Khalidiya Massacre

On February 4, 2012 news broke of the Khalidiya Massacre - the worst yet among the Homs Massacres, or massacres of civilians anywhere in Syria, to that date. A reported 138 people were reported killed in unprovoked military shelling on their homes in the Khalidiya district in the north of Syria's central city of Homs. The media and decision-makers of the West accepted and promoted this narrative of events.

Initial reports heralded 200+ daily victims in Homs altogether, which is approximately right) but some baseless reports pass on death tolls as high as "at least 416." This page is focused on the Khalidiya portion only, an unusually unanymous opposition total of exactly 138. (see Death Toll on the talk page).

As usual, the shocking new death toll was timed to coincide with a UN Security Council vote on regime change in Syria, and gave critics of Syria's government and "crackdown on protests" new impetus. (See Timing on the talk page) Pointing to this for partial motive, the government would claim those killed were actually locals taken hostage by the armed "terrorists," who had the general run of Homs after a Syrian military pull-out in December. In this version, rebels were re-branding victims of their own crimes to blame the government, and have it changed from without, in the manner of Libya.

This possibility will here be considered alongside the other narrative as we examine the evidence, first as usual on the talk page, with a few highlights summarized below.

Western Narrative
Activists picked up the pieces and got their high body count, and reported their explanation to the world by the early hours of the 4th. Mainstream Western Media reported at the time, when it mattered, the version told to them, as here, by the Guardian's Damien Pearse (with agencies):
 * More than 200 people have been killed by Syrian forces in the city of Homs, according to activists, as the UN security council prepares to vote on a draft resolution backing an Arab call for President Bashar al-Assad to resign. ... the attacks prompted western and Arab countries to step up their push for a UN resolution calling for Assad to go. ... the French foreign minister, Alain Juppe, said the Homs bloodshed was a crime against humanity and "those who block the adoption of such a resolution are taking a grave historical responsibility".
 * Death tolls cited by activists and opposition groups ranged from 217 to 260, making the Homs attack the deadliest so far in Assad's crackdown on protests.
 * Death tolls cited by activists and opposition groups ranged from 217 to 260, making the Homs attack the deadliest so far in Assad's crackdown on protests.

As arguably the biggest atrocity to date, almost four months before the Houla Massacre provoked massive diplomatic warfare against Damascus, this February massacre sparked angry attacks on embassies, and also was exploited to influence a UN Security Council vote on Syria's future taking place that day. As Pearse's report noted, "It was not immediately clear what had prompted [or, rather, would prompt] Syrian forces to launch such an intense bombardment, just as diplomats at the security council were discussing the draft resolution supporting the Arab League demand for Assad to step aside." Framed either way, that mystery of motive is worth pondering.

Summary of ACLOS Findings
(incomplete) The numbers with some evidence behind them came from opposition Local Coordinating Committees and the Center for Documentation of Violations in Syria (CDV), is 181 victims in Homs at large, of which 138 were in Khalidiya. The last number is agreed by the SOHR, and seems to reflect exactly those killed strictly by distance shelling of some 36 homes. It's this smaller but still-large number - 138 - this page will deal with.

In all the reports from opposition sources heralding large quantities of dead civilians, it seems none mention one of the most striking qualities. According to the opposition's own VDC database, those 138 shelling victims in Khalidiya include 8 boys (largely teenaged), 130 adult males, and no one else. (Strictly Male Victims? on the talk page). This has no explanation in the opposition's narrative of families hit randomly in their homes, but is consistent with the alternate story that rebels had used their own murdered captives as props. No pro-government sources seem to have noticed or reported this gender-segregation in support, but it does exist and greatly strengthens that already-logical narrative.

Detailed video cataloguing and analysis has not yet been done, but all videos ACLOS has summarily reviewed seem consistent with these other findings. Only men or teenage boys seem to appear, all collected a little too quickly to believe they were pulled out from under rubble, and showing no dust or sign of rubble was ever on them. Many are totally intact and - visibly - could be simple gunshot victims. Other men do show extreme bodily injuries that could be caused by a number of things, including explosives shells through the roof, grenades through the window, or crowbars and heavy rocks. Deeper study may well yield more specific insights.

U.S. president Barack Obama declared emotively on the 4th "yesterday the Syrian government murdered hundreds of Syrian citizens, including women and children, in Homs through shelling and other indiscriminate violence." But A closer look reveals the core bulk of the dead that proves "the Syrian government’s unspeakable assault" is 94% adult and 100% male. And that clue suggests that foreign-sponsored insurgents, and a momentary lack of government checks on them in Homs, were to blame for the escalating bloodshed there. And he used the blood to encourage more restrictions yet on the government, and to add moral support at least for the rebel battalions of Homs.

A number of family names that appear are shared by victims of surrounding incidents, where people of the same name were singled out for "Shabiha" massacres, targeted "shelling," or shooting by "regime sniper." There are clues in these connections ACLOS can so far make a little sense of, and hopefully more in time. See Family Names on the talk page for a beginning analysis of this aspect.