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* Tanks firing in three cities, activists say

* Ban Ki-moon says Syria situation getting worse

* Record number of Syrian refugees flee to Turkey

By Mariam Karouny

BEIRUT, April 6 (Reuters) – Syrian troops and tanks battled

rebels on Friday, opposition activists said, only four days

before a troop pullback agreed by President Bashar al-Assad as

part of international envoy Kofi Annan’s plan to end a year of

bloodshed.

The renewed violence erupted a day after U.N.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the conflict was worsening

and attacks on civilian areas persisted, despite assurances from

Damascus that its troops had begun withdrawing under the plan.

U.N.-Arab League mediator Annan said “more far-reaching

action is urgently required” to halt all forms of violence by

April 12, following a withdrawal of the military’s heavy weapons

and troops from cities two days earlier.

But activists reported tank fire in at least three urban

centres on Friday — the town of Douma near Damascus, the

restive city of Homs and Rastan, north of Homs.

“Tanks went into Douma last night, then they left. Today at

7 in the morning they came back. There has been shelling on

Douma since the morning. We are not sure if people were killed

but the shelling did not stop,” a local activist said.

“At least 5 tanks and 10 buses loaded with security men and

Shabiha (pro-Assad militia) entered Douma,” he said.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said

troops were fighting Free Syrian Army rebels in Douma as well as

in Rastan on the highway between Homs and Hama cities.

There were no immediate reports of casualties.

Army shelling of villages in the northwestern province of

Idlib has prompted a swelling exodus of Syrian refugees. More

than 2,800 fled into Turkey on Thursday, a Turkish official

said, more than double the highest previous one-day total.

The refugees all crossed close to the Turkish village of

Bukulmez and more were waiting on the other side of the border,

the official said. Forty-four minibuses ferried the arrivals

from the border to a refugee camp at Reyhanli.

“The army is destroying buildings and bombing them till they

turn to charcoal,” said Mohammed Khatib, a refugee who said he

came from Kastanaz, a Syrian town of 20,000 people.

“The army wants people to move out of their houses. If the

residents refuse, they destroy them with the people inside.”

WESTERN SCEPTICISM

More than 42,000 Syrians have fled their country since the

revolt against 42 years of Assad family rule began a year ago.

Loyalist forces have killed over 9,000 people, by a U.N. tally.

Syria says 6,044 have died, including 2,566 soldiers and police.

Annan told the U.N. General Assembly by video link from

Geneva that the Syrian authorities had told him this week troop

withdrawals were under way in the towns of Deraa, Idlib and

Zabadani. But he said he wanted “fuller information”.

Western powers are not convinced Assad will honour the

promised truce and believe he may seek loopholes giving him more

time to cripple the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and deter protesters.

It is also uncertain whether the FSA has enough control over

its fighters to enforce Annan’s ceasefire deadline.

Syria’s U.N. ambassador Bashar Ja’afari said the plan did

not require any pullback of police – who have played a big role

in the conflict as suggested by the state’s own casualty toll.

Last year the opposition said troops had disguised

themselves as police and repainted army vehicles in police

colours before the arrival in December of Arab observers sent to

monitor what proved an abortive Arab League peace plan.

A Norwegian general attached to U.N. peacekeeping arrived in

Damascus on Thursday to examine prospects for an eventual U.N.

ceasefire monitoring mission of up to 250 unarmed observers,

something which would require a Security Council resolution.

The council, where Russia and China have vetoed two previous

Syria resolutions, agreed on Thursday to a statement urging

Damascus to meet Annan’s ceasefire deadline.