resistance is gone. what comes next could be worse. the eye witnesses are gone or dead, meaning government forces now have free reign, and the fear is they'll use it to move in and keep killing while their leaders keep lying. the regime has told lie after lie about what they're doing. we have documented this on the program over the last year. the latest lie, that one of the eye witnesses who just escaped from homs who you're going to hear from on the program tonight, they say he's dead, he's not, and what he's going to tell us could be the last, best account of the destruction in baba amr. opposition fighters in the free syrian army have pulled out of homs, and the army could be poised to go in. the syrian army, after what our sources say were the two bloodiest days of fighting they have ever seen. in the end, light weapons are no match against heavy artillery and forces willing to target apartment buildings, houses, and mosques. you can hear the anguish in that man's voice as the shells land. this has been going on for a month in this one city and neighborhood and this is what government forces have been doing to the neighborhood where tens of thousands of people once lived and the regime is denying it is happening. as we said, the opposition has moved out. the free syrian forces calling the pullback a strategic move to spare the remaining civilians. reports are only about 4,000 people remain. what you are seeing is people out in the streets gathering snow to melt because at this point they have no drinking water. they have no electricity, no heat, very little communication with the outside world. they have seen shelling throughout the day, snipers on rooftops aiming at them, and here they are reduced to risking their lives for a bucket of snow. again, the free syrian army left, we're told. the remaining civilians are entirely at the mercy of the forces. the forces and unarmed -- and plain clothes security forces and military forces have thought nothing of killing men, women, and children, and thought nothing of kidnapping kids. long before the shells started falling on homs, children were being taken, tortured, and killed. the pictures as you imagine are revolting but for day after day and week after week and month after month they have also been the daily reality in homs. once the shelling began, babies like this boy named adnan, were dying from shrapnel wounds and lack of medical care. of the some of the last video we have seen is brutalizing to see and says everything about this war conducted by an army and the children are the victims. a boy we don't know his name trapped in the rubble of a home. he is buried. you see him there up to his waist, already an orphan, already disabled. not a terrorist, not part of an armed game, which the regime said it's fighting. it is just a boy in the upper part of the scream half buried by a regime that will consider his agony a failure because in the end that boy survived. as we said, the violence, the videos have slowed to a trickle today with our connections, the people in homs being cut, and two eyewitnesses managed to get out and tell their story. both were hunted by the regime and a resistance member named danny whose reporting you have seen all month and a spanish journalist javier espinosa and was with marie colvin and rei ochlik when they died. the syrian news agency put out a press release saying he is dead. the official syrian news agency posted a story today saying they recovered your body. the syrian red crescent, they claim, was unable to get your body out of the country because of, quote, armed terrorist groups. when you hear that, what do you think? >> well, i think that they're quite wrong. you can see yourself. if it is not because of the sufferring in baba amr, the would be a nice joke. >> it is one of the many lies the syrian regime told. this is just the latest. what you saw with your own eyes, can you describe what life has become like in baba amr for the people living there? >> well, it's an enormous tragedy, enormous, very, very rough situation. describe the normal day there, start shelling at 6:00 in the morning, very systematic and sick:00, start the shelling, they don't stop until 6:00 p.m. they don't shell at night. i don't know why. from 6:00 to 6:00, they stop for lunch, and that was also very precise, at 1:00, they stop for one hour, and resume shelling. and it's a lot of shelling in a very small area. the shelling is very concentrated. >> now that you're out do you worry what is appearing in baba amr now? >> i think now there is no journalists there and no media working anymore because they suspended transmissions, the civilians are on their own and the report of regime in the past is not very good and the latest news i have because i was in touch with them is it's almost finished because they don't have any more way of resisting the advance of the army, and that's also a problem for supplies and but already, the humanitarian situation was completely critical. they had nothing. they didn't receive nothing at all. >> you survived the shelling in baba amr that killed jurnalist marie colvin and remy off lick, and you said the picture was shocking. what happened in that hour? >> well, we were just sleeping and they were falling down on our building, the building where we were staying, so the building was hit at least twice, and we woke up and we concentrate altogether in the same room and one of the guys who is the media officer there abu haneen, my personal hero, he told us get out because they are targeting the building. he was