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* Children say sounds of shooting echo constantly

* Women try to escape worst of violence

* Hama “knows what this regime is capable of”, says resident

By Mariam Karouny

HAMA, Syria, May 3 (Reuters) – Scarred by months of

shelling, the street in the Syrian city of Hama was deserted

until a handful of children emerged warily from their homes to

greet visiting United Nations monitors.

“Down with the traitor of Syria” read graffiti in the

northern Hama district of Arbaeen, a centre of opposition to

President Bashar al-Assad and scene of heavy bombardment by his

forces trying to crush an uprising that is now 14 months old.

Gradually the empty street showed signs of life as the

children were joined by women in long black abayas and finally a

few men joined the small crowd, emboldened by the U.N. presence

in the ghostly neighbourhood.

In a city still raw from the memory of Assad’s late father’s

suppression of an armed Islamist uprising 30 years ago, when

many thousands were killed, all those in Arbaeen who spoke to

this reporter said they lived in fear of security forces. Three

decades on, many had fresh tales of suffering.

A young girl of about eight, who did not give her name, said

the army had killed 10 of her cousins just a few days ago. She

said soldiers lined them up against a wall and shot them. “Now

the army scares me,” she said.

“Every night we hear shooting and shelling, and we are

scared,” said her friend standing next to her.

A nearby alley was dug up and blocked – a deliberate move,

residents said, by security forces to make it impassable.

Women appeared from nearby houses, carrying a few clothes in

bags and holding their children by the hand, saying they wanted

to leave before the upsurge in shelling and security raids that

takes place on Thursdays and Fridays.

One woman said she was taking her two daughters and her

eight-year-old son, but leaving behind a 15-year-old son because

she feared soldiers would stop him at a checkpoint because he

appeared old enough to be a rebel fighter. “So I left him here

with my mother,” she said.

Others spoke of missing husbands and sons. “We don’t know if

they are alive or dead. Each one of us who has a young boy has

already sent him out of the city,” said one woman.

A man called Abdullah said that every couple of days

security forces ordered people to collect bodies dumped outside

the neighbourhood. “Some of the bodies we pick up are covered in

worms,” he said.

From across the wide street, another group of people stood

and watched, saying they would not cross over for fear of being

shot by snipers.

“HAMA KNOWS”

Twelve-year-old Mustafa said Hama residents heard constant

shooting and lived in fear. “There are no schools and we are

scared of the army – they have detained my two brothers and my

cousins and we don’t know where they are”.

Another man, called Hamza, showed U.N. monitors a wound in

his thigh, saying he had been shot while attending a peaceful

demonstration a few days ago.

“We’ve been suffering from this regime since the 1980s,” he

said. “The people of Hama have suffered a lot and we, of all

Syrians, know what this regime is capable of. It is willing to

kill all Syrians to remain in power.”

The United Nations says Syrian forces have killed 9,000

people since protests first broke out against Assad in March

2011, inspired by uprisings across the Arab world against

autocratic rule. Syrian authorities say armed groups have killed

more than 2,600 police and soldiers.

A three-week-old ceasefire agreement, brokered by the United

Nations, has contained some of the worst violence but failed to

halt the daily killings.

The head of the monitoring mission overseeing the truce,

Major General Robert Mood, told reporters in Hama that U.N.

observers were having a “calming affect” and that government

forces appeared willing to cooperate with the ceasefire.

“There have been steps taken by the government forces on the

ground that indicate a better willingness to live up to the

commitments made in the agreement,” he said, giving no details.

“We still have a good chance and opportunity to break the

growing cycle of violence and turn it around to a positive

cycle,” Mood said.

In Hama, signs of that violence were widespread. In the

Al-Sabil neighbourhood, Mood’s convoy passed a school which

Syrian security forces said they had seized back from “terrorist

groups”, the term officials use to describe anti-Assad rebels.

“The army liberated it a month ago and are staying

temporarily. When things get better they will leave,” one

officer told Reuters.

New windows had been installed but parts of the school walls

were still charred. Surrounding buildings had gaping holes from

shells or rocket-propelled grenades and many houses were

bullet-marked. Sandbags surrounded craters in the road.

“WE LOVE OUR PRESIDENT”

Not all of Hama resembled a war zone. Further south in the

centre of the city streets were crowded with people and traffic,

shops were open and election banners ahead of Monday’s

parliamentary vote lent an air of normality.

In Orontes Square, scene of protests against Assad last

summer which drew many tens of thousands of demonstrators,

anti-Assad graffiti had been painted over and a large picture of

the president dominated the centre of the square.

People who spoke to Reuters on the street, away from

security forces and cameras, were divided. Some said the Syrian

army had saved their city from “terrorists’. Others refused to

talk, saying they would be killed for speaking out.

Ghadir, a 30-year-old woman, said: “The army protect us. The

army is my brother, my cousin and the men of my country. This is

what the army is and the others are just terrorists.”

“We know what you people think of us, but we love our

president,” said her friend.

But a man in Orontes Square, dressed in sports gear, said

that even speaking to foreign reporters was a risk. “We’re

scared. We can’t talk to you. Even if you can’t see them, they

are here and when you leave they will arrest us and kill us,” he

said.

Back in Arbaeen, as the monitors were preparing to move on,

residents echoed those fears. “After you leave they will come

back and kill us,” a woman said. Vanishing back into houses and

side streets, they left their neighbourhood deserted again.

(Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Giles Elgood)