By Khaled Oweis
The United States and European Union called on Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad to step down on Thursday and President Barack Obama
accused him of "torturing and slaughtering" his own people in what
U.N. officials said could be crimes against humanity.
It was a dramatic sharpening
of international rhetoric -- major states had urged Assad to reform rather than
resign.
But with no threat of Western
military action like that against Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, the five-month-old
conflict between Assad and his opponents seems likely to grind on in the
streets.
Putting faith in sanctions
rather than force, Obama ordered Syrian government assets in the United States
frozen, banned U.S. citizens from operating in or investing in Syria and prohibited U.S. imports of Syrian
oil products.
Though U.N. Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon said Assad had assured him on Wednesday that military operations
were over, activists said Syrian forces carried out further raids in Deir
al-Zor and surrounded a mosque in Latakia on Thursday.
"The future of Syria must
be determined by its people, but President Bashar al-Assad is standing in their
way," Obama said. "His calls for dialogue and reform have rung hollow
while he is imprisoning, torturing and slaughtering his own people."
In a coordinated move,
European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton called on Assad to step
aside and said the EU was preparing to broaden sanctions against Syria.
At the United Nations,
Britain, France,
Portugal, Germany and the United States said they would begin drafting a
Security Council sanctions resolution on Syria. "We believe that the time
has come for the council to take further action," Britain's Deputy U.N.
Ambassador Philip Parham told reporters.
U.N. human rights
investigators said Assad's forces had carried out systematic attacks on
civilians, often opening fire at close range and without warning, and
committing violations that may amount to crimes against humanity.
A U.N. report issued in Geneva
recounted complaints of indiscriminate shooting and of wounded people being put
to death with knives or by being dumped in the refrigerated rooms of hospital
morgues.
CRACKDOWN
"CONTINUING"
The Security Council should
consider referring the situation in Syria to the Hague-based International
Criminal Court, the investigators said, adding that they had evidence against
50 suspects.
U.N. human rights chief Navi
Pillay conveyed that message in a briefing to the council in New York later in
the day. "I ... recommended referral" to the ICC, she told reporters.
Diplomats said they would study the recommendation.
In a telephone call with
Assad on Wednesday U.N. Secretary General Ban joined a chorus of condemnation,
expressing alarm at reports of widespread violations of human rights and
excessive use of force by security forces against civilians.
The Syrian Revolution
Coordinating Union, an activists' group, said security forces fired machineguns
near a mosque in Latakia which was surrounded by armored vehicles.
It also said Assad's forces
killed at least one man when they fired live ammunition to stop residents from
marching after Ramadan prayers in the Mureijeh neighborhood of Homs, 165
kilometers (100 miles) north of the capital Damascus.
Separately, it said security
forces shot dead a man it identified as Ali al-Hussein and wounded six when
they fired at a sit-in in the town of al-Ruhaibeh northeast of Damascus.
In New York, Syria's U.N.
Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari accused the United States and European powers of waging
a "diplomatic and humanitarian war" against Syria by imposing
sanctions and demanding that Assad quit.
Britain's Parham told
reporters the proposed U.N. sanctions would include an arms embargo, asset
freezes and travel bans. But veto-holders Russia and China have so far opposed concrete measures
against Damascus.
SANCTIONS IMPACT
Nadim Shehadi of London's
Chatham House think-tank said the shift in tone from Washington and Europe was
significant, since it may encourage Syrians who saw previous calls for Assad to
reform as an indication of support for him.
"The previous messages
from the West to Bashar al-Assad were ambiguous," Shehadi said. "Now
the West has hit at the very basis of the idea of his power, by telling him
that we don't believe in you any more and you should leave.
Rosemary Hollis, Middle East
politics lecturer at London's City University, said the move could "rattle
the regime, they will feel very isolated."
It may take time, however, for
the diplomatic broadside, backed by sanctions, to have an impact on the
45-year-old president who took power when his father President Hafez al-Assad
died 11 years ago after three decades in office.
He has so far brushed off international
pressure and survived years of U.S. and European isolation following the 2005
assassination of Lebanese statesman Rafik al-Hariri, a killing many Western
nations held Damascus responsible for.
Despite the escalating
international rhetoric and Western sanctions, no country is proposing to take
the kind of military action NATO forces launched in Libya to support rebels
fighting Gaddafi. That action has helped them take much of the country.
However, Syria's economy,
already hit by a collapse in tourism revenue, could be further damaged by
Obama's announcement. U.S. sanctions will make it very difficult for banks to financetransactions
involving Syrian oil exports.
It will also make it
challenging for companies with a large U.S. presence, such as Shell to continue
producing crude in Syria -- although the impact on global oil markets from a potential shutdown of Syria's
380,000 barrels per day oil industry would be relatively small compared to
Libya.
Assad says the protests are a
foreign conspiracy to divide Syria and pledged last week his army would
"not relent in pursuing terrorist groups."
U.N. INVESTIGATION
The U.N. investigators said
Syrian forces had fired on peaceful protesters throughout the country, often at
short range and without warning, killing at least 1,900 civilians, including
children. Their wounds were "consistent with an apparent shoot-to-kill
policy," their report said.
"The mission found a
pattern of human rights violations that constitutes widespread or systematic
attacks against the civilian population, which may amount to crimes against
humanity," it said.
There was a "clear
pattern of snipers shooting at demonstrators," and in some cases targeting
people trying to evacuate the wounded. In hospitals "there were several
reports of security forces killing injured victims by putting them alive in
refrigerators in hospital morgues."
The United Nations plans to
send a team to Syria this weekend to assess the humanitarian situation there,
U.N. humanitarian chief Valerie Amos said on Thursday.
(Additional reporting by Arshad
Mohammed and Deborah
Charles in Washington, Justyna
Pawlakin Brussels, Mohammed
Abbas in London, Mariam
Karouny in Beirut and Louis
Charbonneau at the
United Nations; Writing by Dominic Evans;
Editing by Todd Eastham)
Source : Reuters
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