
President Ahmed al-Sharaa called for national unity and peace on Sunday amid a growing international backlash following the killing of Alawite civilians in the worst violence since the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad.
United Nations rights chief Volker Turk said the killings "must cease immediately", while the Arab League, the United Nations, the United States and other governments have condemned the violence.
“Syria’s stability is crucial for Lebanon’s stability, and we have files to address, including border demarcation and arms smuggling,” said Lebanese Foreign Affairs and Emigrants Minister, Youssef Rajji.
The presidency announced on Telegram that an "independent committee" had been formed to "investigate the violations against civilians and identify those responsible for them", who would face the courts.
Clashes between the new security forces and loyalists of the former government erupted on Thursday in the heartland of the Alawite minority to which Assad belongs and have since escalated into reported mass killings.
Speaking from a mosque in Damascus, Sharaa said: "We must preserve national unity (and) civil peace as much as possible and, God willing, we will be able to live together in this country."
A Syrian war monitor said Sunday that security forces and allied groups killed 830 Alawite civilians over the past four days, revising upwards a previous toll.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the latest deaths among Alawite civilians pushed the overall toll in violence since Thursday to 1,311, as fighting killed 231 security personnel and 250 fighters loyal to ousted president Bashar al-Assad.
The Britain-based Observatory said they were killed in "executions" carried out by security personnel or pro-government fighters, and were followed by looting.
'They gathered all the men'
The interior ministry said on Sunday that government forces were conducting "sweeping operations in Qadmous and the surrounding villages" in Tartus province to "pursue the remnants of the toppled regime".
State news agency SANA quoted a defense ministry source as saying there were violent clashes ongoing in Tanita, another Tartus village.
An AFP photographer in the city of Latakia reported a military convoy entering the Bisnada neighborhood to search homes.
In Baniyas, a city to the south, resident Samir Haidar, 67, told AFP two of his brothers and his nephew were killed by armed groups that entered people's homes, adding that there were "foreigners among them".
"They gathered all the men on the roof and opened fire on them," Haidar said.
Defense ministry spokesman Hassan Abdul Ghani said on Saturday the security forces had "reimposed control" over areas that had seen attacks by Assad loyalists.
The mass killings followed clashes sparked by the arrest of a wanted suspect in a predominantly Alawite village, the Observatory said, reporting a "relative return to calm" in the coastal region on Saturday.
The head of the World Health Organization Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said medical facilities had been damaged in the clashes and that the UN agency was "working to deliver medicines and trauma supplies".
Chief US diplomat Marco Rubio said Syria "must hold the perpetrators of these massacres against Syria's minority communities accountable", while Germany's foreign ministry said the Syrian authorities had "a responsibility to prevent further attacks".
A defence ministry source told SANA that troops had blocked roads leading to the coast to prevent "violations", without specifying who was committing them.
Latakia province security director Mustafa Kneifati told the news agency: "We will not allow for sedition or the targeting of any component of the Syrian people."
Fear of reprisals
Sharaa's Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which led the toppling of Assad in December, has its roots in the Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda and remains proscribed as a terrorist organisation by many governments including the United States.
Since the rebel victory, it has vowed to protect Syria's religious and ethnic minorities.
The UN's Turk said in a statement there had been a "continuous spike in hate speech both online and offline" in Syria and insisted there was an "urgent need for a comprehensive transitional justice process".
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar, speaking to German newspaper Bild, said Europe "must wake up" and "stop granting legitimacy" to the new Syrian authorities who he insisted were still jihadists.
The Alawite heartland has been gripped by fear of reprisals for the Assad family's brutal five-decade rule which included widespread torture and disappearances.
Social media users have shared posts documenting the killing of Alawite friends and relatives.
The Observatory, which relies on a network of sources in Syria, reported multiple "massacres" in recent days, with women and children among the dead.
The Observatory and activists released footage showing dozens of bodies piled outside a house. Other videos appeared to show men in military garb shooting people at close range.
AFP could not independently verify the images or accounts.
During a sermon on Sunday in Damascus, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch John X said Christians were among those killed and called on Sharaa to "put a stop to these massacres... and give a sense of safety and security to all the people of Syria, regardless of their sect".
Aron Lund of the Century International think tank said the violence was "a bad omen".
He said the new government lacks the tools, incentives and local support base to engage with disgruntled Alawites.
"All they have is repressive power, and a lot of that... is made up of jihadist zealots who think Alawites are enemies of God."
With AFP
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