Syria accused of torture and 11,000 executions
BBC News online -- 21 January 2014
There
is clear evidence that Syria has systematically tortured and executed
about 11,000 detainees since the start of the uprising, a report by
three former war crimes prosecutors says.
The investigators examined thousands of still images of dead prisoners reportedly smuggled out by a defector.The report says the evidence implicates "agents of the Syrian governments". Damascus has denied claims of abuse.
The report comes a day before peace talks are due to begin in Switzerland.
The talks, known as "Geneva II", open in Montreux, and continue in Geneva two days later.
It is seen as the biggest diplomatic effort yet to end the three-year conflict which has left more than 100,000 dead and millions displaced.
Meanwhile, in its annual report released on Tuesday, Human Rights Watch accuses Russia and China of allowing abuses to take place by blocking action through the UN. It also accuses both government and pro-opposition forces of human rights abuses including torture and extrajudicial killings.
Analysis
There have been many reports and much evidence collected by human rights groups and international investigators alleging systematic torture and killings in Syrian government detention centres.
But the latest report carries such allegations into a new dimension.
The figure of 11,000 victims documented in the 55,000 photographs is clearly just the tip of the iceberg, representing the numbers in one location only, and with a large number of the images (27,000) taken by one official photographer.
The claims were also given credibility by the team of three top international war crimes prosecutors and their forensic experts, who examined the photographic evidence and questioned the main source, "Caesar", at length.
Issues of political motivation - the commissioning of the report by Qatar, and its release just before the Geneva talks - should not obscure the reality of the evidence produced.
Geneva II, it says, "shouldn't become the latest excuse to avoid action to protect Syrian civilians".
'Significant starvation'
The report by the former war crimes prosecutors was
commissioned by Qatar, which supports Syrian rebel and opposition
groups. It is based on the evidence of a defected military police
photographer, referred to only as Caesar, who along with others
reportedly smuggled about 55,000 digital images of some 11,000 dead
detainees out of Syria.He said his job had been to take photographs of corpses, both to allow a death certificate to be produced and to confirm that execution orders had been carried out.
"There could be as many as 50 bodies a day to photograph which require 15 to 30 minutes of work per corpse," he is quoted as saying.
He did not claim to have witnessed killings or torture himself, which the investigators said gave weight to his testimony.
The photographs cover the period from the start of the uprising in 2011 until August last year.
All but one of the bodies shown are male. Investigators say most were emaciated; many had been beaten or strangled. Some had no eyes, and some showed signs of electrocution.
One of the authors of the report, Prof Sir Geoffrey Nice, told the BBC's Newsday programme that the scale and consistency of the killings provided strong evidence of government involvement that could support a criminal prosecution.
Forensic pathologist Stuart Hamilton told Newsday that in the images that he saw, a large number of detainees were showing "evidence of significant starvation".
'Caesar' torture report
Some 50,000 digital images - allegedly showing the bodies of about 11,000 detainees - were smuggled out of Syria
Photographs taken at a military hospital in one unnamed part of Syria since March 2011 by a police photographer codenamed Caesar
Each body photographed with a serial number, all but one image shows a dead male, most aged between 20 and 40 and in little or no clothing
"Significant number" of bodies show signs of starvation, other injuries include burns, bruising, gouged eyes, ligature marks indicating strangulation, and signs of electrocution
He said many looked as if they had been bound or restrained.
"There were a large number who had been beaten. And there were a significant minority who had clearly been strangled," he said.The report says the images are "clear evidence" of "systemic torture and killing of detained persons by agents of the Syrian government".
The Syrian government has not commented on the report, but has denied accusations of human rights abuses during the 34 months of the conflict.
The UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said the images were "compelling and horrific", and that perpetrators must be held to account.
Boycott threat The Syrian government and the main exiled opposition alliance, the National Coalition, are due to send delegates to the Geneva II conference, which begins on Wednesday.
Geneva Communique
A UN-backed meeting in 2012 issued the document and urged Syria to:
Form transitional governing body
Start national dialogue
Review constitution and legal system
Hold free and fair elections
The plane carrying the Syrian
government delegation was reportedly delayed at Athens airport on
Tuesday amid concern that refuelling it could break an EU embargo.
On Monday, the UN's secretary general withdrew an invitation
to Iran - a key ally of President Bashar al-Assad - over its refusal to
endorse the Geneva Communique, the plan for a transitional governing body agreed at a UN-backed meeting in 2012.The invitation to Iran had angered the US, while the Coalition had threatened to pull out if the invitation was not rescinded. It has since confirmed it will attend.
It is unclear whether Iran will be able to join the talks when they move to Geneva.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Tehran regretted that the invitation had been withdrawn "under pressure", while Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said not inviting Iran was "a mistake".
He added: "There is no catastrophe, we will push for a dialogue between the Syrian parties without any preconditions."
The conference is the culmination of months of diplomacy. In May last year, Russian and the US agreed to try to bring both sides together
Labels: Atrocities, Conflict, Iran, Negotiations, Syria, United Nations
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