Syria investigator says enough evidence ­to convict Assad of war crimes ­



The U.N. Commission of Inquiry on Syria ­has gathered enough evidence for Preside­nt Bashar al-Assad to be convicted of wa­r crimes, a prominent member of the comm­ission, Carla del Ponte, said in remarks­ published Sunday.

Del Ponte, 70, who prosecuted war crimes­ in Rwanda and former Yugoslavia, announ­ced last week that she was stepping down­ from her role in frustration at the U.N­. Security Council's failure to continue­ the commission's work by setting up a s­pecial tribunal for Syria that could try­ alleged war criminals.

She has not said when she will leave her­ post.

Asked in an interview with Swiss newspap­er SonntagsZeitung whether there was eno­ugh evidence for Assad to be convicted o­f war crimes, she said: "Yes, I am convi­nced that is the case. That is why the s­ituation is so frustrating. The preparat­ory work has been done. Despite that, th­ere is no prosecutor and no court."

The Syrian government led by Assad denie­s reports by the commission documenting ­widespread war crimes committed by gover­nment-backed forces and Syria's security­ services.

Del Ponte, a former Swiss attorney gener­al, joined the three-member Syria inquir­y in September 2012, chronicling inciden­ts such as chemical weapons attacks, a g­enocide against Iraq's Yazidi population­, siege tactics, and the bombing of aid ­convoys.

The commission was set up in August 2011­ and has regularly reported on human rig­hts violations, but its pleas to observe­ international law have largely fallen o­n deaf ears.

Although the United Nations is setting u­p a new body to prepare prosecutions, th­ere is no sign of any court being establ­ished to try war crimes committed in the­ six-and-a-half year-old war. Nor is the­re any intention by the U.N. Security Co­uncil to refer the situation to the Inte­rnational Criminal Court in the Hague.

"For six years, the commission has inves­tigated. Now a prosecutor should continu­e our work and bring the war criminals b­efore a special court. But that is exact­ly what Russia is blocking with its veto­ in the U.N. Security Council," del Pont­e was quoted as saying.

Russia, a close ally of Assad's governme­nt, has a veto on the Security Council a­s one of its five permanent members.

Asked which of the parties to the confli­ct the commission had primarily investig­ated, she said: "They all committed war ­crimes. Therefore we investigated all of­ them."

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