
situation in Homs has "deteriorated tremendously" and that the Syrian
regime "has its mind set on taking Homs even if that means killing tens of
thousands of people," he said.
The coalition on Thursday began
the process of selecting a new leader from five official candidates who include
interim president Georges Sabra and the former president of the Syrian National
Council Burhan Ghalioun.
Saleh
emphasised that the new leader would have to heal rifts in the fractured
coalition.
"We
are at a critical juncture in the revolution," he said.
"The
coalition knows it is important to respond to the challenges with which we are
confronted."
Syria's
main opposition has faltered since the departure of Ahmad Moaz al-Khatib in May
in protest at the world's "inaction" over Syria's conflict.
Source: AlJazeera
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