BRUSSELS (AP) — The U.N.'s top human rights official said Saturday that there should be no amnesty for serious crimes committed in Syria, even if the threat of prosecution might motivate members of the regime to cling to power at all costs.
Asked if Syrian President Bashar Assad should be allowed to leave power in exchange for safe haven, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay
said international leaders seeking peace may be drawn to "politically
expedient solutions which may involve amnesty or undertakings not to
prosecute."
But she said that would be wrong under international law.
"You
cannot have amnesty for very serious crimes," she told The Associated
Press during an interview in Brussels. "So my message is very clear —
there has to be accountability."
Lawyers for former Liberian President Charles Taylor, who was sentenced Wednesday by the Special Court for Sierra Leone to 50 years in prison, had argued that giving him a long sentence would send the wrong message to Assad.
Courtenay Griffiths,
an attorney for Taylor, criticized the court for refusing while setting
Taylor's sentence to take into account his decision to step down from
power after his indictment in 2003.
"What lesson does that send to
President Assad?" Griffiths asked. "Maybe the lesson is: If you are a
sitting leader and the international community wants to get rid of you,
either you get murdered like Gadhafi, or you hang on until the bitter
end." Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was killed by a mob in October.
In
Doha, Qatar, on Saturday, the head of Syria's largest exile opposition
group said he would welcome Arab military action aimed at ending attacks
by Assad's regime against Syrian rebel forces and civilians.
Activists
say as many as 13,000 people have died in Assad's crackdown against a
popular uprising that began in March 2011. One year after the revolt
started, the U.N. put the toll at 9,000, but many more have died since.
Burhan Ghalioun, head of the Syrian National Council,
made the comments before a meeting of Arab League foreign ministers.
The envoys are to discuss the bloodshed in Syria, including last week's
massacre of more than 100 people in Houla.
Gulf nations such as
Saudi Arabia and Qatar have pledged funds to aid Syria's rebels, but
there is no direct evidence that anti-Assad forces are becoming better
armed. The Arab League, however, does not appear ready to deploy its own
troops.
Kofi Annan, the international envoy for Syria, is also in Doha.
Source:- http://news.yahoo.com
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