Syria Forces Bombard Homs As UN Squabbles February 6, 2012 Radio Free Europe http://www.rferl.org/content/more_syria_deaths_regime_forces_bombard_homs_int/24474791.html Syrian opposition sources say at least 17 people have been killed as Syrian government forces continue to bombard the flashpoint central city of Homs. Activists said government forces were using helicopter gunships and rocket launchers in the assault. The government denied shelling Homs, however, saying armed terrorist gangs were behind the violence. The government also blamed a gas pipeline explosion in Homs on terrorists. Meanwhile, Russia and China have offered defenses of their votes after coming under Western criticism for vetoing a United Nations Security Council draft resolution that would have called for a halt to the Syrian violence and urged President Bashar al-Assad to step down. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov described the West's reaction to the vetoes as indecent and bordering on hysteria. The desire of the coauthors [of the draft UN Security Council resolution on Syria] was to make the [Syrian] regime stop violent activities without imposing any concrete obligations on the armed groups that are fighting against this regime, Lavrov said during a visit to Bahrain. And such a resolution would have meant that the Security Council was taking sides in a civil war. Moscow and Beijing on February 4 both vetoed the measure, which was backed by the Arab League and supported by the Security Council's 13 other members. In its comments on February 6, the Chinese Foreign Ministry rejected U.S. accusations that China and Russia were sheltering the Syrian regime, saying Beijing only wanted to uphold justice. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton earlier called the vetoes a travesty and accused China and Russia of protecting the brutal regime in Damascus. Lavrov and Russian Foreign Intelligence Service head Mikhail Fradkov are expected to travel to Damascus on February 7 to meet with President Assad. A Russian Foreign Ministry statement said the men will press Assad to make compromises and that Russian President Dmitry Medvedev is seeking the swiftest stabilization of the situation on the basis of democratic reforms. Upward of 6,000 people are estimated to have been killed in the Syrian conflict since the Assad regime launched its crackdown on protesters in March, 2011. Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby said on February 5 that Arab states would continue their efforts to help resolve the Syrian crisis