UN 'prepared' to name Syria 'war criminals'
UN 'prepared' to name Syria 'war criminals'
UN investigators say they are ‘prepared’ to publish secret lists of alleged war criminals in Syria to help end the 'exponential rise' in rights violations, as news emerges of the murder of ten children by regime forces.
5 min read
UN investigators are considering publishing lists of alleged war criminals in Syria, as evidence of atrocities and grave abuses continue to emerge from the country.
The investigators say that the aim behind the decision to release this hitherto secret document is to put alleged perpetrators of torture, executions and kidnappings "on notice", and act as a deterrent to help protect people at risk of abuse.
"It is unconscionable that Syrians should continue to suffer as they have for the last four years and have to live in a world where only limited attempts have been made to return Syria to peace, and to seek justice for the victims," said Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, who heads the four-member independent commission charged with investigating alleged human rights violations since the Syrian conflict began in March 2011.
Some 222,000 people have been killed in the Syrian civil war according to U.N. estimates. About 6.5 million people have been displaced, and more than 3 million have fled the country.
The commission said it has kept the four lists of names it compiled for possible prosecution confidential because its investigations do not meet the normal requirements of "due process". But it said "not to publish names at this juncture of the investigation would be to reinforce the impunity that the commission was mandated to combat".
The four lists were given to the UN human rights chief and are in a safe in Geneva. The commission said a fifth list will be delivered to High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein in March.
In December 2013, Zeid's predecessor, Navi Pillay, said a growing body of evidence pointed to the involvement of senior Syrian officials, including President Bashar Assad, in crimes against humanity and war crimes. But she was careful to say she hadn't singled him out as a suspect.
In a report to the UN General Assembly on Friday, the commission said there has been an "exponential rise in the perpetration of war crimes, crimes against humanity and human rights violations" in Syria. It said civilians continue to suffer while the many perpetrators are shielded from accountability.
The report, based on 380 interviews with victims and eyewitnesses during the six-month period ending January 15, details the massive rights violations committed by Assad's government as well as by the Islamic State group and other rebels. The commission has conducted more than 3,556 interviews since September 2011.
It said sieges of opposition areas by the government have become longer and "more harsh", and often include a ban on the delivery of food and medical supplies and continuous air and ground bombing. Government forces are now employing a similar strategy in Raqqa, the Islamic State group's de facto capital, "with total disregard for the distinction between civilian and military targets", the commission said.
Throughout 2013, 2014 and into 2015, it said "the government has made liberal use of barrel bombs", including dropping barrel bombs with chemical agents, "likely chlorine".
In response, Syria's UN ambassador, Bashar Ja'afari, told reporters that the commission "has been biased from the beginning".
But the report is also harshly critical of the extremist group calling itself Islamic State, noting violent acts including executions of civilians in Raqqa and other areas it holds.
The group has also abused children "on a scale not seen before in the Syrian conflict", training youngsters to use weapons at "cub camps", the commission said. It is also using young boys as executioners, in combat and in suicide bombing missions. Women have suffered as well, the commission said, citing an increasing number of documented cases of sexual violence.
The commission noted last May's vetoes by Russia and China of a U.N. Security Council resolution that would have referred the conflict in Syria to the International Criminal Court, reiterating that this remains "a key option".
Failing that, the commission said the council should urgently consider establishing an international tribunal to deal with alleged war crimes in Syria, possibly like those for former Yugoslavia, Sierra Leone or Cambodia.
Children massacred
The UN move came as news emerged that ten children were among at least 48 people killed in a Syrian village earlier this week as regime forces ‘executed’ the families of five alleged rebels, a monitoring group said Saturday.
The killings took place in the village of Rityan, north of second city Aleppo, which regime forces entered on Tuesday during an offensive aimed at cutting rebel supply lines to the Turkish border, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The Britain-based monitoring group said that villagers had discovered the bodies of those killed when they returned to their homes after the regime forces pulled back on Wednesday.
The wives of the five alleged rebel fighters were also among the dead.
"The troops and militiamen knew exactly where they lived thanks to the informers who accompanied them," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said.
Activist Mamun Abu Omar said some of the bodies of the dead had been mutilated.
