Syrian activists deplored the outcome of an international "Friends of Syria" conference, saying today that the world had abandoned them to be killed by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad.
The Syrian military took its bombardment of the rebel-held Baba Amro district of Homs into a fourth week as the Red Cross tried to evacuate more distressed civilians from the city.
"Negotiations have resumed with Syrian authorities and the opposition in order to continue evacuating all persons in need of help," said Hicham Hassan, spokesman of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva.
"We hope to be able to carry out many more life-saving operations," he said. "We are hopeful the ICRC will also enter Baba Amro today."
At least 28 people were killed in Syria today, including nine in Homs, Syria's third city, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The state news agency SANA reported the funerals of 18 members of the security forces killed by "armed terrorist
groups" in Homs, Deraa, Idlib and the Damascus countryside.
But activists in Homs were despondent about yesterday's Friends of Syria meeting in Tunis and suspicious of the ICRC's efforts because they involved the Syrian Arab Red Crescent, viewed as compromised by its links with the government.
"We refuse to work with the local Red Crescent," said Nadir al-Husseini. "The government's demand to use the Red Crescent is a dirty trick because this group is not independent, it is under the control of the regime. We have no trust in them."
The ICRC said the Syrian Red Crescent had evacuated a total of 27 women and children from Baba Amro on Friday.
Mr Husseini described desperate conditions in Baba Amro, where efforts to extract three Western journalists and the bodies of two others killed there on Wednesday have yet to succeed.
"It would be good if they (the ICRC) could bring in some aid. But even if they brought us some medical supplies how much would it really help? We have hundreds of wounded people crammed into houses all around the neighbourhood," he said.
"People are dying from lack of blood because we just don't have the capability of treating everyone. I don't think any
amount they could bring in would really help."
The Tunis conference of Western, Arab and other countries was intended to ratchet up diplomatic pressure on Dr Assad to end an almost year-long crackdown on opponents of his 11-year rule in which thousands of Syrians have been killed.
A doctor in the rebellious town of Zabadani, who asked not to be named, said: "I love the people of all countries but it's clear none of them are very concerned about us or our crisis. I'm sorry to be so depressing, but I'm really frightened that after all these efforts we will still end up like Hama in 1982, killed while the world waits and watches."
Dr Assad's father crushed an armed Islamist uprising in Hama 30 years ago, killing many thousands of civilians and razing parts of the city with tanks and artillery in a three-week assault.
"I can tell you that the people of Zabadani resent what happened in Tunis," the doctor said. "We need them to arm the revolution. I don't understand what they are waiting for. Do they need to see half the people of Syria finished off
first?"
President Barack Obama saidyesterday it was time to stop the killing of Syrians by their own government.
"All of us seeing the terrible pictures coming out of Syria and Homs recently recognise it is absolutely imperative for the international community to rally in sending a clear message to President Assad that it is time for a transition."
Such talk fails to impress in Baba Amro where hundreds of civilians have been killed in the last three weeks.
"They (world leaders) are still giving opportunities to this man who is killing us and has already killed thousands of
people," said activist Husseini in the battered district. "I've completely lost faith in everyone but God. But in
spite of that, I know we will continue this uprising. We'll die trying before we give up," he said.
"The shelling is just like it was yesterday. We have had 22 days of this. The women and children are all hiding in
basements," he added."No one would dare try to flee the neighbourhood, that is instant death. You'd have to get past snipers and soldiers. Then there is a trench that surrounds our neighbourhood and a few others. Then you have to go past more troops."
Dr Assad's forces killed 103 people in Syria on Friday, the activist group Local Coordination Committees said. Most were civilians, including 14 children and one woman, it said.
Diplomatic moves are hamstrung because there is little appetite for military intervention in Syria and because of
Russian and Chinese opposition to Security Council action. Beijing and Moscow refused to attend the meeting in Tunisia.
Some Gulf Arab delegates at the conference called for an international peacekeeping force in Syria. The Saudi foreign minister said arming Syrian rebels was an "excellent idea".
Agencies