Syria: President Bashar al-Assad faces indictment by the International
Criminal Court

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/8471338/Syria-Pre
sident-Bashar-al-Assad-faces-indictment-by-the-International-Criminal-Court.
html


President Bashar al-Assad faces indictment by the International Criminal
Court as Western leaders were told on Sunday that the Syrian leader could be
held to account for the deaths of 120 anti-government protesters. 

Syria: President Bashar al-Assad faces indictment by the International
Criminal Court

Many Western officials have been reluctant to criticise Mr Assad too
harshly, even 
though his regime has long been treated as a near pariah Photo: PAUL GROVER 

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/adrian-blomfield/> Adrian Blomfield

By Adrian Blomfield
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/adrian-blomfield/> , Middle East
Correspondent 6:52PM BST 24 Apr 2011 

An influential body of international judges and lawyers called for Mr Assad
and his lieutenants to be held to account for Easter weekend attacks in
which troops and militamen fire on civilians. 

"Those ordering and carrying out these attacks, including those firing live
rounds into crowds, must be held criminally accountable," the International
Committee of Jurists (ICJ) said in a statement. 

As opposition supporters continued to bury dead comrades on Sunday, four
more were reported to have been killed. 

William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, warned all Britons in Syria that the
scale of violence was so grave they should leave immediately or risk not
being able to leave "at all" as the turmoil worsened. 

Western governments were coming under growing scrutiny for their divergent
policies towards Libya and Syria, where more than 300 people have been shot
dead since unrest began five weeks ago. 

Critics complained that while the West has been comparatively quick to go to
the aid of the Libyan people, Syrians struggling against one of the Middle
East's most repressive regimes had largely been abandoned to their fate.
"The international community has failed so far to protect the people of
Syria from wide-scale human rights violations," Wilder Taylor, the ICJ's
secretary-general, said. 

Syria has deployed many of the same tactics used by Col Gaddafi in Libya,
with unarmed protesters facing live fire by both the security forces and
loyalist militiamen and snipers. 

But many Western officials have been reluctant to criticise Mr Assad too
harshly, even though his regime has long been treated as a near pariah. 

Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, initially sought to present Mr
Assad as a reformist struggling against hardliners in his regime. Even
Israel, which remains technically at war with Syria, has privately urged
Washington to refrain from action that could destabilise Mr Assad for fear
that his downfall could usher in a more hostile government. 

But after more than 100 deaths on Good Friday, the bloodiest day of the
protests so far, Western leaders have stiffened their language. President
Barack Obama called the killings "outrageous" and yesterday Mr Hague joined
the chorus of condemnation. "I deplore the increasing violence in Syria and
am appalled by the killing of demonstrators by Syria's security forces," he
said. 

Such condemnation is unlikely to pacify human rights activists. The ICJ
called for Syria to be referred to the United Nations Security Council.
"There is enough evidence suggesting mass killings now," said Said Benarbia,
the ICJ's legal officer for the Middle East. "The Security Council must
assess the magnitude of human rights violations. It must decide whether to
have an international fact-finding mission and, if there is enough evidence,
refer it to the International Criminal Court." 

Human Rights Watch, the New York-based advocacy group, also called for
action by urging Western states to impose sanctions on Syrian officials
involved in the killings of civilians. 






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