Home United States US Engaging With UN To Ensure Syrians Get Answers For Mass Graves

US Engaging With UN To Ensure Syrians Get Answers For Mass Graves

A drone view shows the site of a mass grave from the rule of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, according to residents, after the ousting of al-Assad, in Najha
A drone view shows the site of a mass grave from the rule of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, according to residents, after the ousting of al-Assad, in Najha, Syria, December 17, 2024. REUTERS/Ammar Awad

The United States is engaged with several UN bodies to ensure that the Syrian people get answers to mass graves, detention sites and torture sites in Syria.

At a regular news briefing on Tuesday, State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller called for answers for the families of those who disappeared and were tortured and killed in Syria.

Miller also sought accountability for those behind these actions.

The administration of President Joe Biden was engaged with the Independent Institution on Missing Persons in Syria, among other UN bodies, Miller said.

An international war crimes prosecutor said on Tuesday that evidence emerging from mass grave sites in Syria has exposed a state-run “machinery of death” under toppled leader Bashar al-Assad in which he estimated more than 100,000 people were tortured and murdered since 2013.

“When you look at the evidence that is coming out of Syria in the now 10 days since the Assad regime fell, it continues to shock the conscience,” Miller said.

He was referring to the mass graves as well as information the U.S. government has been gathering.

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Miller said that this includes information that is not yet publicly known.

“We just continue to see more and more evidence pile up of how brutal they were in mistreating their own people, in murdering and torturing their own people,” the State department spokesperson said.

Hundreds of thousands of Syrians are estimated to have been killed since 2011, when Assad’s crackdown on protests against his rule grew into a full-scale civil war.

Assad and his father Hafez, who preceded him as President and died in 2000, are accused by Syrians, rights groups and other governments of widespread extrajudicial killings, including mass executions within the country’s notorious prison system.

Assad repeatedly denied that his government committed human rights violations and painted his detractors as extremists.

(With inputs from Reuters)