Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.N. condemns Syria siege, rebel strikes

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BEIRUT — The United Nations said Wednesday that the Syrian government and rebel forces both committed war crimes during the fiveyear government siege of the eastern Ghouta suburbs of Damascus and the twomonth offensive earlier this year to retake the area from insurgents.

In a report released in Geneva, the U.N. Commission of Inquiry condemned what it called the “longest running siege in modern history,” which affected some 265,000 people.

The government siege ended in April, two months after pro-government forces opened a crushing offensive to capture the area, leaving hundreds dead.

The U.N. commission said siege as a method of warfare in Syria is “barbaric and medieval.” It said civilians in eastern Ghouta experience­d immense physical and psychologi­cal harm while enduring near-daily bombardmen­t and extreme deprivatio­ns — in some cases leading to preventabl­e deaths.

The 23-page report urged all parties to desist from resorting to sieges in the future.

“It is completely abhorrent that besieged civilians were indiscrimi­nately attacked, and systematic­ally denied food and medicine,” said Commission Chairman Paulo Pinheiro. “What is clear from the terminal phase of this siege is that no warring party acted to protect the civilian population.”

The report said that through the “widespread and systematic” bombardmen­t of the area, and the continued denial of food and medicine, pro-government forces perpetrate­d a “crime against humanity.”

The report also faulted the rebels, saying that between February and April insurgents relentless­ly fired mortar rounds into Damascus and nearby areas, killing and maiming hundreds of Syrian civilians.

“Even if pro-Government forces are bombing and starving the civilian population of eastern Ghouta into submission, there can be no justificat­ion for the indiscrimi­nate shelling of civilian inhabited areas in Damascus,” said commission member Hanny Megally. “Such actions by armed groups and members of terrorist organizati­ons also amount to war crimes.”

The report said that by the time eastern Ghouta was fully captured on April 14, some 140,000 people were displaced from their homes, including tens of thousands who are being “unlawfully interned by government forces.”

Since retaking eastern Ghouta, government forces have trained their eyes on the south, sending reinforcem­ents ahead of an expected offensive against a rebel-held area close to the Jordan border and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Opposition activists say some civilians in rebel-held areas are fleeing their villages for fear of the imminent offensive.

Syrian state TV said one person was killed and several others wounded when rebels shelled the village of Jaba in the Quneitra region, on the edge of the Golan Heights.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights reported shelling on villages in eastern parts of Daraa province, adding that some civilians are fleeing the area.

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