UN says more than 60,000 dead in Syrian civil war
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This
citizen journalism image taken from video provided by Shaam News
Network, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP
reporting, shows a wounded man being pulled from the site of a Syrian
government airstrike on a gas station in the eastern Damascus suburb of
Mleiha, Syria, Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2013. Activists say dozens of people
have been killed or wounded in an air raid on a gas station near the
capital Damascus. |
BEIRUT (AP)
-- The United Nations gave a grim new count Wednesday of the human cost
of Syria's civil war, saying the death toll has exceeded 60,000 in 21
months - far higher than recent estimates by anti-regime activists.
The
day's events illustrated the escalating violence that has made recent
months the deadliest of the conflict: As rebels pressed a strategy of
attacking airports and pushing the fight closer to President Bashar
Assad's stronghold in Damascus, the government responded with deadly
airstrikes on restive areas around the capital.
A
missile from a fighter jet hit a gas station in the suburb of Mleiha,
killing or wounding dozens of people who were trapped in burning piles
of debris, activists said.
Gruesome online video showed incinerated victims - one still sitting astride a motorcycle - or bodies torn apart.
"He's burning! The guy is burning!" an off-camera voice screamed in one video over a flaming corpse.
It
was unclear if the government had a military strategy for attacking the
gas station. At least one of the wounded wore a military-style vest
often used by rebel fighters. Human rights groups and anti-regime
activists say Assad's forces often make little effort to avoid civilian
casualties when bombing rebel areas.
Syria's conflict began in March 2011 with protests calling for political change but has evolved into a full-scale civil war.
As
the rebels have grown more organized and effective, seizing territory
in the north and establishing footholds around Damascus, the government
has stepped up its use of airpower, launching daily airstrikes. The
escalating violence has sent the death toll soaring.
The
U.N.'s new count of more than 60,000 deaths since the start of the
conflict is a third higher than recent estimates by anti-regime
activists. One group, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights, says more than 45,000 people have been killed. Other groups have
given similar tolls.
"The number of
casualties is much higher than we expected, and is truly shocking," U.N.
High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said in a statement.
She
criticized the government for inflaming the conflict by cracking down
on peaceful protests and said rebel groups, too, have killed
unjustifiably. Acts by both sides could be considered war crimes, she
said.
She also faulted world powers for not finding a way to stop the violence.
"The
failure of the international community, in particular the Security
Council, to take concrete actions to stop the bloodletting shames us
all," Pillay said. "Collectively, we have fiddled at the edges while
Syria burns."
The U.S. and many European and
Arab nations have demanded that Assad step down, while Russia, China and
Iran have criticized calls for regime change.
The
new death toll was compiled by independent experts commissioned by the
U.N. human rights office who compared 147,349 killings reported by seven
different sources, including the Syrian government.
After
removing duplicates, they had a list of 59,648 individuals killed
between the start of the uprising on March 15, 2011, and Nov. 30, 2012.
In each case, the victim's first and last name and the date and location
of death were known. Killings in December pushed the number past
60,000, she said.
The total death toll is
likely to be even higher because incomplete reports were excluded, and
some killing may not have been documented at all.
"There
are many names not on the list for people who were quietly shot in the
woods," Pillay's spokesman Rupert Colville told The Associated Press.
The data did not distinguish among soldiers, rebels or civilians.
It
indicated that the pace of killing has accelerated. Monthly death tolls
in summer 2011 were around 1,000.
A year later, they had reached about
5,000 per month.
Most of the killings were in
the province of Homs, followed by the Damascus suburbs, Idlib, Aleppo,
Daraa and Hama. At least three-fourths of the victims were male.
Pillay warned that thousands more could die or be injured, and she said the danger could continue even after the war.
"We
must not compound the existing disaster by failing to prepare for the
inevitable - and very dangerous - instability that will occur when the
conflict ends," she said.
The U.N. refugee
agency said about 84,000 people fled Syria in December alone, bringing
the total number of refugees to about a half-million. Many more are
displaced inside Syria.
While no one expects
the war to end soon, international sanctions and rebel advances are
eroding Assad's power. Rebels recently have targeted two pillars of his
strength: his control of the skies and his grip on Damascus.
Rebels
in northern Syria attacked a government helicopter base near the
village of Taftanaz in Idlib province, activists said. Videos posted
online showed them blasting targets inside the airport with heavy
machine guns mounted on trucks.
All videos appeared genuine and corresponded with other AP reporting on the events.
In
recent weeks, rebels have attacked three other airports in north Syria.
They clashed Wednesday with forces inside the Mannagh military airport
near the Turkish border as well as near the Aleppo international airport
and adjacent Nerab military airport, halting air traffic there for the
second straight day.
The fall of those
airports to the rebels would embarrass the regime but not fully stop the
airstrikes by government jets, many of which come from bases farther
south.
In another blow to the regime and to
Syria's economy, a company based in the Philippines that handled
shipping containers at Syria's largest port said it was canceling its
contract, citing an "untenable, hostile and dangerous business
environment."
The Manila-based International
Container Terminal Services Inc. said the amount of port traffic had
gone down, hurting business, while conditions in Syria grew more
dangerous.
The company's departure will significantly limit cargo services at the Tartus port.
Also,
Wednesday, the family of American journalist James Foley revealed that
he has been missing in Syria for more than a month. Foley was providing
video for Agence France-Press when he was abducted Nov. 22 by unknown
gunmen, his family said in a statement.
"His captors, whoever they may be, must release him immediately," said AFP chairman Emmanuel Hoog.
Covering
Syria has been a challenge for journalists. The government rarely gives
visas to journalists, prompting some to sneak in with the rebels, often
at great danger.
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