(Recasts with Saudi, U.S. comments, Red Cross)
* Western and Arab to press Syria to allow aid for civilians
* "Friends of Syria" say can deliver aid within 48 hours
* Russia, China prevent tough U.N. Security Council action
TUNIS, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Powerful Gulf Arab countries
pushed on Friday for more forceful intervention against Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad and the United States warned he would
have "even more blood on his hands" if he blocked aid to
stricken civilian areas.
Speaking at a meeting of Western and Arab nations which
sought to escalate pressure on Assad over his crackdown on 11
months of protests, Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Prince Saud
al-Feisal said he supported arming the rebels.
"I think it's an excellent idea," he said at the start of a
meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who warned
Assad would pay a heavy price for the violence in Syria.
"If the Assad regime refuses to allow this life-saving aid
to reach civilians, it will have even more blood on its hands,"
Clinton said in prepared remarks for the meeting. "So too will
those nations that continue to protect and arm the regime".
In a political blow to Assad, the Palestinian Islamist group
Hamas turned publically against their long-time ally on Friday.
"I salute the heroic people of Syria who are striving for
freedom democracy and reform," Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said.
The exiled political leadership of Hamas, based in Damascus
for over a decade, quietly quit the Syrian capital recently but
had tried to deny their absence had anyting to do with the
revolt.
Qatar's Foreign Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani
said an Arab force should be created to impose peace and open
humanitarian corridors in Syria.
He was addressing the first gathering of the "Friends of
Syria" group, more than 50 countries who met against the
backdrop of a surge in government attacks on the city of Homs
and mounting world outrage over violence that has claimed
thousands of lives during the uprising.
In Homs, Syrian government artillery fire killed five people
in the city's Baba Amro district, opposition activists said, as
the bombardment of opposition-held neighbourhoods entered its
fourth week on Friday.
"Baba Amro is being hit with 122mm artillery directed at it
from surrounding villages. A father and his 14-year-old son were
among those killed. They were trying to flee the shelling when
shrapnel hit them in the street," Mohammad al-Homsi said.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said it was
negotiating with Syrian officials and opposition forces in Homs
for an evacuation of all sick and wounded in need of help.
French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said the Red Cross and
the governor of Homs were working to evacuate wounded foreign
journalists stranded in the city.
SHOT THROUGH THE HEAD
Activists said Syrian security forces lined up and shot dead
at least 18 people in a village in the central western Hama
province. A video uploaded by activists showed people wrapping
the bloodied bodies of children and at least four adults.
Several had been shot through the head.
An updated draft declaration from the meeting called on
Syria to "immediately cease all violence" to allow the United
Nations access to Homs, and to let agencies deliver aid to
civilians affected by the violence.
The Friends of Syria pledged, in the latest version of the
draft seen by Reuters, to deliver humanitarian supplies within
48 hours if Syria's government "stopped its assault on civilian
areas and permitted access".
With moves for tough action against Syria in the U.N.
Security Council stymied by Russian and Chinese vetoes and a
lack of appetite for military action to end Assad's crackdown,
delegates in Tunis have limited options.
The head of the main opposition Syrian National Council
(SNC) expressed disappointment in the Tunis meeting. "This
conference does not meet the aspirations of the Syrian people,"
SNC chief Burhan Ghalioun told Reuters.
But in a sign the international community is seeking ways
around the Security Council deadlock, U.N. Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon said he would dispatch former U.N. chief Kofi Annan to
Syria as a joint U.N.-Arab League envoy.
One Syrian opposition source said that although no country
had yet decided to arm the rebels, foreign powers were turning a
blind eye to weapons purchases by Syrian exiles smuggling in
light arms, communications equipment and night vision goggles.
Syrian opposition supporters were also trying to bring
anti-aircraft and anti-tank weapons to the Free Syrian Army
rebels, and to get retired Syrian officers into the country to
help coordinate military opposition to Assad.
HARSH REALITIES
The draft communique did not mention any foreign military
intervention along the lines of the NATO bombing campaign that
helped force out Libya's Muammar Gaddafi.
Instead, it called for further diplomatic pressure on Assad
to step down and endorsed an Arab League plan that sees him
handing power to a deputy as a prelude to elections.
The group will also commit to enforce sanctions aimed at
pressuring Syrian authorities to halt violence, according to the
draft declaration.
These include travel bans, asset freezes, a halt to
purchases of Syrian oil, ceasing infrastructure investment and
financial services relating to Syria, reducing diplomatic ties
and preventing arms shipments to the Syrian government.
Juppe said the European Union, which has already imposed
sanctions on Syrian officials, businesses and oil exports, would
freeze assets of the Syrian Central Bank from Monday.
But the wording of the Tunis draft reflected a harsh
reality: there is little the world can do to stop the violence
as long as Russia and China, both of which declined invitations
to the Tunis meeting, reject Security Council resolutions.
Another problem facing world powers is divisions within the
Syrian opposition. While the Syrian National Council (SNC)
attended the Tunis talks but the mainly Syrian-based National
Coordination Body said it was not taking part.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said London would
now treat the SNC as "a legitimate representative of the Syrian
people". But the draft offered a weaker endorsement, proposing
only that the SNC be recognised as "a legitimate representative
of Syrians seeking peaceful democratic change".
(Additional reporting by Dominic Evans in Beirut, Khaled Oweis
in Amman, Lou Charbonneau at the United Nations, Arshad Mohammed
and Myra MacDonald in London; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing
by Myra MacDonald)

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