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Fact-finding group for Syrian killings says no one above the law


Yasser Farhan, spokesperson for the Syrian fact-finding committee tasked with investigating violence and revenge killing targeting the Alawite minority sect along the Syrian coast, holds a press conference in Damascus on March 11, 2025.
Yasser Farhan, spokesperson for the Syrian fact-finding committee tasked with investigating violence and revenge killing targeting the Alawite minority sect along the Syrian coast, holds a press conference in Damascus on March 11, 2025.

A Syrian fact-finding committee investigating sectarian killings during clashes between the army and loyalists of ousted President Bashar al-Assad said on Tuesday that no one was above the law and that it would seek the arrest and prosecution of any perpetrators.

Pressure has been growing on Syria's Islamist-led government to investigate after reports by witnesses and a war monitor of the killing of hundreds of civilians in villages where most of the population are members of the ousted president's Alawite sect.

"No one is above the law. The committee will relay all the results to the entity that launched it, the presidency, and the judiciary," committee spokesperson Yasser Farhan said in a televised press conference.

The committee was preparing lists of witnesses and potential perpetrators, and it would refer any suspects with sufficient evidence against them to the judiciary, Farhan said.

The U.N human rights office said entire families, including women and children, were killed in the coastal region as part of a series of sectarian slayings by the army against an insurgency by Assad loyalists.

Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa told Reuters in an interview on Monday that he could not yet say whether forces from Syria's Defense Ministry — which has incorporated former rebel factions under one structure — were involved in the sectarian killings.

Asked whether the committee would seek international help to document violations, Farhan said it was "open" to cooperation but would prefer using its own national mechanisms.

The violence began to spiral on Thursday, when the authorities said their forces in the coastal region came under attack from fighters aligned with the ousted Assad regime.

The Sunni Islamist-led government poured reinforcements into the area to crush what it described as a deadly, well-planned and premeditated assault by remnants of the Assad government.

But Sharaa acknowledged to Reuters that some armed groups had entered without prior coordination with the Defense Ministry.

The Alawites are the second-largest religious group in Syria after Sunni Muslims. Their faith is an offshoot Shiite Islam.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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