rhodescholar
Gold Member
- Banned
- #41
They are fighting terror. Terror you label freedom movement. Even in the face of reality, you won´t change your position. Look, those are the few guys celebrating the 5th anniversary of the "Syrian revolution":
I can see why you're ignored by most of the forum; you're just not intelligent enough to earn responses, and have nothing of value to offer.
For the mentally sane, here are the facts:
Syria war crimes investigators amass strongest evidence 'since Nuremberg' against Bashar al-Assad
"The most striking evidence concerns Assad’s response to the mass protests against his rule that swept Syria from 2011 onwards. He appointed a “Central Crisis Management Cell” and gave the security chiefs on this committee supreme responsibility for suppressing the unrest. The cell held daily meetings in Damascus, chaired by Mohammad Said Bekheitan, the second most senior member of the ruling Ba’ath party....
During this period, thousands of Assad's opponents were killed, detained or tortured. Hospitals were transformed into torture centres, with bodies being stacked in the lavatories after the morgues overflowed.
Stephen Rapp, the former chief prosecutor of the United Nations court handling the Rwandan genocide, told the New Yorker: “When the day of justice arrives, we’ll have much better evidence than we’ve had anywhere since Nuremberg.”
http://www.economist.com/news/middl...ous-abuse-pronounced-genuine-bashar-al-assads
"Such doubts should now be laid to rest. Following a six-month investigation that included dozens of interviews with former prisoners, defectors who had worked in Syrian military hospitals or intelligence agencies, forensic experts and families of the disappeared, Human Rights Watch (HRW), an independent watchdog group, says it is satisfied that the photos are indeed genuine. In a report published on December 16th it says that Caesar’s work suggests that Syrian officials should be tried for crimes against humanity."
Bashar al-Assad implicated in Syria war crimes, says UN
"A UN inquiry has found "massive evidence" that the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, is implicated in war crimes as the latest reported death toll in the country's civil war reached 126,000.
Navi Pillay, the UN's human rights chief, said a commission of inquiry into human rights violations in Syria "has produced massive evidence … [of] very serious crimes, war crimes, crimes against humanity" and that "the evidence indicates responsibility at the highest level of government, including the head of state."