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Monitors 'smell burnt flesh' at Syria site
The site of the massacre in Hama, Syria. (BBC)
A UN spokesman says observers who went to the Syrian village of al-Qubair were hit by a "stench of burnt flesh" but could not confirm how many had died.
UN observers who went to the Syria massacre village of al-Qubair saw blood on the walls and were hit by a "stench of burnt flesh" but could not confirm how many died, a spokesman says.
While the government has denied responsibility, UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said the observers saw armoured vehicle tracks around the village and homes that were damaged by rockets, grenades and various weapons.
"Inside some of the houses, blood was visible across the walls and floors. Fire was still burning outside houses and there was a strong stench of burnt flesh," the spokesman said in a grim account of the visit.
At least 55 people were killed on Wednesday in an assault on al-Qubair in Hama province, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
UN officials have made it clear they believe government forces and allies were behind the attack on a mainly Sunni Muslim village surrounded by an Alawite population loyal to President Bashar al-Assad.
More than 20 unarmed UN observers were allowed into al-Qubair on Friday after they were shot at and prevented from entering the village on Thursday, Nesirky said in a statement
The village was empty when they went in there and so monitors were unable to talk to any witnesses of the attack, which has led to calls for tougher action against President Bashar al-Assad.
Nesirky said people from a nearby village came "and spoke of what they had heard and the relatives they had lost.
"Armoured vehicle tracks were visible in the vicinity. Some homes were damaged by rockets from armoured vehicles, grenades and a range of calibre weapons," Nesirky said.
"The circumstances surrounding this attack are still unclear. The names, details and number of those killed are still not confirmed. The observers are still working to ascertain the facts," he said.
Nesirky said that Syrian army checkpoints had "stopped" and "in some cases turned back" the observers who made "multiple attempts" to get into Al-Qubeir on Thursday.
"Some of the patrols were being stopped by civilians in the area," he added.
The monitors were also told by residents that their "safety was at risk" if they entered the village.
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