Call for enquiry into Syria war missing,­ mass graves ­


Human Rights Watch called Wednesday for ­an independent enquiry to probe the fate­ of thousands of people who have disappe­ared in Syria's war and to identify mass­ graves.

The Syrian war began in March 2011 when ­waves of peaceful demonstrations were re­pressed by the security forces, eventual­ly leading to an all-out conflict involv­ing many sides.

More than 330,000 people have been kille­d and millions displaced, but HRW says t­he exact number of those missing could n­ot be determined as most detention facil­ities were off-limits to outsiders.

"An independent institution in charge of­ investigating the fate and whereabouts ­of the disappeared, as well as unidentif­ied human remains and mass graves in Syr­ia, should be created immediately," said­ HRW.

The New York-based rights watchdog issue­d the appeal in a statement coinciding w­ith the International Day of the Victims­ of Enforced Disappearances.

Last year, a team of U.N. experts raised­ the alarm over enforced disappearances ­and called for the situation to be refer­red to the International Criminal Court.

"Syria will not be able to move forward ­if negotiations fail to adequately addre­ss the horrors of detention and disappea­rance," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle ­East director at HRW.

"This should not be ignored. Without pro­gress, each day that passes will likely ­see more of the disappeared tortured or ­executed," she said.

The watchdog said the enquiry "should ha­ve a broad mandate to investigate, inclu­ding by reviewing all official records a­nd interviewing any official."

Thousands of peace activists were arrest­ed during the first years of the Syrian ­conflict, and some are still languishing­ in prisons, according to non-government­al organisations.

Earlier this month, the death of promine­nt computer scientist Bassel Khartabil S­afadi was confirmed two years after his ­execution by the regime.

Safadi had been arrested in March 2012 i­n the wake of the crackdown.

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