BEIRUT,
Aug 20 (Reuters) - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad made his first appearance
in public since a July bomb attack, attending prayers at a Damascus mosque to
mark the start of the Muslim holiday of Eid, state TV showed.
The first
day of Eid on Sunday also gave Assad's opponents a chance to rally and
activists reported protests around Syria, including in the capital, on a
holiday that marked the end of the Islamic holy fasting month of Ramadan.
Fighting
raged on around Syria, killing more than 100 people, an activist group
reported.
Battling
a 17-month-old uprising against 42 years of rule by his family, Assad was
filmed at prayer with his prime minister and foreign minister but not with his
vice president, Farouq al-Shara, whose reported defection was denied the
previous day.
Shaken by
a July 18 bomb attack in Damascus and defections - including that of his last
prime minister - Assad's recent appearances on state TV had previously been
restricted to footage of him conducting official business. He was shown
swearing in the new prime minister a week ago.
Syria's
civil war has intensified since the bombing that killed members of Assad's
inner circle, including his defence minister and brother-in-law.
Assad was
pictured on Sunday sitting cross-legged at a mosque in the Damascus residential
district of Muhajirin listening to a sermon in which Syria was described as a
victim of "terrorism" and a conspiracy hatched by the United States,
Israel, the West and Arabs - a reference to Gulf states which back the revolt.
Sheikh
Mohammad Kheir Ghantous said the plot would not "defeat our Islam, our
ideology and our determination".
Dressed
in a suit and tie, Assad smiled as he greeted officials including senior
members of his Baath Party.
In
attendance were Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem and Prime Minister Wael
al-Halki. He is the replacement for Riyad Hijab, a Sunni who has joined the
opposition to Assad since his defection was announced on Aug. 6.
Hijab was
the highest-level Syrian official to desert the government so far.
With
diplomatic efforts to end the war hampered by divisions between world powers
and regional rivalries, Syria is facing the prospect of a prolonged conflict
that threatens to destabilise the Middle East with its sectarian overtones,
pitting a mainly Sunni Muslim opposition against the Alawite minority to which
Assad belongs.
FIGHTING
CONTINUES DESPITE START OF EID
The
London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said more than 100 people had
been killed on Sunday. The figure could not be independently verified. It
reported fighting in Damascus, Deraa and elsewhere despite the start of the Eid
holiday.
In the
rebel-held village of Saraja, near the Turkish border, the bereaved visited
their relatives' graves, in accordance with Eid tradition.
"He
had four children, he was my only son," said an elderly woman who
identified herself as Umm Jumaa, speaking in a video obtained by Reuters as she
visited the grave of her slain son.
A trench
had been dug nearby in anticipation of more bodies.
Even as
President Assad appeared in Damascus, videos posted by activists on YouTube
showed protests against him in and around the capital. "Oh martyr, your
blood will not go to waste," chanted protesters in Qudsia, a Damascus
neighbourhood, in a YouTube posting dated Aug. 19.
"The
people want divine protection," chanted several dozen men shown in another
video, posted by activists and dated Aug. 19. It showed a protest at Yabrud,
north of Damascus.
What
started out last year as a mostly peaceful protest movement against Assad's
rule is now an armed insurrection.
Government
forces have increasingly resorted to air power to hold back lightly armed
insurgents in Damascus and Aleppo, Syria's largest city and business hub. More
than 18,000 people have died in Syria's bloodshed and about 170,000 have fled
the country, according to the United Nations. Aleppo has been the theatre for
some of the heaviest recent fighting. Rebels hold several districts in the
country's largest city and have tried to push back against an army
counter-offensive.
U.N.
investigators said last week that government forces and allied militia had
committed war crimes, including murder and the torture of civilians in what
seemed to be state-directed policy.
Syrian
insurgents had also committed war crimes, including executions, but on a
smaller scale than those by the army and security forces, according to the
investigators.
Syrian
state television reported that government forces had thwarted several attempts
by armed groups to infiltrate Syria from Lebanon, a country whose own fragile
stability has been put under strain by the conflict next door.
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