There is enough evidence to bring human rights charges against Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad over his crackdown on protesters, UN rights
chief Navi Pillay said in comments broadcast Wednesday.
In an interview with the BBC broadcast Wednesday but recorded
earlier, Pillay said the president's role as commander of the security
forces left him responsible for their actions during the unrest.
She also highlighted what she said was the regime's systematic targeting of children.
The Syrian army's use of heavy weapons against civilians in densely
populated areas was a crime under international law, said Pillay.
"Factually there's enough evidence pointing to the fact that many of
these acts are committed by the security forces, [and] must have
received the approval or the complicity at the highest level," she said.
"President Assad could simply issue an order to stop the killings and
the killings would stop...," the UN Human Rights Commissioner Pillay
told the BBC.
"So this is the kind of thing that judges hearing cases on crimes
against humanity will be looking at on command responsibility."
Pillay also spoke of evidence she had seen that the regime was
systematically targeting children in its bid to stamp out resistance.
Hundreds of children had been detained and tortured, said the South African lawyer.
"It's just horrendous."
Pillay said the UN Security Council now had enough reliable evidence
to warrant a referral to the International Criminal Court (ICC).
"There is no statute of limitations so people like him can go on for a
very long time but one day they will have to face justice," she said,
referring to Assad.
The BBC interview with Pillay was broadcast on Wednesday but recorded
before Damascus reportedly accepted the peace plan set out by UN-Arab
League envoy Kofi Annan, a development greeted with skepticism by the
West.
Syrian forces on Wednesday launched fresh attacks on rebel bastions
as UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged Assad to immediately implement the UN-Arab
League peace plan.
At least 21 people were killed as Syrian forces backed by tanks
attacked the central town of Qalaat al-Madiq and other areas Wednesday,
the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The UN says the conflict has already claimed more than 9,000 lives in the past year.
-AFP/NOW Lebanon
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