• Continued BCL atrocities and indulgent incumbents
  • An unfortunate move
  • Concern about secondary education
  • Social networking sites: blessing or curse?
  • Hagel for the defence: Obama’s revenge?
  • Impeachment highlights key role of judiciary
  • Argo wins top awards at Golden Globe
  • Two-day children's fair ends in Barisal
  • Syria strike kills children amid push for war crimes probe
  • Afghans to decide on immunity for US troops: Karzai
  • Sonali board turns down BB order to settle disputed IBPs
  • BB may get power to fire state-owned bank MDs
  • BCB hell-bent on Pakistani players
  • Sakib says he too suffered in receiving BPL payment
  • Auto-rickshaw workers urged to stand united against repression
  • Sustainable dev plan stressed to ensure food security for haor people
  • High-income professionals under NBR watch
  • ACC finds 9 more banks involved
  • Commission on financial sectors soon
  • It’s injurious to humans: experts
  • Teachers continue rallying for MPO, job nationalisation
  • Scrap fuel price hike Left parties ask govt
HOME  INTERNATIONAL
  
Print Friendly and PDF

Syria strike kills children amid push for war crimes probe

Agence France-Presse . Damascus

An air strike on a rebel town near Damascus on Monday killed 13 women and children, a watchdog said, fuelling growing international calls for a war crimes probe into the 22-month Syrian conflict.
Reports of the civilian deaths came as Human Rights Watch accused president Bashar al-Assad’s regime of expanding its deployment of banned cluster bombs.
Monday’s air strike on several houses in the town of Moadamiyat al-Sham southwest of Damascus killed at least eight children and five women, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported.
‘The children, all members of the same clan, were aged between six months and nine years old,’ said the head of the Britain-based Observatory, Rami Abdel Rahman.
The Observatory says that more than 3,500 children have been killed since the Syrian conflict erupted 22 months ago. The United Nations says overall more than 60,000 people have died.
On the diplomatic front, at least 55 countries prepared on Monday to demand that the UN Security Council refer the Syria conflict to the International Criminal Court.
The demand was to be made in a letter organised by Switzerland, which has spent seven months collecting signatories.
Diplomatic sources said that 55 countries had signed and others could still join even though the initiative has little immediate chance of success.
The Security Council is locked in a crippling impasse over the Syria conflict, with permanent members Russia and China having vetoed three resolutions threatening sanctions against Assad.
And with neither being members of The Hague-based ICC court, they would almost certainly reject any new resolution proposing war crimes charges.
On Sunday, Russia said Assad’s removal from power was not a part of past international agreements on the crisis and hence impossible to implement.
‘This is a precondition that is not contained in the Geneva communique (agreed by world powers in June) and which is impossible to implement because it does not depend on anyone,’ news agencies quoted foreign minister Sergei Lavrov as saying.
The wrangling comes amid warnings that the conflict, which according to the UN has sent more than 600,000 Syrians fleeing into neighbouring countries, is growing more dangerous for civilians due to the regime expanding its use of cluster bombs.
New York based Human Rights Watch said Damascus was increasingly resorting to firing rockets containing the sub-munitions, after previously using only aircraft to spread the weapons.
Syria ‘is now resorting to a notoriously indiscriminate type of cluster munitions that gravely threatens civilian populations,’ the director of HRW’s arms division Steve Goose said in a statement.
Another aid group said that rape has been a ‘significant’ weapon of war in the conflict, and is the ‘primary’ factor in the exodus of women and children to neighbouring Jordan and Lebanon.



Reader’s Comment

comments powered by Disqus
   
    Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Online Poll


Do you agree with the government’s move to filter contents posted on social networking sites such as Facebook and twitter and on blogs?

  • Yes
  • No
  • No comment
Ajax Loader

Archives

Select MonthYear

May 2013

SunMonTueWedThuFri Sat
01020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031