About 220 Syrians, mostly civilians, were killed in a village in the rebellious Hama region when it was bombarded by helicopter gunships and tanks then stormed by militiamen who slaughtered some families, opposition sources said today.
UN special envoy Kofi Annan said he was "shocked and appalled" by news of "intense fighting, significant casualties, and the confirmed use of heavy weaponry such as artillery, tanks and helicopters" in the village of Tremseh.
"I condemn these atrocities in the strongest possible terms," Mr Annan said in a statement.
US secretary of state Hillary Clinton expressed outrage at the news and urged the UN Security Council to make clear to Damascus that there would be consequences.
Ms Clinton said accounts of the government attack provided "indisputable evidence that the regime deliberately murdered innocent civilians".
"We call for an immediate ceasefire in and around Hama to allow the UN observer mission to enter Tremseh," she said in a statement. "Those who committed these atrocities will be identified and held accountable."
UN monitors in Syria tried to reach the scene today but said in a report to their Geneva headquarters that they were prevented by an continuing operation by the Syrian air force in the area, targeting urban population centres.
A local activist named Ahmed told Reuters there were 60 bodies at the mosque, of whom 20 were identified: "There are more bodies in the fields, bodies in the rivers and in houses."
There was no independent account of the battle, which the government described as a massacre by "terrorist groups".
Syrian state television said there had been fighting in Tremseh and accused "armed terrorist groups" of committing a massacre there, but gave no death toll. It said three soldiers had been killed.
Opposition reports also said rebels of the Free Syrian Army had been killed in a battle.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said: "Everything we have seen of the Syrian regime's behaviour over the last 17 months suggests that these reports are credible. They demand a united response from the international community."
UN monitors must get into Tremseh urgently to find out what happened, Mr Hague said, and the United Nations Security Council must agree to a Chapter VII resolution with teeth that can impose sanctions if Assad fails to fulfill commitments made under the Annan plan, to withdraw his forces from residential areas.
Chapter VII allows the world body to take action ranging from sanctions to military intervention. But Russia and China have used veto powers so far to block such a resolution.
Lieutenant Ibrahim Zuait al-Tarkawai was among rebels who died "defending the people of Tremseh", the Hama Revolution Leadership Council said.
"We can verify continuous fighting yesterday in the area of Tremseh," said United Nations monitoring mission chief General Robert Mood.
"This involved mechanised units, indirect fire, as well as helicopters," he said.
UN monitors were ready to "go in and seek verification of facts if and when there is a credible ceasefire", he said.
If scores of civilians were killed, this could be the worst atrocity in 16 months of fighting between rebels and the forces of Syria president Bashar al-Assad.
World powers are deadlocked over how to halt the bloodshed, with Russia and China opposed to Western and Arab calls for Dr Assad to step down immediately.
Activists said the killing took place yesterday, as the UN Security Council began negotiating a potentially crucial new resolution on Syria.
The Sunni Muslim village, surrounded by farmland near the Orontes River, was first shelled then invaded by pro-government Alawite militiamen who swept in and killed victims one by one. Some civilians were killed while trying to flee, it said.
Armed Assad loyalists known as Shabbiha have been accused repeatedly of cold-blooded indiscriminate killings carried out on the coattails of army offensives into rebel-held districts.
Another activist organisation, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said over 160 people were killed yesterday in Hama province, most of them in a massacre in Tremseh.
The Observatory said it had listed 40 victims by name so far, among them dozens of rebel fighters. More than 30 of the dead were completely burned. Some were killed with clubs and knives.
Fadi Sameh, an opposition activist from Tremseh, said he left the town before the reported killing spree but was in touch with residents.
"It appears that Alawite militiamen from surrounding villages descended on Tremseh after its rebel defenders pulled out, and started killing the people. Whole houses have been destroyed and burned from the shelling."
Every family in the town seems to have members killed. We have names of men, women and children from countless families," he said.
Many bodies were taken to a local mosque, he added.
A local activist named Ahmed told Reuters there were 60 bodies at the mosque of whom 20 were identified by name.
"There are more bodies in the fields, bodies in the rivers and in houses ... People were trying to flee from the time the shelling started and whole families were killed trying to escape," he said.
According to a detailed account by activists before news of the massacre, a convoy of 25 vehicles with army and security forces headed west after dawn yesterday, with three armoured vehicles and five trucks towing artillery, passing through the town of Muharda in the direction of the village of Tremseh.
"They blockaded the village from all four sides and began violently and randomly firing on houses as a helicopter flew overhead. As the attack happened the electricity and telephone lines were cut. Residents gathered in the streets in a state of fear and panic. They were unable to flee because of the blockade from every side," the report posted on activist Web sites said.
In June, it took United Nations monitors two days to reach the site of an alleged massacre of 78 people shot or stabbed or burned alive in the village of Mazraat al-Qubeir, a Sunni hamlet, by fighters of Dr Assad's Alawite sect.
Two weeks earlier the Syrian government denied responsibility for the massacre of 108 men, women and children in the town of Houla on May 25th, the vast majority of them executed according to a UN report.
Damascus was widely condemned for the atrocity.
Most of Dr Assad's political and military establishment are minority Alawites, who form a branch of Shia Islam. The revolt and the fighters behind it, and the street protesters who launched the revolt in March 2011, are mostly Sunni Muslims.
The insurgents cannot match the Syrian army's firepower but they have established footholds in villages, towns and even cities across Syria, coming under attack from Dr Assad's forces to respond fiercely with helicopter gunships and artillery.
Following high-profile defections of a family friend and a top diplomat, both Sunnis, analysts said cracks were appearing in Dr Assad's Alawite-dominated rule.
But Dr Assad's strongest strategic ally, Russia, stuck by him with a clear warning to his Western and Arab enemies that it would not even consider a tough new UN resolution.
Britain, the United States, France and Germany want to make compliance with a transition plan drafted by international envoy Kofi Annan enforceable under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter.
This would allow the council to authorise actions ranging from diplomatic and economic sanctions to military intervention.
Russia's deputy UN ambassador Alexander Pankin warned Moscow would use its veto if it had to. "We are definitely against Chapter 7," he said.
"Anything can be negotiated, but we do not negotiate this, this is a red line."
Reuters