A/RES/73/182 GA
Situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
73
Session
111
Yes
15
No
55
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.3/73/L.50 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/73/182 |
| Category | SOCIAL CONDITIONS AND EQUITY |
| Voeten Topics ⓘ | |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/73/182 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/73/PV.56
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Uruguay
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Yemen
Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/73/182
General Assembly
Distr.: General
24 January 2019
18-22278 (E) 290119
*1822278*
Seventy-third session
Agenda item 74 (c)
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 17 December 2018
[on the report of the Third Committee (A/73/589/Add.3)]
73/182. Situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic
The General Assembly,
Guided by the Charter of the United Nations,
Reaffirming the purposes and principles of the Charter, the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights 1 and relevant international human rights treaties,
including the International Covenants on Human Rights, 2
Reaffirming its strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and
territorial integrity of the Syrian Arab Republic and to the principles of the Charter,
Recalling its resolutions 66/176 of 19 December 2011, 66/253 A of 16 February
2012, 66/253 B of 3 August 2012, 67/183 of 20 December 2012, 67/262 of 15 May
2013, 68/182 of 18 December 2013, 69/189 of 18 December 2014, 70/234 of
23 December 2015, 71/130 of 9 December 2016, 71/203 of 19 December 2016,
71/248 of 21 December 2016 and 72/191 of 19 December 2017, Human Rights
Council resolutions S-16/1 of 29 April 2011,3 S-17/1 of 23 August 2011,3 S-18/1 of
2 December 2011,4 19/1 of 1 March 2012,5 19/22 of 23 March 2012,5 S-19/1 of 1 June
2012,6 20/22 of 6 July 2012,7 21/26 of 28 September 2012,8 22/24 of 22 March 2013,9
__________________
1 Resolution 217 A (III).
2 Resolution 2200 A (XXI), annex.
3 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Sixty-sixth Session, Supplement No. 53 (A/66/53),
chap. I.
4 Ibid., Supplement No. 53B and corrigendum (A/66/53/Add.2 and A/66/53/Add.2/Corr.1), chap. II.
5 Ibid., Sixty-seventh Session, Supplement No. 53 and corrigendum (A/67/53 and A/67/53/Corr.1),
chap. III, sect. A.
6 Ibid., chap. V.
7 Ibid., chap. IV, sect. A.
8 Ibid., Supplement No. 53A (A/67/53/Add.1), chap. III.
9 Ibid., Sixty-eighth Session, Supplement No. 53 (A/68/53), chap. IV, sect. A.
A/RES/73/182
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23/1 of 29 May 2013, 10 23/26 of 14 June 2013,10 24/22 of 27 September 2013, 11
25/23 of 28 March 2014,12 26/23 of 27 June 2014,13 27/16 of 25 September 2014,14
28/20 of 27 March 2015, 15 29/16 of 2 July 2015, 16 30/10 of 1 October 2015, 17
31/17 of 23 March 2016,18 32/25 of 1 July 2016,19 33/23 of 30 September 2016,20
S-25/1 of 21 October 2016,21 34/26 of 24 March 2017,22 35/26 of 23 June 2017,23
36/20 of 29 September 2017 24 and 39/15 of 28 September 2018 25 and Security
Council resolutions 1325 (2000) of 31 October 2000, 2042 (2012) of 14 April 2012,
2043 (2012) of 21 April 2012, 2118 (2013) of 27 September 2013, 2139 (2014) of
22 February 2014, 2165 (2014) of 14 July 2014, 2170 (2014) of 15 August 2014,
2178 (2014) of 24 September 2014, 2191 (2014) of 17 December 2014, 2209 (2015)
of 6 March 2015, 2235 (2015) of 7 August 2015, 2254 (2015) of 18 December 2015,
2258 (2015) of 22 December 2015, 2268 (2016) of 26 February 2016, 2286 (2016) of
3 May 2016, 2314 (2016) of 31 October 2016, 2319 (2016) of 17 November 2016,
2328 (2016) of 19 December 2016, 2332 (2016) of 21 December 2016, 2336 (2016)
of 31 December 2016, 2393 (2017) of 19 December 2017 and 2401 (2018) of
24 February 2018, and the statements by the President of the Council of 3 August
2011,26 2 October 201327 and 17 August 2015,28
Strongly condemning the grave human rights situation in the Syrian Arab
Republic, the indiscriminate killing and deliberate targeting of civilians as such,
including those involving the continued indiscriminate use of heavy weapons and
aerial bombardments, which has caused more than 400,000 fatalities, including the
killing of more than 17,000 children, the continued widespread and systematic gross
violations, as well as abuses, of human rights and violations of international
humanitarian law, including by the starvation of civilians as a method of warfare and
the use of chemical weapons, including chlorine gas, sarin and sulfur mustard, which
are prohibited under international law, and acts of violence that foment sectarian
tensions by the Syrian authorities against the Syrian population,
Reiterating that the only sustainable solution to the current crisis in the Syrian
Arab Republic is through an inclusive and Syrian-led political process, under the
auspices of the United Nations, that meets the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian
people and the establishment of a constitutional committee that would prepare the
work for free and fair elections and political transition in line with Security Council
