Atrocities by the Syrian government "far outweigh" crimes by the opposition fighters and Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime is "mostly responsible" for the human rights offenses in the three-year war, the UN human rights chief said today.
High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said both sides' abuses should be documented and brought to the International Criminal Court, "but you cannot compare the two.
Clearly the actions of the forces of the government far outweigh the violations, killings, cruelty, persons in detention, disappearances, far outweigh" those by the opposition.
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Pillay, who briefed the UN Security Council on today, has been pushing for an ICC war crimes prosecution since 2011. The council would have to refer the case to the ICC, but Russia and China, both permanent veto-wielding council members, have shielded Damascus from any serious council sanctions.
This month's holder of the rotating council presidency, Nigerian Ambassador U Joy Ogwu, noted that the council remains deadlocked on a referral to the International Criminal Court.
France had asked Pillay to brief the council on Syria, but Russia objected to putting the spotlight on its Middle East ally. As a compromise, Russia allowed Pillay to be invited to speak on an array of crises, including Syria, Central African Republic, Mali, Libya and South Sudan, thus taking the focus off Damascus, in theory. But most of the questions put to her when she emerged from the four-hour meeting were about Syria.
Pillay told reporters that "It is the government that is mostly responsible for the violations" in Syria, as Syrian Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari stood nearby, seething and waiting for his turn to speak.
Ja'afari stepped up to the microphone to say Pillay's comments were "part of an orchestrated pressure campaign" against Syria in the Security Council by France, Britain and the United States. He said she has never visited Syria, that she ignored hundreds of letters he has sent with reports of rebel abuse, and said her comments "confirm her biased reading from the beginning."
He also blamed the Turkish government and intelligence agency for allegedly supporting and supplying the Syrian rebels, whom Ja'afari calls "terrorists.