Syria
extremists financed by private Gulf donors carried out mass killings
– HRW
At
least 190 people were killed and more than 200 taken hostage by
Syrian rebels financed by private Gulf donors in an August 4 military
offensive in the Latakia governorate, according to a Human Rights
Watch report.
RT,
11
October, 2013
At
least 67 of the victims executed had lived in government-aligned
Alawite villages, HRW said in its report,
“You Can Still See Their Blood,”
released Friday, which saw the events as the first evidence of
planned crimes against humanity perpetrated by opposition forces.
The
killings took place when President Bashar Assad’s forces were
overwhelmed by the militants, who then proceeded to enter the 10
Alawite villages nearby, sometimes rounding up and executing entire
families, while taking others hostage.
Torture
and decapitations were also testament to the aggravated nature of the
military offensive, proof of which was gathered by HRW through
reports, witness statements, hospital records and materials recorded
by the rebels themselves.
HRW’s
Syria and Lebanon researcher, Lana Fakih, told Reuters that “homes
were destroyed and burned. Most villagers had not returned.”
She spoke to Hassan Shebli, whose elderly wife and disabled
23-year-old son were gunned down and buried next to his home, as he
found upon his return to his village. The assailants took videos and
posed with their victims before the killings.
According
to the human rights watchdog, the nature, scale and coordination of
the abuses and killings elevate them to the status of crimes against
humanity. Acting Middle East director at HRW, Joe Stork, explained
that “these abuses were not the actions of rogue
fighters…this operation was a coordinated, planned attack on the
civilian population in these Alawite villages.”
A
view inside a damaged house after what activists said was an air raid
by forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad in Salma town,
Latakia governorate August 16, 2013 (Reuters / Khattab Abdulaa)
The
attacks were found to have been planned and carried out by five
distinct groups, including the Al- Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra and
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, as well as jihadists
originating from outside Syria.
However,
the broader offensive, which lasted until August 18, was thought to
include 20 distinct groups.
The
operation was thwarted by government forces on that day, after
regaining control of the area.
Although
the report could not confirm the presence of fighters from the
Western-backed Free Syrian Army, the force’s commander, Salim
Idriss, posted a video a week after the Latakia attacks in which he
claimed the FSA participated in the operation “to a great
extent.”
Other
groups boasted about their exploits in their own recordings, used by
HRW to corroborate its findings, although the rebels themselves also
recounted the offensive to correspondents from Reuters, claiming to
have killed about 200 people.
However,
not all the groups admitted to the killings. A member of the Sunni
Ahrar al-Asham militia claimed that his fighters only shoot in
self-defense, although the group was among the five that were found
to have participated in the Latakia killings.
The
Syrian National Coalition’s spokesman, Khaled Saleh, also condemned
the attacks and said that if any abuses by rebels associated with the
coalition were found to have happened in Latakia, the perpetrators
would be brought to justice.
"We
have previously committed ourselves to applying these rules on all
the brigades that work for us and we will hold accountable, after
investigation and fair trial, all those responsible for violations
against human rights or international laws. The incidents in Latakia
are not an exception and we will treat them as we treated previous
case,” Saleh said in a written
statement to Reuters.
Smoke
rises after what activists said was shelling by forces loyal to
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad in the village of Dourit, in
Latakia countryside August 17, 2013 (Reuters / Khattab Abdulaa)
Nonetheless,
dozens of witness accounts from the province remain, together with
footage shot by rebels, as a gruesome reminder of the executions
carried out on August 4. Returning residents reported finding the
bodies of loved ones strewn around the streets, lying next to their
homes, as well as charred corpses lying in mass graves.
The
organization also wished to point out that the report is by no means
a move away from scrutinizing the Syrian government’s own human
rights abuses – including sectarian cluster bombings of Sunni areas
in May, as reported By UN officials.
The
report proposes that the UN Security Council imposes an embargo on
supplying arms to all sides implicated in the systematic abuse of
human rights and the carrying out of planned attacks, which is
classified as a crime against humanity. The organization also
proposed referring all transgressions to the International Criminal
Court in The Hague.
Stork,
HRW’s Middle East chief, said: “Syrian victims of war
crimes and crimes against humanity have waited too long for the
Security Council to send a clear message that those responsible for
horrible abuses will be held to account.”
“The
ICC referral is long overdue,”
Stork said.
The
civil war, now in its third year, has claimed the lives of more than
100,000 people, according to UN estimates. Many experts fear that the
sectarian nature and conflicting interests of the rebel groups
involved are exacerbated by outside funding, and are turning Syria
into a hotbed of extremism drifting further away from any resolution
that outside actors may have planned for it.
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