__________________
10 Ibid., chap. V, sect. A.
11 Ibid., Supplement No. 53A (A/68/53/Add.1), chap. III.
12 Ibid., Sixty-ninth Session, Supplement No. 53 (A/69/53), chap. IV, sect. A.
13 Ibid., chap. V, sect. A.
14 Ibid., Supplement No. 53A and corrigenda (A/69/53/Add.1, A/69/53/Add.1/Corr.1 and
A/69/53/Add.1/Corr.2), chap. IV, sect. A.
15 Ibid., Seventieth Session, Supplement No. 53 (A/70/53), chap. II.
16 Ibid., chap. V, sect. A.
17 Ibid., Supplement No. 53A (A/70/53/Add.1), chap. II.
18 Ibid., Seventy-first Session, Supplement No. 53 (A/71/53), chap. II.
19 Ibid., chap. IV, sect. A.
20 Ibid., Supplement No. 53A and corrigendum (A/71/53/Add.1 and A/71/53/Add.1/Corr.1), chap. II.
21 Ibid., Supplement No. 53B and corrigendum (A/71/53/Add.2 and A/71/53/Add.2/Corr.1), chap. II.
22 Ibid., Seventy-second Session, Supplement No. 53 (A/72/53), chap. II.
23 Ibid., chap. V, sect. A.
24 Ibid., Supplement No. 53A (A/72/53/Add.1), chap. III.
25 Ibid., Seventy-third Session, Supplement No. 53A (A/73/53/Add.1), chap. III.
26 S/PRST/2011/16; see Resolutions and Decisions of the Security Council, 1 August 2011–31 July
2012 (S/INF/67).
27 S/PRST/2013/15; see Resolutions and Decisions of the Security Council, 1 August 2013–31 July
2014 (S/INF/69).
28 S/PRST/2015/15; see Resolutions and Decisions of the Security Council, 1 August 2015–31 December
2016 (S/INF/71).
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resolution 2254 (2015), with a view to establishing credible, inclusive and
non-sectarian governance, with the full and meaningful participation of women,
reaffirming in this regard the important role of women in the prevention and
resolution of conflicts and in peacebuilding, and stressing the importance of their
equal participation and full involvement in all efforts for the maintenance and
promotion of peace and security and the need to increase their role in decision-making
with regard to conflict prevention and resolution,
Expressing its full support for the efforts of the Special Envoy of the Secretary-
General for Syria to establish urgently a credible and legitimate constitutional
committee to advance the efforts of the United Nations to achieve a sustainable
political solution to the conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic in line with Security
Council resolution 2254 (2015), and recalling that pursuant to Council resolution
2254 (2015) a political solution to the conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic also
comprises free and fair elections, under the supervision of the United Nations, to the
satisfaction of the governance and to the highest international standards of
transparency and accountability, with all Syrians, including displaced persons and
refugees, eligible to participate, as well as the establishment of a neutral and safe
environment,
Reconfirming its endorsement of the Geneva communiqué of 30 June 2012,29
endorsing the joint statement on the outcome of the multilateral talks on Syria, held
in Vienna, of 30 October 2015 and the statement of the International Syria Support
Group of 14 November 2015 (the Vienna statements) in pursuit of the full
implementation of the Geneva communiqué, facilitated by the Special Envoy, as the
basis for a Syrian-led and Syrian-owned political transition in order to end the conflict
in the Syrian Arab Republic, and stressing that the Syrian people will decide the future
of the Syrian Arab Republic,
Noting with deep concern the culture of impunity for the most serious violations
of international law and violations and abuses of human rights law committed during
the present conflict, which has provided a fertile ground for further violations and
abuses,
Recalling that, amid expressions of popular discontent over restrictions on the
enjoyment of civil, political, economic and social rights, civilian protests erupted in
Dar’a in March 2011, and noting that the violent oppression of civilian protests by
the Syrian authorities, which later escalated to the direct shelling of civilians, fuelled
the escalation of armed violence and violent extremist groups, and terrorist groups,
including so-called ISIL (also known as Da’esh), Nusrah Front (also known as Hay’at
Tahrir al-Sham), Al-Qaida-affiliated terrorist groups, and all other individuals,
groups, undertakings and entities associated with Al-Qaida or ISIL so designated by
the Security Council, and other violent extremist groups,
Recalling also the specific obligations under international humanitarian law to
respect and protect, in situations of armed conflict, medical personnel and
humanitarian personnel exclusively engaged in medical duties, their means of
transport and equipment, and hospitals and other medical facilities, and to ensure that
the wounded and sick receive, to the fullest extent practicable and with the least
possible delay, the medical care and attention required, recalling also that, under
international law, attacks intentionally directed against hospitals and places where the
sick and wounded are collected, provided that they are not military objectives, as well
as attacks intentionally directed against buildings, material, medical units and
transport and personnel using the distinctive emblems of the Geneva Conventions of