outside already and saw the rockets were targeting the building. he shout get out from the building. they're targeting the building. at the moment we tried to get out there was another guy inside who told us, no, come back, because he already had heard the sound of incoming shell. so i was able to come back in the room and i took shelter after a wall, but marie and remi were already outside and received the full explosion of the rocket that fall down on the gate of the building. >> javier espinosa, i appreciate your reporting. thanks very much for talking with us. >> thank you very much. >> he was escaping homs and he and other activists trying to bring out wounded were ambush many of them were killed. when he wasn't reporting for his paper he was tweeting even as he made his escape from syria. the other eyewitness is the syrian expatriate we have been calling danny. almost daily his dispatches posted on youtube told a story of ordinary people caught in the cross hairs. >> this is one of about 50 or 100 of them. expecting the forces to attack this place in homs called baba amr. even in the houses people aren't safe anymore. >> as you can see, all the people down here, this is civilians, running away from the government. all we ask for is help. we want to get rid of this regime. it is killing us. this is where civilians live. these are civilian bodies. this isn't army. this is one of the houses in baba amr. look at these children. is that how the assad regime is supposed to treat our children? you can see another rocket landed on one of the civilian's houses. this has been going on all day long. why isn't anyone helping us? where is the humanity in the world? where is the freaking u.n.? >> danny made it out of homs, out of syria. i sat down with him a few moments ago. >> what do you think is going to happen now in ababa amr. >> what i know is going to happen now is that the army will enter baba amr and have revenge on the families that live there, and they will take out revenge on the families that live there, torture women and kids and will steal every single thick they find in the houses. they will break shops. they will burn houses down. this is going to go on for a week. >> what made you pick up a camera? >> i actually went back not to get a camera. i went back to join the free syrian army. they did not allow me to join and said i have no training and they said you have english and try to get the truth to the outside world. they wanted to know the truth what was going on and picked up the camera and started shooting me doing reports. >> are there images that stick in your mind about things you saw that you weren't able to document or things you saw that when you closed your eyes at night, those are the images you see? >> also the images, i remember, the first week because i wasn't used to seeing pieces of bodies in the street, seeing bodies i can't save, i can't even move because a sniper would shoot me if i tried to move a body, bodies with no faces, losing parts of their bodies, losing arms, losing legs. that's the first week. after that i got used to it and got used to seeing all of that. you get used to seeing the crisis going on. >> some of the most heartbreaking images you captured were inside the medical clinics that people can't go to a real hospital because the syrian government has taken them over and will take the people away and seems like there is hardly any medical supplies, and people are dying for simple lack of basic medicine. >> all we have is four doctors. one of the four doctors is a dentist. they learn how to do surgery. we haven't got good equipment even. the problem is we have no outside help. we want doctors to come in and the world to know what's going on there and no one is helping us. no one is doing anything about this. it has been nearly a year. >> i spent a lot of time in sarajevo and people would say the same thing year after year, you're taking pictures and telling our story and nobody is doing anything about it. nobody is helping. what is that like to be crying out every day and not have anybody really hear you or people hear you but not do anything? >> it is terrible. look, if we pick up arms, people will attack us. we are still peaceful demonstrators going out. 40 persh of the population are going out in demonstrations. we don't want the government to stay. no one is doing anything about it. we knew the arab league would do nothing about it. we thought the u.n. might help us. the u.n. didn't do anything about it. we thought america would help, england would help, no one is helping. not even moving. we feel terrible. we are going to die. and we can't stop. we will not stop this revolution. after the killing, bashaur al assad, what he did in homs and all of syria, we will not live under his grip anymore. >> it has gone too far. >> it has gone too far. we will not talk peacefully to him. >> you don't think like where his father was able to kill tens of thousands of people in one month and stay in power. you think that won't work? >> what's difference between then and now. then there was no media. even us in different cities didn't know what was going on in hamma. now we have media. what is killing the regime is the media we're getting out. if it wasn't for the media we would have more than 200,000 dead now. the media is the strongest power for us getting the story out. since the first time we went out demonstrations we got the mobile phones, videoing the demonstrations. if they shoot us we can get it to the media so the outside world knows what's going on. >> what