The brief seizure of Rityan was part of an abortive offensive launched by Syrian regime forces this week to try to encircle the rebel-held east of Aleppo and relieve two besieged Shiite villages to its north.
By Friday all but one of the villages taken by government forces in the initial fighting had been recaptured by the rebels, who include fighters of Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front.
The investigators say that the aim behind the decision to release this hitherto secret document is to put alleged perpetrators of torture, executions and kidnappings "on notice", and act as a deterrent to help protect people at risk of abuse.
"It is unconscionable that Syrians should continue to suffer as they have for the last four years and have to live in a world where only limited attempts have been made to return Syria to peace, and to seek justice for the victims," said Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, who heads the four-member independent commission charged with investigating alleged human rights violations since the Syrian conflict began in March 2011.
Some 222,000 people have been killed in the Syrian civil war according to U.N. estimates. About 6.5 million people have been displaced, and more than 3 million have fled the country.
The commission said it has kept the four lists of names it compiled for possible prosecution confidential because its investigations do not meet the normal requirements of "due process". But it said "not to publish names at this juncture of the investigation would be to reinforce the impunity that the commission was mandated to combat".
The four lists were given to the UN human rights chief and are in a safe in Geneva. The commission said a fifth list will be delivered to High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein in March.
In December 2013, Zeid's predecessor, Navi Pillay, said a growing body of evidence pointed to the involvement of senior Syrian officials, including President Bashar Assad, in crimes against humanity and war crimes. But she was careful to say she hadn't singled him out as a suspect.
In a report to the UN General Assembly on Friday, the commission said there has been an "exponential rise in the perpetration of war crimes, crimes against humanity and human rights violations" in Syria. It said civilians continue to suffer while the many perpetrators are shielded from accountability.
The report, based on 380 interviews with victims and eyewitnesses during the six-month period ending January 15, details the massive rights violations committed by Assad's government as well as by the Islamic State group and other rebels. The commission has conducted more than 3,556 interviews since September 2011.
It said sieges of opposition areas by the government have become longer and "more harsh", and often include a ban on the delivery of food and medical supplies and continuous air and ground bombing. Government forces are now employing a similar strategy in Raqqa, the Islamic State group's de facto capital, "with total disregard for the distinction between civilian and military targets", the commission said.
Throughout 2013, 2014 and into 2015, it said "the government has made liberal use of barrel bombs", including dropping barrel bombs with chemical agents, "likely chlorine".
In response, Syria's UN ambassador, Bashar Ja'afari, told reporters that the commission "has been biased from the beginning".
But the report is also harshly critical of the extremist group calling itself Islamic State, noting violent acts including executions of civilians in Raqqa and other areas it holds.
The group has also abused children "on a scale not seen before in the Syrian conflict", training youngsters to use weapons at "cub camps", the commission said. It is also using young boys as executioners, in combat and in suicide bombing missions. Women have suffered as well, the commission said, citing an increasing number of documented cases of sexual violence.
The commission noted last May's vetoes by Russia and China of a U.N. Security Council resolution that would have referred the conflict in Syria to the International Criminal Court, reiterating that this remains "a key option".
Failing that, the commission said the council should urgently consider establishing an international tribunal to deal with alleged war crimes in Syria, possibly like those for former Yugoslavia, Sierra Leone or Cambodia.
Children massacred
The UN move came as news emerged that ten children were among at least 48 people killed in a Syrian village earlier this week as regime forces ‘executed’ the families of five alleged rebels, a monitoring group said Saturday.
The killings took place in the village of Rityan, north of second city Aleppo, which regime forces entered on Tuesday during an offensive aimed at cutting rebel supply lines to the Turkish border, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The Britain-based monitoring group said that villagers had discovered the bodies of those killed when they returned to their homes after the regime forces pulled back on Wednesday.
The wives of the five alleged rebel fighters were also among the dead.
"The troops and militiamen knew exactly where they lived thanks to the informers who accompanied them," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said.
Activist Mamun Abu Omar said some of the bodies of the dead had been mutilated.
The brief seizure of Rityan was part of an abortive offensive launched by Syrian regime forces this week to try to encircle the rebel-held east of Aleppo and relieve two besieged Shiite villages to its north.
By Friday all but one of the villages taken by government forces in the initial fighting had been recaptured by the rebels, who include fighters of Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front.