__________________
29 Security Council resolution 2118 (2013), annex II.
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12 August 194930 in conformity with international law are war crimes, and recalling
the applicable rules of international humanitarian law relating to the non-punishment
of any person for carrying out medical activities compatible with medical ethics,
Expressing grave concern at the indiscriminate use of force by the Syrian
authorities against civilians, which has caused immense human suffering and
fomented the spread of extremism and extremist groups and which demonstrates the
continuing failure of the Syrian authorities to protect the population and implement
the relevant resolutions and decisions of United Nations bodies and has created a safe
haven for crimes against humanity,
Expressing grave concern also at the remaining presence of extremism and
violent extremist groups, terrorism and terrorist groups, and strongly condemning all
violations and abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian
law committed in the Syrian Arab Republic by any party to the conflict, in particular
so-called ISIL (also known as Da’esh), Nusrah Front, Al-Qaida-affiliated terrorist
groups, militias fighting on behalf of the regime and other violent extremist groups,
Noting with serious concern the observation of the Independent International
Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic that non-State armed groups still
resort to the use of force against civilians,
Reaffirming its condemnation in the strongest possible terms of the use of
chemical weapons by anyone under any circumstances, emphasizing that any use of
chemical weapons anywhere, at any time, by anyone, under any circumstances, is
unacceptable and is and would be a violation of international law, and expressing its
strong conviction that those individuals responsible for the use of chemical weapons
must and should be held accountable,
Condemning in the strongest possible terms the fact that chemical weapons have
been used since 2012 in the Syrian Arab Republic, including as reported by the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons-United Nations Joint
Investigative Mechanism in its reports of 2016 and 2017,31 concluding that the Syrian
Arab Armed Forces were responsible for the attacks which released toxic substances
in Tallmannis in 2014 and in Sarmin and Qaminas in 2015, that ISIL (also known as
Da’esh) used sulfur mustard in Mari‘ in 2015 and in Umm Hawsh in 2016 and that
the Syrian Arab Republic was responsible for the release of sarin at Khan Shaykhun
in 2017, accordingly noting with great concern the reports of the fact-finding mission
of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons regarding alleged
incidents in Lataminah32 and Saraqib,33 as well as its interim report regarding the
alleged use of toxic chemicals as a weapon in Duma, 34 and demanding that the
perpetrators immediately desist from any further use of chemical weapons,
Expressing support for the work carried out by the Commission of Inquiry,
welcoming its reports, strongly condemning the lack of cooperation by the Syrian
authorities with the Commission of Inquiry, reiterating its decision to transmit the
reports of the Commission of Inquiry to the Security Council, expressing its
appreciation to the Commission of Inquiry for its briefings to members of the Security
Council, and requesting that the Commission of Inquiry continue to brief the General
Assembly and members of the Security Council,
__________________
30 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 75, Nos. 970–973.
