A monitoring group has said that at
least 60,000 people have died in Syrian government jails during the five-year
conflict.
Syrian government officials could
not be reached for comment on the report by the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights, which cited sources in the security apparatus for the toll. The
government has rejected similar reports in the past.
"No fewer than 60,000
detainees were martyred ... either as a result of direct bodily torture, or
denial of food and medicine" the Observatory said in a written statement
on Saturday.
The Observatory's director, Rami
Abdulrahman, said it had arrived at the number by adding up death tolls
provided by sources in several Syrian jails and security agencies.
He said more than 20,000 of them
had died at Sednaya prison near Damascus. The Observatory said it had been able
to verify the deaths of 14,456 people, 110 of them under the age of 18, since
the start of the Syrian uprising in 2011.
Abdulrahman said his sources were
serving officials seeking to expose what was going on, and the Observatory had
been gathering the information since the start of the year.
U.N. investigators said in
February that detainees held by the Syrian government were being killed on a
massive scale.
"LARGE NUMBERS"
"We know large numbers of
people have died in detention in Syria," said Nadim Houry, deputy director
of the Middle East and North Africa division at Human Rights Watch in a
telephone interview.
"The only way to get to the
bottom of the numbers question is to allow for independent monitors into the
detention centers," he added.
A Syrian defector known as Caesar
in 2013 smuggled out tens of thousands of photos taken between May 2011 and
August 2013 that show at least 6,786 separate individuals who had died in
government custody, HRW said in a report issued in December.
That toll was calculated by the
Syrian Association for Missing and Conscience Detainees (SAFMCD), which was
formed by an opposition body and reviewed all the photos, the HRW report said.
President Bashar al-Assad, in a
2015 interview, dismissed the Caesar photos as "allegations without
evidence", and part of a Qatar-funded plot against his government.
Houry said: "Whether it is
60,000 or 30,000, the number is just huge. Despite the Caesar photos, the
multiple reports, there is no international traction."
The U.N. investigators said in
February the reported killings of detainees amounting to a state policy of
"extermination" of the civilian population, a crime against humanity.
The independent experts said they
had also documented mass executions and torture of prisoners by two jihadi
groups, the Nusra Front and Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL. These
constituted war crimes and in the case of Islamic State also crimes against
humanity.
(Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by
Andrew Heavens)
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