The National - News

70,000 reasons why Assad has no place in Syria’s future

▶ The Syrian dictator’s relentless barrel bombing has killed and maimed thousands

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Barrel bombs are old containers filled with crude explosives and shrapnel that explode on impact. As instrument­s of terror, they are a cheap, crude and effective way of killing and maiming at random. It comes as little surprise that Bashar Al Assad has made extensive use of barrel bombs to terrorise and subdue Syrians. According to a report published this week by the Syrian Network of Human Rights, the regime in Damascus dropped nearly 70,000 barrel bombs between July 2012 and December last year. At least 10,763 Syrians, many of them children, have lost their lives to these flying killing machines.

Even as lackeys of Mr Al Assad appear in foreign cities to speak loftily of the need for a “political solution”, their master drops incendiary barrels on defenceles­s civilians. The reason for this is simple. Mr Al Assad is not interested in a political transition: his sole objective is to frighten his people to the point of relinquish­ing all hope for change. Barrel bombs are among the weapons with which his regime seeks to underwrite its future and their use spells out the extent of the Syrian leader’s barbarism and inhumanity.

The UN’s inquiry has stated unequivoca­lly that barrel bombs deployed by the Syrian regime violate “‘rules of internatio­nal humanitari­an law prohibitin­g the use of weapons that cause superfluou­s injury, unnecessar­y suffering or that are indiscrimi­nate by nature”. It has repeatedly called on Damascus to cease using them. But such demands, repeated after Syrians were gassed to death with sarin, have been greeted with contempt by Mr Al Assad. Rather than being brought to justice for his war crimes, he continues to consider himself a contender in the future of Syria and carries on stamping on the hopes of Syrians. For those who continue to support his aspiration­s, that shocking statistic should remain a source of neverendin­g shame.

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