31 See S/2016/738/Rev.1, S/2016/888 and S/2017/904.
32 See S/2017/931, annex, and S/2018/620, annex,
33 See S/2018/478, annex.
34 See S/2018/732, annex.
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Noting with serious concern the observation of the Commission of Inquiry that,
since March 2011, the Syrian authorities have conducted widespread attacks against
the civilian population as a matter of policy, including targeted attacks against
protected persons and objects, including medical facilities, personnel and transport
and blocked humanitarian convoys, as well as enforced disappearances, torture in
detention, summary executions and other violations and abuses, and underscoring the
need for those allegations to be examined and evidence to be collected and made
available for future accountability efforts,
Strongly condemning the reported killing of detainees in Syrian military
intelligence facilities and the widespread practice of enforced disappearance,
arbitrary detention and the use of sexual and gender-based violence and torture in
detention centres referred to in the reports of the Commission of Inquiry, including,
but not limited to, Branch 215, Branch 227, Branch 235, Branch 251, the Air Force
Intelligence Investigation Branch at Mazzah military airport and Saydnaya prison,
including the reported practice of mass hangings by the authorities, as well as the
reported killing of detainees at military hospitals, including Tishrin and Harasta
hospitals,
Expressing its deepest concern about the findings of the Commission of Inquiry
and also the allegations contained in the evidence presented by “Caesar” in January
2014 regarding the torture and execution of persons incarcerated by the Syrian
authorities, and underscoring the need for those allegations and similar evidence to
be collected, examined and made available for future accountability efforts,
Recalling the statements made by the Secretary-General, the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights and the special procedures of the Human
Rights Council that crimes against humanity and war crimes are likely to have been
committed in the Syrian Arab Republic, noting the repeated encouragement by the
High Commissioner for the Security Council to refer the situation to the International
Criminal Court, and regretting that a draft resolution 35 was not adopted
notwithstanding broad support from Member States,
Noting with concern the existence and application of Law No. 10/2018 in the
national legislation of the Syrian Arab Republic and similar measures, which would
have a significant detrimental impact on the rights of Syrians displaced by the conflict
to claim their property and to return to their homes in a safe, voluntary and dignified
manner when the situation on the ground allows it, and calling for its immediate
repeal,
Expressing concern that the implementation of Security Council resolutions
2139 (2014), 2165 (2014), 2191 (2014), 2254 (2015), 2258 (2015), 2268 (2016),
2286 (2016), 2393 (2017) and 2401 (2018) remains largely unfulfilled, and noting the
urgent need to strengthen efforts to address the humanitarian situation in the Syrian
Arab Republic, including through protection of civilians and full, immediate,
unimpeded and sustained humanitarian access,
Recalling its commitment to Security Council resolutions 2170 (2014),
2178 (2014), and 2253 (2015) of 17 December 2015,
Alarmed that more than 5.6 million refugees, including more than 3.8 million
women and children, have been forced to flee the Syrian Arab Republic and that
13.6 million people in the Syrian Arab Republic, of whom 6.5 million are internally
displaced, require urgent humanitarian assistance, which has resulted in an influx of
Syrian refugees into neighbouring countries, other countries in the region and beyond,
and alarmed at the risk the situation presents to regional and international stability,
__________________
35 S/2014/348.
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Expressing its profound indignation at the death of more than 17,000 children
and the many more injured since the beginning of the peaceful protests in March 2011,
and at all grave violations and abuses committed against children in contravention of
applicable international law, such as their recruitment and use, killing and maiming,
sexual violence, kidnapping and abductions, attacks on schools and hospitals, and
denial of humanitarian access, as well as their arbitrary arrest, detention, torture and
ill-treatment and their use as human shields,
Recalling with serious concern the findings of the Commission of Inquiry in its
report entitled “Out of sight, out of mind: deaths in detention in the Syrian Arab
Republic”, noting in this regard the recent issuing of death notifications of detained
individuals by the Syrian authorities, which provides further indication of systematic
violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law, and
urging the Syrian authorities to provide families with the remains of their relatives
whose fate has been disclosed, including those who have been summarily executed,
to take all appropriate measures immediately to protect the lives and rights of all
persons currently detained or unaccounted for and to clarify the fate of those who
remain missing or are still in custody,
Expressing its deep appreciation for the significant efforts that have been made
by neighbouring countries and other countries in the region to accommodate Syrians,
while acknowledging the increasing financial, socioeconomic and political impact of
the presence of large-scale refugee and displaced populations in those countries,
Underscoring the critical need to support efforts for the safe and voluntary
return of refugees and internally displaced persons to their home areas, including the
rehabilitation of affected areas and the provision of security and material needs in
accordance with international law, including applicable provisions of the Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees36 and the Protocol thereto,37 and taking into account
the interests of those countries hosting refugees,
Welcoming the efforts of the United Nations and the League of Arab States and
all diplomatic efforts to achieve a political solution to the Syrian crisis based on the
final communiqué of the Action Group for Syria of 30 June 201229 and consistent
with Security Council resolution 2254 (2015),
Expressing full support for the efforts of the Special Envoy of the Secretary-
General for Syria, with a view to the protection of the civilian population and the full
implementation of the Syrian political process that establishes credible, inclusive and
non-sectarian governance in accordance with the final communiqué and consistent
with Security Council resolutions 2254 (2015) and 2258 (2015), urging the Special
Envoy to convene the constitutional committee in order to pave the way for the
negotiation of a genuine political transition, noting with appreciation the mediation
efforts to facilitate the establishment of a ceasefire in the Syrian Arab Republic, as
noted by the Security Council in its resolution 2336 (2016), supporting the efforts to
end violence, while expressing deep concern at the violations, demanding that all
parties to the ceasefire in the Syrian Arab Republic respect their commitments, and
urging all Member States, especially the members of the International Syria Support
Group, to use their influence to ensure respect for those commitments and the full
implementation of those resolutions, to support efforts to create conditions for a
durable and lasting ceasefire, which is essential to achieving a political solution to
the conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic, and to bring to an end the systematic,
widespread and gross violations and abuses of human rights and violations of
international humanitarian law,
__________________
36 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 189, No. 2545.
37 Ibid, vol. 606, No. 8791.
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1.