do you want to have happen? there is talk of some groups arming opposition, some countries, whether it's arab countries, middle east countries, europe, nato, the eric league setting up safe havens in the north, humanitarian corridors. >> as you just said, talking, is there any action? they have been talking for more than eight months now. we did not see one good thing come out of it. no one did not -- on the ground is nothing. everyone is talking and diplomats talking and no one is doing anything on the ground and we're dying there. no one is doing anything about it. we're going to keep on dying. everyone is talking. we want the military to come in. we want the air force to come, the u.n. to come in. we don't care if america comes in to help us with ground troops. we didn't say no about this. what does sos mean? everyone is going out saying s.o.s. we want any army to come in and save us. we don't care if satan comes in and helps us. what he is doing is terrible, raping women, killing people under torture, and he doesn't care how many he kills. we're living under rockets for more than 20 days. under rockets. we don't know if a rocket is going to land and kill us. that's how we're living. with he don't mind if we die. this is how we're living. we're only scared about losing parts of our bodies. >> there is some people i think in the u.s. and maybe elsewhere who have seen the revolutions in egypt or tunisia and worry about a group like muslim brotherhood or al qaeda in some cases. when you hear that -- >> we laugh. we laugh. this is the syrian government doing all of this lies. we sit there and laugh. where is the muslim brotherhood, that's us fighting, syrians. it is not muslim revolution. they ask us, why do you come out from mosques? well, my answer, how are you going to gather 10,000 people? >> a mosque is the only place you're allowed? >> we have christians in the mosque. that's the only place to gather big amounts of people. that was in the beginning without the security forces finding out. >> the revolution really began with children, children who are protested in dara who were arrested and tortured, and that's what angered people. and we continue to see children targeted, children tortured, their bodies returned to their families. why are they doing that? why are they returning bodies of children to their families? >> where are they going to put them? we already have loads of mass graves all over syria. they will return them and make the family sign on a paper saying that the armed gangs killed my child. that's what they're doing. they killed my brother, the only way to get my brother back, the body, is to sign on a paper saying the armed gangs killed my brother. >> is it a warning to families about -- is it a threat? is it a warning about what will happen to others? >> yeah. if my family was in syria now they would be killed. anyone there working against the government would be killed. anyone who asks for freedom, just the word freedom, will be shot in the head, a traitor? >> you're working with a group, syrian americans for democracy. did they help you get out? >> they helped me come to america so i could get back to help the people. if we don't get the funds out, we need to keep homs going. we need to get the revolution going in homs. they're doing fund raising dinners here to get the money and the support we need for the guys down on the ground. >> is it too late for homs? >> no. >> if the military moves in on the ground tomorrow -- >> it won't stop. i might go back. this is not going to stop. if they're going to have to kill every single guy living in homs. there is not one family that hasn't lost a relative or lost a relative underneath torture. why would they stop? there is not one family who hasn't got a relative shot or injured or killed. they will never stop. >> until you saw this with your own eyes, did you believe this could happen in the modern world? >> no. i knew this was going to happen from the beginning of the revolution. i didn't know it would take this long to finish it. i thought he would do that in the third or fourth month of the revolution, but he's just doing it slowly. his father did it fast. his father killed more than 60,000 in one month. >> do you think it is inevitable he will fall? >> he will fall. he is not staying. i have a belief, everyone believes he is going to go. he is not staying anymore. we will keep fighting until he kills us all. we will not stop fighting this regime. he killed everyone. he has killed every single guy i love, all my friends, all the guys -- everyone in homs that has been injured or shot or tortured. we will not stop this revolution. this revolution will go onto the end. eve either us or him. >> us or him. let us know what you think. you can follow me on twitter. up next, another keeping them honest report. remember the terrifying reports of toyotas accelerating on their own? tonight will you see information the company didn't share with the government and only cnn has the internal memo. toyota says what we found isn't relevant. the experts we talked to say otherwise. also ahead, story from the storm and the people of harrisburg, illinois. they have been through so much and showing such strength and it could be tested by more punishing weather. it is headed their way. gary tuchman is in harrisburg for us. >> the teenager who allegedly opened fire inside an ohio high school killing three students is charged with murder in juvenile court but will he eventually be charged as an adult? 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