Amnesty: Syrian security may have committed crimes against humanity
AP
BEIRUT
The rights group Amnesty International said Wednesday that Syrian security forces may have committed crimes against humanity during a deadly siege of an opposition town in May, citing witness accounts of deaths in custody, torture and arbitrary detention.
The Amnesty report focused on a crackdown in Talkalakh, a town near the Lebanese border that was overrun by army tank units, security forces and pro-regime gunmen after weeks of protests calling for the ouster of President Bashar Assad. Some activists place the Talkalakh death toll as high as 36. Thousands of people also fled to Lebanon to escape the offensive.
The report by the London-based group could boost international pressure on Assad’s regime as it presses attacks on various fronts against a four-month-old uprising, including sending more forces this week against a string of towns along the Turkish border seen as potential anti-government strongholds.
Amnesty called on the UN Security Council to refer the case to the International Criminal Court.
“The accounts we have heard from witnesses to events in (Talkalakh) paint a deeply disturbing picture of systematic, targeted abuses to crush dissent,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa Deputy Director.
At the time of May attacks, residents told The Associated Press of scenes in the town of about 70,000, including execution-style slayings and the stench of decomposing bodies in the streets. Talkalakh is surrounded by villages filled with Assad loyalists from his Alawite sect.
In other developments Wednesday, the US ambassador to Syria said that earlier this year, several US citizens, including tourists, residents and a diplomat, were held up by Syrian forces at checkpoints, without notification to the U.S. Embassy.
“Given these incidents and the uncertainty and volatility of the current situation, the US Government has recommended that US citizens not travel to Syria now, and the US Embassy has reduced its staffing to minimize the number of persons exposed to risk,” the ambassador, Robert Ford, said in a statement.
“Until that risk is reduced not only for diplomats, but for all US citizens, the warning against travel to Syria will remain in place,” said the statement posted on the embassy’s website.
In the Amnesty report on Talkalakh, witnesses were quoted as saying Syrian forces fired on fleeing families and ambulances. One witness said soldiers stabbed lit cigarettes on the backs of detainees’ necks. The Amnesty report said at least nine people died in custody, including eight who were fatally wounded after they were ordered out of a house.
According to Amnesty, some of the family members who went to identify the bodies of their sons in Talkalakh were forced to sign a document stating that the boys and men were killed by armed gangs.
Amnesty cited interviews carried out in Lebanon and by phone with more than 50 people. The rights group, along with most foreign media, has not been allowed to enter Syria.
The report said the attacks “appear to be part of a widespread, as well as systematic, attack against the civilian population,” which would constitute crimes against humanity.
“Most of the crimes described in this report would fall within the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court,” Luther said. “But the UN Security Council must first refer the situation in Syria to the court’s prosecutor.”
Four European countries have introduced a draft resolution in the Security Council that would condemn Syria’s crackdown on protesters, but Russia and China have indicated they would veto it.
In May, Reed Brody, counsel for the New York-based group Human Rights Watch, told AP Television News that the Talkalakh attacks appear to be “a systematic attack on a civilian population, a political decision to shoot to kill unarmed demonstrators and that could very well be a crime against humanity.”
Activists say security forces have killed more than 1,400 people – most of them unarmed protesters – since mid-March. The regime disputes the toll, blaming “armed thugs” and foreign conspirators for the unrest.
Assad’s forces have opened up fronts around the country against growing opposition protests, including more than 300,000 demonstrators filling the central city of Hama last week. On Tuesday, security forces and gunmen shot dead more than a dozen people as troops advanced on Hama and faced roadblocks of sand and burning tires, activists said.
The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 21 people have been killed since Tuesday. Another group, the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria said, as many as 22 people were shot dead and more than 80 wounded.
Hama has a history of militancy. In 1982, the late Hafez Assad ordered his troops to crush a rebellion by Sunni fundamentalists, killing between 10,000 and 25,000 people, rights groups say.
A statement by Human Rights Watch said that security forces and pro-government fighters, known as “shabiha,” raided homes and set up checkpoints around Hama, Syria’s fourth-largest city. The rights group said at least 16 people have been killed in the city since Monday.
“Hama is the latest city to fall victim to President Bashir Assad’s security forces despite his promises that his government would tolerate peaceful protests,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Security forces have responded to protest with the brutality that’s become familiar over the past several months.”
On Wednesday, a Hama resident said Syrian troops were beefing up their presence on the city’s outskirts. Inside Hama, many shops were closed as part of a self-declared general strike since Friday.
The resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of government reprisals, said the strike would continue “until all detainees are freed” following a wave of arrests in the past days.
In northern Syria, troops entered villages near the Turkish border that pro-government forces fear could become bases for opposition groups, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. The group, quoting witnesses in the area, said intense cracks of gunfire were heard in the area but it was not clear if there were any casualties.
Near the capital Damascus, security forces detained dozens of men in the town of Dumair on Wednesday, said a Syria-based activist. The activist, who requested anonymity in fear of reprisals, said the detainees were being held at a boys’ school on the edge of town, about 20 miles (35 kilometers) east of Damascus.
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