Strongly condemns the systematic, widespread and gross violations and
abuses of international human rights law and violations of international humanitarian
law committed in the Syrian Arab Republic and the indiscriminate and
disproportionate attacks in civilian areas and against civilian infrastructure, in
particular attacks on medical facilities and schools, which continue to claim civilian
lives, and demands that all parties comply with their obligations under international
humanitarian law;
2.
Deplores and condemns in the strongest terms the continued armed
violence by the Syrian authorities against its own people since the beginning of the
peaceful protests in 2011, and demands that the Syrian authorities immediately put an
end to all attacks on their own people, take all feasible precautions to avoid, and in
any event to minimize, incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians and damage
to civilian objects and meet their responsibilities to protect the Syrian population and
immediately implement Security Council resolutions 2254 (2015), 2258 (2015)
and 2286 (2016);
3.
Urges all Member States, especially the members of the International Syria
Support Group, to create conditions for continued negotiations for a political solution
to the Syrian conflict, under the auspices of the United Nations, by working towards
the nationwide ceasefire, to enable full, immediate and safe humanitarian access and
to lead to the release of those arbitrarily detained, consistent with Security Council
resolution 2254 (2015), as only a durable and inclusive political solution to the
conflict can bring an end to the systematic, widespread and gross violations and abuses
of international human rights law and violations of international humanitarian law;
4.
Strongly condemns any use of chemical weapons, such as chlorine, sarin
and sulfur mustard, by any party to the conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic,
emphasizes that the development, production, acquisition, stockpiling, retention,
transfer or use of chemical weapons anywhere, at any time, by anyone, under any
circumstances, is unacceptable, constitutes one of the most serious crimes under
international law and is a violation of the Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their
Destruction38 and Security Council resolution 2118 (2013), and expresses its strong
conviction that individuals responsible for the development, production, acquisition,
stockpiling, retention, transfer or use of chemical weapons must and should be held
accountable;
5.
Also strongly condemns the continued use of chemical weapons in the
Syrian Arab Republic, in particular the chlorine attack on 4 February 2018 in Saraqib
and the attack on 7 April 2018 in Duma, which killed dozens of men, women and
children and severely injured hundreds more, recalls the decision of the Security
Council that the Syrian Arab Republic shall not use, develop, produce, otherwise
acquire, stockpile or retain chemical weapons, or transfer, directly or indirectly,
chemical weapons to other States or non-State actors, recalls the relevant reports of
the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons-United Nations Joint
Investigative Mechanism, and demands that the Syrian regime and so-called ISIL
(also known as Da’esh) immediately desist from any further use of chemical weapons;
6.
Expresses grave concern at the reported chemical weapons attack in Duma
on 7 April 2018, notes the latest report of the Independent International Commission
of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic that a vast body of evidence suggests that
chlorine was dropped by helicopter on a residential building, and looks forward to the
final findings of the fact-finding mission of the Organisation for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons on that attack;
__________________
38 Ibid., vol. 1974, No. 33757.
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7.
Calls for a significant enhancement of the verification measures of the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, and welcomes the
arrangements that the Organisation will put in place to identify the perpetrators of
the use of chemical weapons;
8.
Demands that the Syrian regime adhere fully to its international
obligations, including the requirement that it declare in full its chemical weapons
programme, with special emphasis on the need for the Syrian Arab Republic to
urgently resolve the verified gaps, inconsistencies and discrepancies pertaining to its
declaration in respect of the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development,
Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction and
to eliminate its chemical weapons programme in its entirety, as referred to in the
report of the Director General of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons dated 22 February 2016 39 indicating that the Technical Secretariat is at
present unable to verify fully that the declaration and related submissions of the
Syrian Arab Republic are accurate and complete, as required by the Convention and
decision EC-M-33/DEC.1 of the Executive Council of the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons;40
9.
Requests additional procedures for stringent verification pursuant to
article IV, paragraph 8, and article V, paragraph 10, of the Convention, in order to
ensure the complete destruction of the Syrian chemical weapons programme and
prevent any further use of chemical weapons;
10. Deplores and condemns in the strongest terms the continued widespread
and systematic gross violations and abuses of human rights and fundamental freedoms
and all violations of international humanitarian law by the Syrian authorities, the
government-affiliated militias and those who fight on their behalf, including those
deliberately targeting civilians or civilian objects, including attacks on schools,
hospitals and places of worship, with heavy weapons, aerial bombardments, cluster
munitions, ballistic missiles, barrel bombs, chemical or other weapons and other force
against civilians, as well as the starvation of the civilian population as a method of
warfare, attacks on schools, hospitals and places of worship, massacres, arbitrary
executions, extrajudicial killings, the killing and persecution of peaceful protesters,
human rights defenders and journalists, individuals and members of communities on
the basis of their religion or belief, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances,
violations of the human rights of women and children, forced displacement of
members of minority groups and of those opposed to the Syrian regime, unlawful
interference with access to medical treatment, failure to respect and protect medical
personnel, torture, systematic sexual and gender-based violence, including rape in
detention, and ill-treatment;
11.
