Published: 21:44, September 18, 2020 | Updated: 16:51, June 5, 2023
Netherlands prepares case against Syria for human rights violations
By Reuters

This picture taken on August 28, 2020 shows an aerial view of Syrians gathering for an anti-government demonstration by the ruins of a building that was hit in prior bombardment and adorned with a giant flag of the Syrian opposition, in the town of Ariha in the rebel-held northwestern Idlib province. (OMAR HAJ KADOUR / AFP)

AMSTERDAM - The Netherlands is preparing a case against Syria at the UN’s highest court, seeking to hold the government of President Bashar al-Assad accountable for human rights violations, including torture and the use of chemical weapons, the Dutch foreign minister told parliament on Friday.

Syria’s decade old civil war has killed at least 200,000 civilians, left 100,000 missing and forced 5.5 million to flee to neighboring countries, the Netherlands said

Syria has been informed of the legal step, which precedes a possible case at the International Court of Justice, the UN’s court for disputes between states in The Hague.

READ MORE: US slaps sanctions on Syria in push for Assad to end war

 “Today the Netherlands announced its decision to hold Syria responsible under international law for gross human rights violations and torture in particular,” Foreign Minister Stef Blok wrote in a letter to legislators. It cites Syria’s obligation to uphold the UN Convention against Torture, which Damascus ratified in 2004.

 “The Assad regime has committed horrific crimes time after time. The evidence is overwhelming. There must be consequences,” the letter said. “Large numbers of Syrians have been tortured, murdered, forcibly disappeared, and subjected to poison-gas attacks, or have lost everything fleeing for their lives.”

ALSO READ: Assad: Syrian crisis not civil war but battle of global powers

Syria’s decade old civil war has killed at least 200,000 civilians, left 100,000 missing and forced 5.5 million to flee to neighboring countries, the Netherlands said.