Execution video surfaces in Syria
By   Salma Abdelaziz and Joe Sterling,  CNN
May 15, 2013 -- Updated 2010 GMT (0410 HKT) CNN.com 
(CNN) -- Armed, masked men raise their weapons and shoot 
dead three men sitting on a curb in a Syrian city. The images are 
captured on video, purportedly showing Islamist rebels carrying out a 
public execution of soldiers.
The incident occurred in 
Raqqa city, in the north. Videos produced by locals sympathetic to the 
Islamists have appeared on the Web, and an opposition group, the Syrian 
Observatory for Human Rights issued a report on the incident Tuesday.
"Rebel fighters from the Islamic 
State of Iraq and Bilad al-Sham (Syria) have summarily executed three 
men in the middle of a square in Raqqa city," the Observatory said. "The 
jihadis stated that the detainees were officers from the Syrian army."
The videos show armed masked men 
standing in a street, with one of them reading from a paper. A crowd of 
onlookers can be seen in the background. Gunmen shoot dead three men who are 
sitting on a curb and the militants raise their weapons in 
celebration. 
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There was no immediate comment on the incident from rebel leaders and the 
government.
This is the latest report of an atrocity in a war rife with abuse, killing and 
widespread population displacement.
Since the unrest began in March 
2011, Syrians have described a range of human rights abuses by security 
forces and backers of President Bashar al-Assad's regime.
There have been claims of atrocities by rebel forces as well.
The Raqqa incident comes on the 
heels of a horrific video showing a man said to be a Syrian rebel 
carving into the body of a government soldier, cutting out his heart and liver, 
and putting the heart in his mouth, taking a bite.
Other violence persisted Wednesday. Clashes broke out between rebel fighters 
and regime troops at the 
Aleppo central prison, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. The 
Israeli military said several Syrian rockets landed in the Mount Hermon area of 
the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, on the border with Syria.
At least 50 people were killed 
Wednesday across the country, the opposition Local Coordination 
Committees of Syria said. Of those, 18 were in Aleppo and four were in 
Raqqa.
Meanwhile, the Internet is back up 
in Syria after being down for more than eight hours Wednesday, according to the 
Renesys Corp., an Internet monitoring company. A week ago, a 
widespread Internet outage in Syria lasted more than 19 hours before access was 
restored.
Diplomatic moves 
On Wednesday, the U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution calling for a 
political transition in Syria.
The resolution, which passed by a 
107-12 vote, with 59 abstentions, also condemned the government's 
increased use of heavy weapons and ongoing "widespread and systematic 
gross violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms," said a U.N. 
statement.
It was the fifth resolution on Syria voted by the body since 2011.
"If we are unable to do anything to stop this tragedy, then how can we sustain 
the moral credibility of 
this organization?" Assembly President Vuk Jeremic said before the vote, 
according to the statement.
Meanwhile, in Sweden, U.S. 
Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov 
discussed the revival of a peace initiative based on last year's Geneva 
conference.
That conference, brokered by Russia and the United States, outlined how a 
transitional government could be formed in Syria.
"I think it's fair to say that both of us are confident about the direction 
that we're moving in and very, 
very hopeful that within a short period of time, the pieces will have 
come together fully so that the world, hopefully, will have an 
opportunity to be given an alternative to the violence and destruction 
that is taking place in Syria at this moment," Kerry said.
Lavrov cited the Russian-American proposal to convene a conference to start 
implementing the Geneva communique last June.
"It's self-explanatory, and what we need now is to mobilize support for this 
initiative on the basis of 
what was, I believe, in Geneva and what was proposed by Washington and 
Moscow: to mobilize support, first of all, by all the Syrian groups, the regime 
and all opposition groups; and second by those outside actors 
who have influence on either one or the other Syrian group," Lavrov 
said.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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