Condemns unequivocally all attacks and violence against journalists and
media workers by the Syrian authorities, the government-affiliated militias and
non-State armed groups, urges all parties to respect the professional independence
and rights of journalists, and recalls in this regard that journalists and media workers
engaged in dangerous professional missions in areas of armed conflict shall be
considered civilians and shall be protected as such, provided that they take no action
adversely affecting their status as civilians;
12. Strongly condemns all violations and abuses of human rights and
violations of international humanitarian law, including the killing and persecution of
individuals and communities on the basis of their religion or beliefs, by armed
extremist groups, as well as any human rights abuses or violations of international
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humanitarian law by non-State armed groups, including Hizbullah and those
designated as terrorist groups by the Security Council;
13. Deplores and strongly condemns the terrorist acts and violence committed
against civilians by so-called ISIL (also known as Da’esh), Nusrah Front (also known
as Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham), Al-Qaida-affiliated terrorist groups, terrorist groups so
designated by the Security Council and other violent extremist groups and their
continued gross, systematic and widespread abuses of human rights and violations of
international humanitarian law, and reaffirms that terrorism cannot and should not be
associated with any religion, gender, ethnicity, nationality or civilization;
14. Condemns in the strongest terms the gross and systematic abuse of the
human rights of women and children by all terrorist groups and armed groups,
including so-called ISIL (also known as Da’esh), in particular the killing of women
and girls, sexual and gender-based violence, including the enslavement and sexual
exploitation and abuse of women and girls and the forced recruitment, use and
abduction of children;
15. Condemns the reported forced displacements of the population in the
Syrian Arab Republic, including forced displacement of civilians as a result of local
truce agreements, as highlighted by the Commission of Inquiry, and the alarming
impact thereof on the demography of the country, which amounts to a strategy of
radical demographic change initiated by the Syrian authorities, its allies and other
non-State actors, calls upon all parties concerned to cease immediately all activities
related to these actions, including any activities that may amount to war crimes and
crimes against humanity, notes that impunity for such crimes is unacceptable,
reaffirms that those responsible for such breaches of international law must be
brought to justice, and supports efforts to collect evidence in view of future legal
action;
16. Reminds the Government of the Syrian Arab Republic of its obligations
under the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment, 41 including its obligation to take effective measures to
prevent acts of torture in any territory under its jurisdiction, and calls upon all States
parties to the Convention to comply with any relevant obligations under the
Convention, including with respect to the extradite or prosecute principle contained
in article 7 of the Convention;
17. Strongly condemns the reported persistent and widespread use of sexual
violence, abuse and exploitation, including in government detention centres,
including those run by the intelligence agencies, and notes that such acts may
constitute violations of international humanitarian law and violations and abuses of
international human rights law, and in this regard expresses deep concern at the
prevailing climate of impunity for sexual and gender-based violence;
18. Also strongly condemns all violations and abuses committed against
children in contravention of applicable international law, such as their recruitment
and use, killing and maiming, rape and all other forms of sexual violence, abductions,
denial of humanitarian access for children, and attacks on civilian objects, including
schools and hospitals, as well as their arbitrary arrest, unlawful detention, torture and
ill-treatment and their use as human shields;
19. Reaffirms the Syrian authorities’ responsibility for the systematic use of
enforced disappearances, takes note of the assessment of the Commission of Inquiry
that the Syrian authorities’ use of enforced disappearances amounts to a crime against
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humanity, and condemns the targeted disappearances of young men and the
exploitation of ceasefires as an opportunity to forcibly recruit and arbitrarily
detain them;
20. Demands that the Syrian authorities, in accordance with their obligations
under relevant provisions of international human rights law, including the right to life
and the right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and
mental health, promote non-discriminatory access to health services and respect and
protect medical and health personnel from obstruction, threats and physical attacks;
21. Strongly condemns all attacks on medical and health personnel, their
means of transport and equipment, as well as on hospitals and other medical facilities,
deplores the long-term consequences of such attacks for the population and health-
care systems of the Syrian Arab Republic, and reaffirms that humanitarian workers
and their means of transport, equipment and facilities must be protected in accordance
with international humanitarian law;
22. Stresses that the situation in Idlib is of particular concern, expresses its
support for the current agreement to cease hostilities in order to avoid a humanitarian
catastrophe, and calls upon the guarantors of that agreement to ensure that the
ceasefire is upheld;
23. Demands that the Syrian authorities cooperate fully with the Commission
of Inquiry, including by granting it immediate, full and unhindered access throughout
the Syrian Arab Republic;
24. Also demands that the Syrian authorities meet their responsibilities to
protect the Syrian population;
