Monday, May 15, 2017

Syria using 'crematorium' to hide mass killing, US says


State department claims Bashar al-Assad has built a crematorium near Saydnaya, where rights groups say 13,000 people have been killed


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The Syrian government has installed a crematorium in a military prison in order to destroy the remains of thousands of murdered prisoners, the United States alleged Monday.
Stuart Jones, the acting assistant secretary for Near Eastern Affairs, said the crematorium could be used to dispose of bodies from Saydnaya, where tens of thousands of people have been imprisoned during the country's six-year-old civil war.
"We believe that the building of a crematorium is an effort to cover up the extent of mass murders taking place in Saydnaya prison," said Jones.
The US state department also released commercial satellite photographs showing what it said is a building in the prison complex that has been modified to support the crematorium.
In presenting the photographs, Jones said Syrian President Bashar Assad's government "has sunk to a new level of depravity" with the support of Russia and Iran and called on both countries to use its influence with Syria to establish a credible ceasefire and begin political talks.


Acting Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs Stuart Jones briefs the press on the situation in .
Jones said Washington's information came from credible humanitarian agencies and from the US "intelligence community" and that as many as 50 people per day are thought to be hanged at Saydnaya.
The latest satellite photograph presented by Jones dated to January 2015, more than two years ago, and it was not immediately clear why the United States waited to present its evidence.
Amnesty International said in February that the Syrian government executed up to 13,000 prisoners in mass hangings and carried out systematic torture at the military jail near Damascus.
The Syrian justice ministry denied the Amnesty report, calling it completely "devoid of truth".
Amnesty said the executions took place between 2011 and 2015, but were probably still being carried out and amounted to war crimes.
It called for a further investigation by the United Nations, which produced a report last year with similar accusations also based on extensive witness testimonies.
Assad's government has rejected similar reports in the past of torture and extrajudicial killings in a war that has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives.
The Amnesty report said an average of 20-50 people were hanged each week at the Saydnaya military prison north of Damascus.
Between 5,000 and 13,000 people were executed at Sednaya in the four years after a popular uprising descended into war, it said.
Jones said Washington is not specifically accusing Moscow or Tehran of complicity in the alleged Saydnaya killings, but said Russia is aware of and has supported other abuses. 
And he said last week's visit by Lavrov to the White House was "an opportune time to remind people about the atrocities that are being carried out inside of Syria all the time."
US President Donald Trump came to office vowing to focus US efforts in Syria on defeating the Islamic State (IS) group and he said he hoped to work with Putin, whose forces are in Syria to protect Assad's regime, in this goal.
But relations with Moscow, already dire under Trump's predecessor Barack Obama, have not improved and Assad has continued to bombard civilian areas in his battle with opposition rebels.

Then last month, when Assad was again accused of using the banned nerve agent sarin in a strike on his own people, Trump ordered a retaliatory US cruise missile strike on a Syrian air base.

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