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| Few images of the violence against protesters exist |
A
UN-appointed commission has found that Syria's military and security forces
committed crimes against humanity in their crackdown on protesters. Damascus
rejects all accusations of arbitrary violence against protesters.
A United
Nations commission of inquiry on Syria said in Geneva on Monday that Syrian
forces operating under the command of President Bashar al-Assad had committed
crimes against humanity in their crackdown against anti-regime protests, including
murder, torture and rape.
"The
commission is gravely concerned that crimes against humanity have been
committed in different locations in the Syrian Arab Republic during the period
under review," the commission said in its report, concluding that Assad's
government bore responsibility for the crimes.
"The
sheer scale and consistent pattern of attacks by military and security forces
on civilians and civilian neighborhoods and the widespread destruction of
property could only be possible with the approval or complicity of the [Syrian
state]," it said.
The panel,
which interviewed 223 victims and witnesses - including defectors - called on
Syria to halt the "gross human rights violations" and release
prisoners rounded up in mass arrests. It also called for access to the country
to be given to media, aid workers and rights monitors. The three members of the
panel, from Brazil, Turkey, and the United States, were refused access to the
country to compile their report.
'Declaration
of economic war'
In their
report, the human rights experts listed widespread, arbitrary detention of
protesters, torture and rape of prisoners as a routine practice, shoot-to-kill
orders, as well as the targeting of children.
They called
on the UN Human Rights Council to "take urgent steps" to involve the
Security Council in a bid to put an end to these violations. Nothing concrete
was mentioned as to what shape such steps could take.
Meanwhile,
in response to recent sanctions imposed on Syria by the Arab League, Syrian
Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem dismissed all allegations that Syrian forces
were in breach of international law.
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| Assad has repeatedly rejected calls to step down |
During a
press conference on Monday, al-Moallem showed a film containing scenes of
graphic violence against pro-government supporters allegedly committed by armed
protesters.
He went on
to complain that the Arab League sanctions were tantamount to the
"declaration of economic war against Syria" and accused the
organization of closing "all windows" of negotiations and of turning
a blind eye on the "terrorist gangs" who are murdering government
supporters.
But he
claimed that Syria had removed 95 percent of its assets from the Arab countries
imposing the boycott.
Assad's
administration has vehemently denied reports that its forces are killing
demonstrators in anti-regime protests around the country, which began in
mid-March after the successful revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia.
According
to UN figures, at least 3,500 people in Syria have died in the unrest.
Author: Gabriel Borrud (AFP, dpa)
Editor: Michael Lawton
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