25. Strongly condemns the intervention in the Syrian Arab Republic of all
foreign terrorist fighters and those foreign organizations and foreign forces fighting
on behalf of the Syrian regime, expresses deep concern that their involvement further
exacerbates the deteriorating situation in the Syrian Arab Republic, including the
human rights and humanitarian situation, which has a serious negative impact on the
region, and demands that all foreign terrorist fighters, and those who are fighting in
support of the Syrian authorities, including all militias sponsored by foreign
Governments, immediately withdraw from the Syrian Arab Republic;
26. Demands that all parties immediately put an end to all violations and
abuses of international human rights law and violations of international humanitarian
law, recalls, in particular, the obligation under international humanitarian law to
distinguish between civilians and combatants and the prohibition against
indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks and all attacks against civilians and
civilian objects, further demands that all parties to the conflict take all appropriate
steps to protect civilians, in compliance with international law, including by desisting
from attacks directed against civilian objects, such as medical centres, schools and
water stations, and refrain from militarizing such facilities, seek to avoid establishing
military positions in densely populated areas and enable the evacuation of the
wounded and all civilians who wish to leave areas of conflict, including besieged
areas, and recalls in this regard that the Syrian authorities bear primary responsibility
for protecting their population;
27. Condemns in the strongest terms all attacks on protected objects, including
indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks and those which may constitute a war
crime, taking place in the Syrian Arab Republic, and requests the Commission of
Inquiry to continue to investigate all such acts;
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28. Recalls the statements made by the Special Envoy of the Secretary-
General for Syria, Mr. Staffan de Mistura, indicating that the overwhelming majority
of the civilian casualties in the Syrian Arab Republic have been caused by the
indiscriminate use of aerial bombardments, demands in this regard that the Syrian
authorities immediately cease any attacks on civilians, any disproportionate attacks
and any indiscriminate use of weapons in populated areas, and recalls in this regard
the obligation to respect international humanitarian law in all circumstances;
29. Emphasizes the need for accountability for crimes involving breaches of
international law, in particular of international humanitarian law and human rights
law, some of which may constitute war crimes or crimes against humanity, committed
in the Syrian Arab Republic since March 2011, through fair and independent
investigations and prosecutions at the domestic or international level;
30. Urges all Member States and parties to the conflict to cooperate fully with
the International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism to Assist in the Investigation
and Prosecution of Persons Responsible for the Most Serious Crimes under
International Law Committed in the Syrian Arab Republic since March 2011,
including through the provision of relevant information and documentation, stresses
its mandate to closely cooperate with the Commission of Inquiry, and also urges the
Mechanism to make a particular effort to ensure consultation and cooperation with
Syrian civil society organizations;
31. Welcomes the reports of the Mechanism for 2017 and 2018,42 and invites
the Head of the Mechanism to prepare the reports of the Mechanism for presentation
on an annual basis in the month of April at a plenary meeting of the General Assembly,
starting at its seventy-third session, under the agenda item entitled “Prevention of
armed conflict”, within existing resources;
32. Also welcomes the voluntary contributions made by Member States to the
funding of the Mechanism, invites all Member States to make additional financial
contributions, and notes the steps taken by the Secretary-General in response to the
call to include the necessary funding for the Mechanism in his next budget proposal;
33. Emphasizes the need to ensure that all those responsible for violations of
international humanitarian law or violations and abuses of human rights law are held
to account through appropriate, fair and independent domestic or international
criminal justice mechanisms, in accordance with the principle of complementarity,
stresses the need to pursue practical steps towards this goal, and for that reason
encourages the Security Council to take appropriate action to ensure accountability,
noting the important role that the International Criminal Court can play in this
regard;
34. Welcomes the efforts by States to investigate conduct in the Syrian Arab
Republic and to prosecute crimes within their jurisdiction committed in the Syrian
Arab Republic, encourages them to continue to do so and to share relevant
information between States in accordance with their national legislation and
international law, and also encourages other States to consider doing the same;
35. Deplores the deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Syrian Arab
Republic, and urges the international community to assume its responsibility for
providing urgent financial support to enable the host countries and communities to
respond to the growing humanitarian needs of Syrian refugees, while emphasizing the
principle of burden-sharing;
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36. Calls upon all members of the international community, including all
donors, to fulfil their previous pledges and continue to provide much-needed support
to the United Nations, its specialized agencies and other humanitarian actors to
provide humanitarian assistance to the millions of Syrians displaced both internally
and in host countries and communities;
37. Welcomes the efforts of those countries outside the region that have put in
