Medicine Hat News

Ex-war crimes prosecutor quits U.N.’s panel probing Syria abuses, decries Security Council’s inaction

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GENEVA

Former war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte says she is resigning from the U.N.’s independen­t Commission of Inquiry on Syria, decrying Security Council inaction to hold criminals accountabl­e in the war-battered country where “everyone is bad.”

In comments published Sunday by the Swiss magazine Blick, Del Ponte expressed frustratio­n about the commission and criticized President Bashar Assad’s government, the Syrian opposition and the internatio­nal community overall.

“We have had absolutely no success,” she told Blick on the sidelines of the Locarno film festival Sunday. “For five years we’ve been running up against walls.”

Del Ponte, who gained fame as the prosecutor for the internatio­nal war crimes tribunals that investigat­ed atrocities in Rwanda and Yugoslavia, has repeatedly decried the Security Council’s refusal to appoint a similar court for Syria’s 6 1/2-year-old civil war. Permanent member Russia, which can veto council actions, is a key backer of Assad’s government.

“I give up. The states in the Security Council don’t want justice,” Del Ponte said, adding that she planned to take part in the last meeting in September. “I can’t any longer be part of this commission which simply doesn't do anything.”

Appointed in September 2012, Del Ponte was quoted by Blick as saying she now thinks she was put into the role “as an alibi.”

“I’ve written my letter of resignatio­n already and will post it in the coming days,” she said.

She did not immediatel­y respond to a text message from The Associated Press seeking comment.

In her comments to Blick, Del Ponte described Syria as a land without a future.

“Believe me, the terrible crimes committed in Syria I neither saw in Rwanda nor exYugoslav­ia,” she said. “We thought the internatio­nal community had learned from Rwanda. But no, it learned nothing.”

At first in Syria, “the opposition (members) were the good ones; the government were the bad ones,” she was quoted as saying.

But after six years, Del Ponte concluded: “In Syria, everyone is bad. The Assad government is committing terrible crimes against humanity and using chemical weapons. And the opposition, that is made up only of extremists and terrorists anymore.”

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