Syrian secular groups demonstrate outside the parliament building in Damascus on February 21, 2012 against an article in the draft constitution that would require the president to be a Muslim. The protest comes ahead of the weekend referendum on a new constitution that could end nearly five decades of rule by Assad's Baath party. -AFP Photo

DAMASCUS: Syrian forces killed 57 civilians Tuesday as they blitzed the city of Homs and a village in Idlib province, monitors said, as the Red Cross sought a truce to deliver aid and the United Nations demanded unimpeded access for aid groups.

The escalation comes as Russia, a key ally of President Bashar al-Assad's regime, said it will boycott an international conference in Tunis this week aimed at seeking political change in Syria and China refused to commit.

It also comes ahead of the weekend referendum on a new constitution that could end nearly five decades of rule by Assad's Baath party.

At least 33 civilians were killed in an operation by Syrian forces in the village of Abdita in the northwestern province of Idlib that extended to the neighbouring villages of Ibleen and Balshon, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said

And despite a plea by activists on Monday to allow women and children to flee Homs' besieged Baba Amr neighbourhood, troop reinforcements were sent to the outskirts of the restive city, which residents say has been under assault for 18 straight days.

Activists fear they are preparing to storm its defiant neighbourhoods. The Observatory said 16 people, including three children, died in “intensive shelling” that targeted Baba Amr, with the Khaldiyeh and Karm al-Zaytoun districts also blasted.

Eight more civilians, including a child, were reportedly killed by gunfire elsewhere in the country.

Homs-based activist Hadi Abdullah of the General Commission of the Syrian Revolution, who had earlier voiced fears of an imminent ground attack against Baba Amr area, told AFP “large reinforcements were heading to Homs.”

”We counted at least 150 shells crashing in Baba Amr within two hours this morning. We gave up counting afterwards,” he said.

Omar Shaker, another activist, told AFP the neighbourhood had “no electricity, nor fuel,” and that “snipers have hit water tanks,” rendering the situation “bad beyond imagination.”Human Rights Watch said it had confirmed the use of Russian-made 240 mm mortars in Homs.

“It is by far the most powerful mortar in modern use -- most other countries stop at 160mm mortars, and a very powerful weapon,” HRW emergency director Peter Bouckaert told AFP.

“We have little doubt that those extremely powerful mortars are being fired by the regime forces into civilian neighborhoods of Homs. We are talking about a 250-pound mortar round that can only be fired from a heavy specialised armored vehicle and it requires a nine person crew to operate,” he added.

AFP was not able to verify the death toll nor the reports of shelling, as foreign reporters are given only limited access within the country.

In the capital, the Observatory reported that security forces opened fire overnight to disperse a demonstration in the Al-Hajar Al-Aswad neighbourhood, as daring protests spread in the stronghold of Assad's regime.

Protesters blocked the roads leading to Baramkeh Square in the centre of the capital overnight, according to Mohammed Shami, a spokesman for activists in Damascus province.

Demonstrators used “burning materials” to shut the roads, triggering a security alert that saw “heavily armed forces” deployed in the area within minutes, he added.

Security forces also opened fire to disperse a student protest inside the University of Aleppo, the northern city that until recently been spared anti-regime demonstrations.

And secular groups demonstrated outside parliament against an article in the draft constitution that would require the president to be a Muslim.

The International Committee of the Red Cross called for a daily truce of two hours in Syria so it can deliver vital aid to afflicted areas, after saying a day earlier it was in talks with both sides to halt the violence.

The head of the rebel Free Syrian Army, Colonel Riyadh al-Asaad welcomed the call, but voiced doubts that the “criminal” regime would commit.

Meanwhile, the UN under secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, Valerie Amos, called on Syria to allow aid groups unimpeded access to the country.

“This is a major human rights crisis that is now moving into significant humanitarian consequences,” Amos said after talks with EU aid commissioner Kristalina Georgieva.

And although top US military officer, General Martin Dempsey, said over the weekend it was “premature” to arm the country's opposition, top Republican Senator John McCain called again for the outgunned rebels to be supplied with weapons.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, said Syria was increasingly under pressure.

A Friends of Syria meeting in Tunis on Friday will “demonstrate that Assad's regime is increasingly isolated and that the brave Syrian people need our support and solidarity,” she said on a visit to Mexico.

The meeting “will send a clear message to Russia, China and others who are still unsure about how to handle the increasing violence but are up until now, unfortunately, making the wrong choices,” she added.

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