The attack has been described as a " genocidal massacre" which was motivated by sectarian animosities against the Sunni community of Hama. Patrick Seale, reporting in The Globe and Mail, described the operation as a "two-week orgy of killing, destruction and looting" which destroyed the city and killed a minimum of 25,000 inhabitants. Robert Fisk, who was present at Hama during the events of massacre, reported that indiscriminate bombing had razed much of the city to the ground and vast majority of the victims were civilians. Nearly two-thirds of the city was destroyed in the Ba'athist military operation. The massacre remains the "single deadliest act" of violence perpetrated by an Arab state upon its own population, in the history of Modern Middle East. Subsequent estimates vary, with the lower estimates reporting at least 10,000 deaths, while others put the number at 20,000 ( Robert Fisk) or 40,000 (Syrian Human Rights Committee and SNHR). Initial diplomatic reports from Western countries stated that 1,000 were killed. Prior to the start of operations, Hafez al-Assad issued orders to seal off Hama from the outside world effectively imposing a media blackout, total shut down of communications, electricity and food supplies to the city for months. The campaign that had begun in 1976 by Sunni Muslim groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood, was brutally crushed in an anti-Sunni massacre at Hama, carried out by the Syrian Arab Army and Alawite militias under commanding General Rifaat al-Assad. The Hama massacre ( Arabic: مجزرة حماة) occurred in February 1982 when the Syrian Arab Army and the Defense Companies, under orders of president Hafez al-Assad, besieged the town of Hama for 27 days in order to quell an uprising by the Muslim Brotherhood against the Ba'athist government.
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