UN’s Syria investigators warn world must not allow Ukraine to go down same path

Pointing to similarities between war-stricken countries, investigators say Russian and Syrian forces continue to ‘indiscriminately bomb densely populated areas’

Photos on porcelain decorated with the images of Russian President Vladimir Putin and Syrian President Bashar Assad are displayed in a souvenir shop in Damascus, Syria, on April 18, 2016. Political observers say Russia’s brazen Syria intervention emboldened Putin, giving him a renewed Middle East foothold and helped pave the way for his current attack on Ukraine. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)
Photos on porcelain decorated with the images of Russian President Vladimir Putin and Syrian President Bashar Assad are displayed in a souvenir shop in Damascus, Syria, on April 18, 2016. Political observers say Russia’s brazen Syria intervention emboldened Putin, giving him a renewed Middle East foothold and helped pave the way for his current attack on Ukraine. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)

GENEVA, Switzerland (AFP) — United Nations investigators on Wednesday urged world leaders to do everything they could to avoid Ukraine becoming another Syria, a country “destroyed” by 11 years of conflict.

Russian forces have been involved in the Syrian civil war since 2015 and the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria said it hoped the disregard for civilian casualties would not be repeated in Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Rather than winding down, the investigators said the war in Syria was heating up again and warned that its participants may take advantage of world attention turning away towards Ukraine.

Commission chair Paulo Pinheiro spoke of the millions of people displaced, the more than 100,000 people missing or forcibly disappearing, the poverty rate at an unprecedented 90 percent, human rights violations and crimes against humanity.

“We can only hope that world leaders are doing everything now that they can avoid a similar fate for Ukraine,” he told reporters.

Syrian and Russian forces “operating side by side have continued to indiscriminately bomb densely populated areas in the northwest,” he said.

A man walks past destruction by airstrikes on the town of Ariha, in Idlib province, Syria, on January 30, 2020. Political observers say Russia’s brazen Syria intervention emboldened Putin, giving him a renewed Middle East foothold and helped pave the way for his current attack on Ukraine. (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed, File)

“Civilians have also been attacked with sophisticated precision-guided weapons and airstrikes — including in strikes where Russian fixed-wing aircraft were identified flying over targeted areas.”

Pinheiro also said Russia and Syria were insisting on humanitarian aid being delivered from Damascus rather than across the border, but “their attacks in the northwest occur along the very road where such humanitarian aid would travel.”

He added: “We are seeing since 2015 similar practices by the Russian Federation in the conflict that we are seeing in another country today.”

War on the uptick

The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria was mandated by the UN Human Rights Council to investigate and record all violations of international law since March 2011 in the country.

Hanny Megally, one of the three commissioners, said Russian forces were in Syria to help the government, while they were in Ukraine “to remove it.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) embraces Syrian President Bashar Assad in the Bocharov Ruchei residence in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, Russia, on November 20, 2017. (Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

Another difference, he said, was that the Russians were using more air power in Syria, rather than the large number of ground forces seen in Ukraine.

Citing indiscriminate attacks on civilians and targeted attacks on medical facilities, he said: “The disregard for civilian casualties is one of our biggest concerns in Syria and I would hope that’s not being repeated in Ukraine.”

The Commission of Inquiry’s latest report covers the second half of 2021.

Megally said regular fighting had increased over the last six to nine months, with increased shelling and aerial attacks by President Bashar al-Assad’s regime and his Russian allies.

A MiG-31 fighter jet of the Russian air force carrying a Kinzhal hypersonic cruise missile is parked at the Hemeimeem air base in Syria, February 15, 2022. (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP)

“Our worry is that it’s not a war that’s coming to an end; it’s actually on the uptick again,” said Megally.

“It’s a country that’s been destroyed and can’t take much more of this, and we’re seeing it now plunging more into crisis wherever you look.

“If eyes are gazing elsewhere, then we may see actors on the ground take advantage of that.”

The commission will present its report to the Human Rights Council on March 18.

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