InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5
More than 20 unarmed UN observers were allowed into Al-Kubeir on Friday, a day after monitors were shot at and prevented from entering the village.
"Inside some of the houses, blood was visible across the walls and floors. Fire was still burning outside houses and there was a strong stench of burnt flesh," UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said in New York.
UN officials have made clear they believe government forces and their allies were behind the attack on the mainly Sunni Muslim village surrounded by an Alawite population loyal to Assad.
Damascus denied responsibility and blamed foreign-backed "terrorists," as it has done repeatedly in the past.
Russia on Saturday pushed the idea of an international conference on the more than 15-month-old crisis in Syria, with the Arab state's ally Iran also given a place at the table despite US opposition.
"We want this event to be effective," Lavrov told reporters.
"To say that Iran doesn't have a place because it is already to blame for everything and it's part of the problem and not part of the solution, this is thoughtless to say the least from the point of view of serious diplomacy."
Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the United Nations, has called Iran a "spoiler" and said it is "part of the problem in Syria." The United States has accused Iran of arming Assad's forces.
Russia has said a conference on Syria was needed to overcome differences over how the peace plan of UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan should be implemented.
Lavrov said permanent UN Security Council members Russia, the United States, France, Britain and China, Syria's neighbours including Lebanon and Jordan, as well as the European Union and Arab League should take part in the conference.
Moscow wants to hold the forum "as soon as possible", Lavrov said, without elaborating.
He again reaffirmed Russian opposition to the use of force. "We will not sanction the use of force at the United Nations Security Council," he said.
Lavrov added that Moscow would be "glad" to support Assad's departure but only if Syrians themselves agreed on it.
In Turkey, leaders of the exiled Syrian National Council were meeting in Istanbul on Saturday to pick a new leader after the resignation of Burhan Ghalioun to avert divisions within the opposition bloc.
Ghalioun resigned on May 17 after activists accused him of ignoring the Local Coordination Committees, which spearhead anti-government protests on the ground, and of allowing the Muslim Brotherhood to play a leading role within the bloc.
Sources in the group said the aim was to pick a "consensus" candidate who would be acceptable to Islamists, liberals and nationalists. Abdel Basset Sayda, a Kurd and member of the SNC's executive, was tipped to take over.
The new leader will face the challenge of boosting the SNC's credibility with activists and rebel fighters inside Syria, as well as with the international community.