BEIRUT - An oil pipeline in the central Syrian city of Homs was attacked Wednesday, setting off a huge blaze, while regime troops stormed several residential neighborhoods in the nearby city of Hama, activists said.
The Local Coordination Committees and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the Homs pipeline was in the rebel-held neighborhood of Baba Amr, which has been shelled by regime troops for the past 12 days.
The Observatory and the LCC also said that government forces launched a new operation Wednesday in another flashpoint city, Hama, after telephone, cellular lines and Internet connections were cut.
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"Loud explosions were heard in the neighborhoods" of Hama, the Observatory said in a statement.
Meanwhile, the Reuters news agency reported that elite Syrian soldiers had stormed at least one neighborhood in the eastern Damascus suburb of Barzeh, raiding homes in what local residents described as an attempt to locate opposition members and Syrian soldiers who have defected to the rebel Free Syrian Army.
Residents and activists told Reuters that troops from the Fourth Armoured Division and the Republican Guards had arrived with backup from armored personnel carriers and set up roadblocks in main streets of the Barzeh neighborhood of eastern Damascus.
CBS News' George Baghdadi says Barzeh has regularly seen such incursions by Syrian forces, and that there appeared to be little new in Wednesday's raids.
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Video by Homs activists broadcast on social networking sites showed thick black smoke billowing from what appeared to be a residential area in that city.
Scores of people were reportedly detained in the raids.
Homs is home to one of Syria's two oil refineries. It has also been one of the cities hardest hit by President Bashar Assad's crackdown on the popular uprising that began in March.
In the regime's latest move to try and quell the uprising by political means, Assad ordered a national referendum vote to be held Feb. 26 on a new draft constitution which would end his Baath party's monopoly on power in Syria.
The uprising started out as mostly peaceful protests against Assad's authoritarian rule, but has become more militarized in the face of the regime's brutal crackdown.
U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay told the General Assembly this week that more than 5,400 people were killed last year alone, and that the number of dead and injured continues to rise daily.
Syria's oil and gas pipelines have been attacked before during the 11-month uprising.
The state-run news agency, SANA, blamed "armed terrorists" for Wednesday's attack on the pipeline. It said the pipeline feeds the tankers in the Damascus suburb of Adra, which contribute in supplying gasoline to the capital and southern regions.
Assad's regime has long blamed "terrorists" and foreign conspiracies for the country's crisis, not protesters seeking democratic reforms. The revolt began with peaceful calls for democratic change, but has been morphing into a bloody, armed insurgency.
Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsGamecore/~3/VHEL1GJl7Yw/
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