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Syrian tanks roll to town where police were killed

Thousands of elite troops led by President Bashar Assad's brother converged on a town where earlier troops had mutinied and killed Assad security forces, sources said.
Image:
Syrian refugees wait to enter Turkey on Wednesday near the Turkish city of Hatay. Around 120 Syrians crossed into Turkey late Tuesday, most of them from Jisr al-Shughur, where there are fears of a backlash after officials said 120 policemen had been killed there.Mustafa Ozer / AFP - Getty Images
/ Source: The Associated Press

Thousands of elite troops led by President Bashar Assad's brother converged Wednesday on a restive northern town, and neighboring villages called to warn that a convoy of tanks was approaching, a resident and a Syrian activist said.

Syrian forces have lost control of large areas of the northern province, a pro-government newspaper reported, in a rare acknowledgment of cracks in the regime's tight grip after weeks of protest calling for an end to its 40-year rule.

The separate reports raised the prospect of more bloodshed in Syria's nationwide crackdown on the 11-week revolt. The region borders Turkey, which said Wednesday it would open the frontier to Syrians fleeing violence.

Also Wednesday, Britain, France, Germany and Portugal handed the U.N. Security Council a draft resolution Wednesday condemning Syria's crackdown on protesters, despite the risk of a Russian veto. U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice said Washington had offered its "strong support for that text" but was not a sponsor. A Friday council vote is possible.

In Jisr al-Shughour, where the government earlier said "armed groups" had killed 120 security forces and taken over, a resident said nearby villages had opened their mosques, churches and schools to take in people who fled in terror.

Some also crossed into Turkey from Idlib province, said the man, who would give only a nickname, Abu Nader, because he feared government reprisals.

Residents said about 40 tanks and armored vehicles were closing in on Jisr al-Shughour, which was now mostly empty, save for youth protesters.

Witnesses in nearby villages called to tell people in Jisr al-Shughour that tanks were approaching, Abu Nader said. He said he feared an attack was imminent.

The pro-government newspaper Al-Watan said gunmen had set up boobytraps and ambushes in small villages to thwart incoming troops, and were sheltering in forests and caves.

Mustafa Osso, a human rights worker, said witnesses told him that thousands of troops were moving toward Idlib.

He said many of the forces were from the army's 4th Division, which is commanded by Assad's younger brother, Maher. The younger Assad also commands the Republican Guard, whose main job is the protect the regime, and is believed to have played a key role in suppressing the protests.

"The number of soldiers is in the thousands," Osso said. He speculated that the government planned a "decisive battle."

Al-Watan, the pro-government newspaper, said the Syrian army was launching a "very delicate" operation designed to avoid casualties in Jisr al-Shughour. Al-Watan said some people were being held captive by armed groups that control some areas in Jisr al-Shughour and a large area of Idlib.

There was no way to independently confirm the reports from Syria, which severely restricts local media and has expelled foreign journalists from the country. The government routinely blames armed gangs and religious extremists for the recent violence.

Activists had reported fighting in Jisr al-Shughour between loyalist troops and defectors who no longer wanted to continue the crackdown on protesters seeking Assad's ouster. Activists say more than 1,300 Syrians, most of them civilians, have died since the start of the nationwide uprising.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said Britain and France would offer a resolution at the United Nations condemning the crackdown.

"If anyone votes against that resolution or tries to veto it, that should be on their conscience," Cameron said.

Jisr al-Shughour lies 12 miles from the Turkish border. On Wednesday, Turkey's state-run news agency said 122 Syrian refugees who fled the recent fighting had crossed into Turkey.

The Anatolia news agency said the group crossed close to the village of Karbeyazi near the border town of Altinozu on Wednesday.

With the new arrivals, the number of Syrian refugees in Turkey has reached around 350. Authorities said more than 30 other Syrians were being treated at Turkish hospitals for wounds they suffered in clashes in northern Syria. They said one has died.

Ankara has said it is prepared to deal with a mass influx of Syrian refugees, though the frontier is relatively quiet for now.

"It is out of the question for us to close the border crossings. We are watching the situation with great concern," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.