{"id":4122,"date":"2020-12-29T17:43:19","date_gmt":"2020-12-29T17:43:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.radiofree.org\/?p=144510"},"modified":"2020-12-29T17:43:19","modified_gmt":"2020-12-29T17:43:19","slug":"un-human-rights-expert-urges-us-to-lift-sanctions-that-may-exacerbate-the-already-dire-humanitarian-situation-in-syria","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2020\/12\/29\/un-human-rights-expert-urges-us-to-lift-sanctions-that-may-exacerbate-the-already-dire-humanitarian-situation-in-syria\/","title":{"rendered":"UN Human Rights Expert Urges US to Lift Sanctions That ‘May Exacerbate the Already Dire Humanitarian Situation in Syria’"},"content":{"rendered":"
A United Nations human rights expert on Tuesday called<\/a> for the removal of unilateral U.S. sanctions<\/a> targeting the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, warning that despite claims by the Trump administration and congressional leaders that the measures aren’t intended to harm the people of war-torn Syria, they may do just that.<\/p>\n “The sanctions violate the human rights of the Syrian people, whose country has been destroyed by almost 10 years of ongoing conflict,” said<\/a> Alena Douhan, U.N. special rapporteur on the negative impact of the unilateral coercive measures on the enjoyment of human rights. “The conflict and violence have already had a dire impact on the ability of the Syrian people to realize their fundamental rights, having extensively damaged houses, medical units, schools, and other facilities.”<\/p>\n Douhan’s statement follows a new round<\/a> of sanctions that the outgoing U.S. administration announced<\/a> last week\u2014just over a year after President Donald Trump signed into law annual defense spending legislation that included<\/a> the bipartisan<\/a> Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act, named for a Syrian defector who smuggled<\/a> out of his country tens of thousands of photos revealing torture by the Assad government.<\/p>\n When the law<\/a> took effect in June 2020, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said<\/a>, “The Treasury Department and State Department are releasing 39 designations under the Caesar Act and Executive Order 13894 as the beginning of what will be a sustained campaign of economic and political pressure to deny the Assad regime revenue and support it uses to wage war and commit mass atrocities against the Syrian people.”<\/p>\n Last week, while announcing<\/a> the latest sanctions, the secretary acknowledged the recent one-year anniversary of the president signing the Caesar Act and said that “the United States will\u202falso\u202fcontinue to pressure the Assad regime and its enablers to prevent them from amassing the resources to perpetuate their atrocities.”<\/p>\n Douhan, meanwhile, expressed alarm about the potential consequences of wide-ranging U.S. sanctions\u2014which could target any foreigner helping the Assad government, even with rebuilding infrastructure\u2014especially given the country’s ongoing forcible displacement crisis <\/a>(pdf) and bread lines “so long that children have to skip school to wait in them,” which is “perhaps the most visible and painful manifestation of Syria’s economic meltdown,” as the Washington Post<\/em> reported<\/a> Saturday.<\/p>\n In a Sunday tweet noting the bread crisis, Medea Benjamin, co-founder of the peace group CodePink, condemned U.S. sanctions on Syria as “collective punishment.”<\/p>\n US sanctions on Syria is collective punishment https:\/\/t.co\/UAiibuB2RE<\/a><\/p>\n \u2014 Medea Benjamin (@medeabenjamin) December 28, 2020<\/a><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n Douhan said Tuesday that “I am concerned that sanctions imposed under the Caesar Act may exacerbate the already dire humanitarian situation in Syria, especially in the course of [the] Covid-19 pandemic, and put the Syrian people at even greater risk of human rights violations.”<\/p>\n “When it announced the first sanctions under the Caesar Act in June 2020, the United States said it did not intend for them to harm the Syrian population,” she continued. “Yet enforcement of the act may worsen the existing humanitarian crisis, depriving the Syrian people of the chance to rebuild their basic infrastructure.”<\/p>\n Concerns remain about the Assad government’s rebuilding efforts. As Human Rights Watch’s World Report 2020<\/em>\u2014which detailed human rights violations by the Syrian-Russian military alliance, non-state armed groups, Turkey and Turkish-backed forces, and U.S.-backed forces and the U.S.-led coalition\u2014explained<\/a>:<\/p>\n The Syrian government enforced a legal and policy framework that enables it to co-opt millions of dollars of international funding earmarked for humanitarian aid and reconstruction. The government restricted humanitarian organizations’ access<\/a> to communities that needed or allegedly received aid, selectively approved aid projects to punish civilians in anti-government held areas, and required that humanitarian groups partner with security-vetted local actors. Based on past incidents, there is a continuing risk that aid be siphoned through the abusive state apparatus to punish civilian populations it perceived as opponents and reward those it perceived as loyal.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n
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