place measures and policies to assist and host Syrian refugees, encourages them to do
more, and also encourages other States outside the region to consider implementing
similar measures and policies, with a view to providing Syrian refugees with
protection and humanitarian assistance;
38. Strongly condemns the intentional denial of humanitarian assistance to
civilians, from whatever quarter, and in particular the denial of medical assistance
and the withdrawal of water and sanitation services to civilian areas, which has
recently worsened, stressing that the starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is
prohibited under international law, noting especially the primary responsibility of the
Government of the Syrian Arab Republic in this regard, and deplores the deteriorating
humanitarian situation;
39. Demands that the Syrian authorities and all other parties to the conflict
ensure the full, immediate, unimpeded and sustained access of the United Nations and
humanitarian actors, including to besieged and hard-to-reach areas, consistent with
Security Council resolutions 2139 (2014), 2165 (2014), 2191 (2014), 2254 (2015),
2258 (2015), 2332 (2016), 2393 (2017) and 2401 (2018);
40. Strongly condemns practices, including abduction, hostage-taking,
arbitrary and incommunicado detention, torture, the murder of innocent civilians and
summary executions, carried out by non-State armed groups and terrorist groups so
designated by the Security Council, most notably so-called ISIL (also known as
Da’esh) and Nusrah Front (also known as Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham), and underlines that
such acts may amount to crimes against humanity;
41. Deplores the suffering and torture in detention centres throughout the
Syrian Arab Republic, as depicted in the reports of the Commission of Inquiry and
the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, as well as in
the evidence presented by “Caesar” in January 2014, and in the reports of widespread
killing of detainees in Syrian military intelligence facilities;
42. Strongly condemns the reported killing of detainees in Syrian military
intelligence facilities, in particular in the Mazzah airport detention facility, the
Harasta Air Force Intelligence Branch and Military Security Branches 215, 227, 235,
248 and 291, and the reported killing of detainees in Adra prison and at military
hospitals, including Mazzah, Tishrin and Harasta, and expresses deep concern at
reports that the regime used a crematorium to conceal a mass killing of prisoners at
the Saydnaya penitentiary complex;
43. Calls for the appropriate international monitoring bodies to be granted
access to detainees in government prisons and detention centres, including all military
facilities referred to in the reports of the Commission of Inquiry;
44. Demands that all parties take all appropriate steps to protect civilians and
persons hors de combat, including members of ethnic, religious and confessional
communities, and stresses that, in this regard, the primary responsibility to protect the
population of the Syrian Arab Republic lies with the Syrian authorities;
45. Strongly condemns the damage and destruction of the cultural heritage of
the Syrian Arab Republic, in particular that of Palmyra and Aleppo, and the organized
looting and trafficking of Syrian cultural property, as outlined by the Security Council
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in its resolutions 2199 (2015) of 12 February 2015 and 2347 (2017) of 24 March
2017, affirms that attacks intentionally directed against historic monuments may
amount to war crimes, and underlines the need to bring the perpetrators of such crimes
to justice;
46. Urges all parties to the conflict to take all appropriate steps to ensure the
safety and security of United Nations and associated personnel, personnel of the
specialized agencies and all other personnel engaged in humanitarian relief activities
as required by international humanitarian law, without prejudice to their freedom of
movement and access, stresses the need not to impede or hinder these efforts, recalls
that attacks on humanitarian workers may amount to war crimes, and notes in this
regard that the Security Council has reaffirmed that it will take further measures in
the event of non-compliance with its resolutions 2139 (2014), 2165 (2014),
2191 (2014), 2234 (2015), 2258 (2015), 2286 (2016), 2393 (2017) and 2401 (2018)
by any Syrian party;
47. Urges the international community to support the leadership and full and
effective participation of women in all efforts aimed at finding a political solution to
the Syrian crisis, as envisaged by the Security Council in its resolutions 1325 (2000),
2122 (2013) of 18 October 2013 and 2242 (2015) of 13 October 2015;
48. Reaffirms that there can only be a political solution to the conflict in the
Syrian Arab Republic, reiterates its commitment to the national unity and territorial
integrity of the Syrian Arab Republic, and urges the parties to the conflict to abstain
from actions that may contribute to the continuing deterioration of the human rights,
security and humanitarian situation, in order to reach a genuine political transition,
based on the final communiqué of the Action Group for Syria of 30 June 2012,29
consistent with Security Council resolutions 2254 (2015) and 2268 (2016), that meets
the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people for a civil, democratic and pluralistic
State, with the full and effective participation of women, where there is no room for
sectarianism or discrimination on ethnic, religious, linguistic, gender or any other
grounds, and where all persons receive equal protection, regardless of gender, religion
or ethnicity, and further demands that all parties work urgently towards the
comprehensive implementation of the final communiqué, including through the
establishment of an inclusive transitional governing body with full executive powers,
which shall be formed on the basis of mutual consent while ensuring the continuity
of governmental institutions.
56th plenary meeting
17 December 2018
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