Syria\'s military and security forces have committed crimes against humanity in their brutal crackdown on anti-regime protesters, UN-appointed investigators said on Monday. State forces have murdered, raped and tortured demonstrators since the beginning of protests in March this year, according to evidence gathered by the Independent Commission of Inquiry on Syria. The panel interviewed 223 victims and witnesses, among them security force defectors, who told of shoot to kill orders to crush demonstrators and cases of children being tortured to death. \"The commission is gravely concerned that crimes against humanity have been committed in different locations in the Syrian Arab Republic during the period under review,\" it said in its report, while concluding that military and security forces were behind the acts. \"The sheer scale and consistent pattern of attacks by military and security forces on civilians and civilian neighbourhoods and the widespread destruction of property could only be possible with the approval or complicity of the State,\" the panel said. Defectors from military and security forces told the commission that they received orders to shoot at unarmed protesters without warning. They, together with militias, had conducted joint operations with \"shoot to kill\" orders, notably in Al Ladhiqiyah in early April and in a suburb of the city in August. \"The protesters called for freedom. They carried olive branches and marched with their children,\" a witness was quoted as saying. \"We were ordered to either disperse the crowd or eliminate everybody, including children. We opened fire.\" The panel heard of sniper attacks on people leading marches and on those trying to rescue the wounded. Torture and killings reportedly took place in the Homs Military Hospital by security forces dressed as doctors and abuse of detainees was described as \"rampant\" at the detention facilities of the Air Force Intelligence Branch at Mazzeh airport near Damascus. The report said at least 256 children had been killed by government forces, and that some boys had been sexually abused. One military defector told researchers he had witnessed the shooting of a two-year-old girl by an officer who said he did not want her to grow up to be a demonstrator. The report highlighted the case of 14-year-old detainee Thamir Al Sharee from the town of Sayda whose postmortem showed injuries consistent with torture. A 40-year-old man told the panel he witnessed the rape of an 11-year-old boy by three security services officers. The report says: \"State forces shot indiscriminately at unarmed protestors. Most were shot in the upper body, including in the head. Defectors from military and security forces told the commission that they had received orders to shoot at unarmed protesters without warning. \"In some instances, however, commanders of operations ordered protesters to disperse and issued warnings prior to opening fire. In some cases, non-lethal means were used prior to or at the same time as live ammunition.\" Snipers, it says, were responsible for many casualties. The commission heard several accounts of how those who were trying to rescue the wounded and collect the bodies of demonstrators also came under sniper fire. Defectors witnessed the killing of comrades who refused to execute orders to fire at civilians. Torture and killings reportedly took place in the Homs military hospital by security forces dressed as doctors and allegedly acting with the complicity of medical personnel. Torture was described as \"rampant\" at the detention facilities of the notorious air force intelligence branch at the Mazzeh airport near Damascus. The commission said it was \"particularly disturbed over the extensive reports of sexual violence, principally against men and boys, in places of detention\". The commission said Syria had violated the right to life, to peaceful assembly and to freedom of movement among others. It called on the government to put an \"immediate end to gross human rights violations\" and launch an independent investigation into the violence. The report also acknowledged the existence of the \"Free Syrian Army,\" a group of defectors it said had claimed responsibility for armed attacks against military and security forces and in its list of recommendations the panel urged opposition groups to respect international human rights law. The Human Rights Council set up the commission in August to investigate human rights violations in Syria where the UN estimates at least 3,500 people have been killed. The regime gives a figure of 600. Many of those, it says, were military and security personnel who were the victims of \"terrorist gangs\". The panel met with regional organisations including the Organization of the Islamic Conference and the Arab League as it gathered evidence from the end of September to the middle of November but was not allowed to carry out its work inside Syria. The council will study the report by the three experts, Karen Koning AbuZayd from the United States, Turk Yakin Erturk and Paulo Sergio Pinheiro from Brazil, at its 19th session taking place in March. The UN report recommends \"prompt, independent and impartial investigations under both domestic and international law to end impunity, ensure accountability and bring perpetrators to justice.\" It also calls for immediate and full access for the commission and outside observers and other United Nations human rights monitoring bodies. Syria\'s embattled government seems unlikely to respond. President Bashar Al-Assad has just defied an Arab League call to allow in Arab observers to \"protect civilans\", and now faces punitive economic and financial sanctions as a result. The foreign minister, Walid al-Moallem, said: \"The Arab Syrian military, which we are all proud of, has given martyrs in order to protect the life of civilians.\"
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