Skip to main content

On the ground in Syria: 'For God's sake, this is too much'

By Michael Pearson, CNN
updated 2:42 PM EST, Tue February 7, 2012
No one spared in Syrian violence
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: "Everyone's becoming used to death here," an activist in Homs says
  • Syrians endure a hellish existence amid government's crackdown
  • Images shot by activists paint a starkly different picture than official government accounts
  • "We are getting killed every moment," an activist says

(CNN) -- A low-slung skyline. A slate gray sky. Rumbling. Close your eyes. It could be the sound of rolling thunder.

Instead, it's another shell falling on a neighborhood in Homs.

Photos: Slaughter in Syria

"You don't know if the rocket is going to come in your living room or in your kitchen," said an activist who is being identified only as Danny for his safety. "Everyone's becoming used to death here."

Blood, he says, has become almost as commonplace as water. Still, the scenes are almost unbelievable.

Activists: Homs under heavy bombardment
Ex-U.S. envoy: Syria already in civil war
More bloodshed in Syria
Homs resident: 'Please someone help us'

"I saw really horrible things I've never seen in my life," he said. "Kids in the hospital, a kid with his whole jaw gone. a little girl, a kid, she's 4 years old, she's dead, her sister's 6 years old, she lost her left eye and her mother is in intensive care."

As the world talks about how to respond to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's bloody crackdown on the uprising in his country, opposition activists in the country say his military and security services are engaged in a vicious campaign of destruction meant to wipe out the opposition. Almost nothing, it seems, is off limits, they say -- not shelling, not snipers, not torture.

To hear al-Assad tell it, the violence is the work of terrorists, and his troops are martyrs to the state's effort to secure peace. But eyewitness accounts and videos streaming out of Syria on the Internet paint a starkly different picture.

Syrian rebel leadership is split

Where state television shows the Syrian president surrounded by clerics in a peaceful prayer, opposition video shows an injured man being hustled into a makeshift medical clinic from the back of a bloody pickup truck, mothers crying in the street.

Opinion: Al-Assad missed chance to reform Syria

Where official images depict a cheering crowd waving Syrian and Russian flags during a visit from the Russian foreign minister, opposition video shows crowds of apparently unarmed civilians running through the streets in terror from explosions that blacken and bloody the streets.

And where the state-run SANA news agency says armed terrorist gangs are to blame for the violence, activists point to images of children, their bodies studded by shrapnel, running fearfully in rubble-strewn streets or asking, from under thick bandages enveloping a tiny head, what they've done to deserve such violence.

Rocket attacks, blood in the streets and fight for freedom

In one video shot by activists, a man cradles the lifeless body of a child.

Smoke rises from a shelled building. Gunfire and explosions echo through the streets.

Possible options to end Syria violence
Syrian activists blaming Russia
China's view of the Syria crisis
Activist: We are killed every moment

Not even the makeshift clinics where people try to help horribly injured civilians are safe.

"They hit one of our field hospitals yesterday," the activist identified as Danny told CNN on Monday. "The doctors died, the patients died."

Snipers and tanks from the Syrian armed forces -- at nearly 400,000 strong, according to the U.S. State Department, one of the largest in the Middle East -- stalk the streets. Barricades keep their quarry from freely moving, according to activists who say day-and-night shelling often hits residential neighborhoods.

Homs is not the only target. Troops raided Daraa in April, shortly after the uprising began, according to Syrian opposition groups. They shot indiscriminately, sometimes into homes, opposition activists have said.

Significant numbers of deaths have also been reported in Damascus and its suburbs, as well as Deir Ezzor, Aleppo, Idlib, Latakia, and Hama.

Throughout the country, government forces have taken over schools and hospitals to use as detention centers and sniper nests, Human Rights Watch reported this week. A father told investigators he stopped allowing his 10-year-old son attend school because of snipers targeting travelers on the road leading to school.

"We called it 'the street of death'," Human Rights Watch quoted the man as saying.

Human rights groups also say security forces have taken and tortured children.

"Children have not been spared the horror of Syria's crackdown. Syrian security forces have killed, arrested, and tortured children in their homes, their schools, or on the streets," said Lois Whitman, children's rights director at Human Rights Watch.

One former adult detainee said security forces seem to target children for special abuse.

"There is torture, but there is also rape for the boys," Human Rights Watch quoted the man as saying. "We would see them when the guards brought them back to the cell, it's indescribable, you can't talk about it."

While many suffer in detention centers, even more suffer in formerly peaceful neighborhoods.

In a video shot Monday, a man perched on an urban rooftop in Homs nervously chants Allāhu Akbar -- "God is great" -- as shells fall on buildings around him.

Activists say 128 people died in the attack.

"We are getting killed every moment," a Syrian resident identified only as Zaidoun for his safety told CNN. "We are not able even just to get some basic medicine to injured people. Children are really hungry. I swear, children are hungry. No power, no fuel. It's too cold."

CNN cannot independently confirm opposition or government reports from Syria because the government has restricted journalists' access to the country.

But Western governments and human rights groups say there's little doubt about the carnage being inflicted by Syrian forces.

The United Nations estimates that at least 6,000 people have died since the violence began nearly a year ago. So far, nothing has stopped the death and suffering.

"It's too much," Zaidoun said, his voice breaking. "For God's sake, this is too much."

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
updated 5:32 AM EDT, Wed May 30, 2012
World powers weighed tough options to end brutality in Syria amid the aftermath of the now-infamous massacre in Houla.
updated 12:53 PM EDT, Tue May 29, 2012
A witness to the massacre in Houla says conditions are "desperate," with medical supplies and food running low.
updated 2:30 PM EDT, Tue May 29, 2012
Horrific images of dozens of mutilated children's corpses in the village of Houla prompted a rare moment of unity from the U.N. Security Council.
updated 6:14 PM EDT, Thu May 24, 2012
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon tells CNN's Christiane Amanpour that the U.N. has no Plan B in Syria.
updated 6:56 AM EDT, Mon May 28, 2012
Observers point to Russia's close ties with Syria going back to the 1950s as a reason for Russia's now defending the al-Assad regime.
updated 2:10 PM EDT, Mon May 28, 2012
Fingerpointing, almost unbearable grief following massacre at Houla. CNN's Mohammed Jamjoom reports.
updated 5:24 PM EDT, Mon May 28, 2012
As Syria blocks foreign journalists, Western media are largely relying on amateur photos and videos to tell the story.
updated 8:53 PM EDT, Sun May 27, 2012
Alex Thomson takes us inside Houla, Syria, which is the site of an attack that resulted in the deaths of dozens.
updated 11:34 AM EDT, Thu May 24, 2012
The deadly clashes that are a fact of daily life in Syria have now bled into Lebanon, raising fears of renewed sectarian violence.
updated 2:21 PM EDT, Thu May 24, 2012
The U.S. State Department's annual human rights report shows that efforts by Arab dictators to crush dissent have destabilized the region.
Are you in Syria? Share your stories, videos and photos with the world on CNN iReport.
For the latest news on developments in the Middle East and North Africa in Arabic.
ADVERTISEMENT