DAMASCUS, Syria  
   (AP) -- Rockets slammed into government-held districts Thursday in 
the central Syrian city of Homs, setting off successive explosions in a 
weapons depot that killed at least 40 people, an opposition group and 
residents said.  The blasts came hours after state TV showed President 
Bashar Assad making a rare visit to a former rebel bastion near the 
capital, Damascus, to mark Army Day.
The twin 
developments showed that rebels fighting to oust Assad are still able to
 strike back despite significant advances by the military that have 
bolstered the confidence of the regime
One 
resident in Homs said the blasts, which sent a massive ball of fire, 
thick smoke and dust into the sky, were so strong they cracked the walls
 of some buildings and shook the ground.
The 
blasts sent a massive ball of fire into the sky and caused widespread 
damage and panic among residents, many of whom are supporters of 
President Bashar Assad.
The Britain-based 
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which closely monitors the fighting
 via a network of activists on the ground, said 40 people were killed 
and 120 were wounded - some critically - when rockets struck the arms 
depot and ignited the fire.
A resident of Homs
 corroborated that account, saying he heard blasts for more than an hour
 after the first explosion. He said they could be heard from the 
overwhelmingly pro-regime districts of Wadi Dahab and al-Walid, where 
the regime is known to keep arms depots.
"Rockets
 were falling on the area ... when the arms depot began to explode but 
we don't know if the rockets triggered the blasts," he said, speaking on
 condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.
He
 said the explosions were so strong that "they shook parts of the city."
 They also shattered all windows in the area and cracked walls, he 
added.
He said he spoke with Syrian Arab Red Crescent paramedics who told him that at least 22 bodies were taken to hospitals.
An
 official at the governor's office in Homs said six people were killed 
and 130 wounded when about 10 rockets slammed into the neighborhood of 
Zahra and the nearby sports stadium. He spoke on condition of anonymity 
because he wasn't authorized to release the information.
Government
 officials often give conflicting figures than those provided by the 
opposition. There was no immediately explanation for the discrepancy, 
and state-run media did not report the incident.
Assad's
 visit to Daraya was his first known public trip outside the capital, 
his seat of power, in more than a year. He visited the battered Baba Amr
 district in Homs after troops seized it from rebels in March 2012.
It
 also is the latest sign of confidence from Assad, whose troops have 
been on the offensive and scored significant gains against rebels in 
recent months.  Assad pledged victory over troops fighting to topple 
him.
More than 100,000 people have been killed
 since the uprising against the Assad family's four-decade rule began in
 March 2011. The revolt later escalated into a civil war, which has 
uprooted millions of people from their homes.
Daraya,
 just south of Damascus, was held by rebels for months and it took the 
army weeks of heavy fighting to regain control of the area earlier this 
year.
Before his trip to Daraya, Assad lauded his troops' accomplishments in the battle against opposition forces.
"You
 have stunned the entire world with your steadfastness and ability to 
overcome the difficulties and score achievements in the face of the 
fiercest barbaric war the modern history has ever witnessed," he said in
 comments released for Army Day and carried by the state news agency 
SANA. "Had we in Syria not been confident of victory, we wouldn't have 
been able to resist" for more than two years.
In August 2012, activists reported that regime forces went on a dayslong killing spree after they seized Daraya from rebels.
At
 the time, reports of the death toll ranged from more than 300 people to
 as many as 600. It was impossible at the time to independently verify 
the numbers because of severe restrictions on media coverage of the 
conflict.
Assad's comments Thursday followed 
several major gains against the rebels, mostly in the central province 
of Homs and near Damascus.
The rebels suffered
 two major setbacks during a wide-ranging government offensive in 
central Syria. In June, Assad's army recaptured the strategic town of 
Qusair near the Lebanese border. Earlier this week, government troops 
took control of a district in the city of Homs that had long been an 
opposition stronghold.
Also Thursday, five major aid agencies, which warned that the Syrian refugee crisis is stretching aid efforts to their limits.
The
 agencies - including CARE International, Oxfam, Danish Refugee Council,
 Handicap International and World Vision - said they are increasingly 
concerned that the international response is failing to match the scale 
of the crisis.
Their joint statement said more
 than 1.4 million Syrians - or 80 percent of all Syrian refugees - are 
now living in tents, temporary settlements, or over-crowded and 
expensive rented accommodations.
---
Mroue reported from Beirut.
 
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