Press releases
Syria: attack on TV station condemned
‘Even a media organisation engaged in propaganda is still a civilian object, so it and those working for it must never be deliberately targeted’ - Ann Harrison
Amnesty International has condemned the attack on the pro-government Ikhbariya TV station in Syria, saying media workers should not have been targeted.
Amnesty said that Ikhbariya TV, like other media facilities, is a civilian object, and those working in the media are civilians and must be protected from attack.
According to the Syrian state news agency SANA, three journalists and four security workers were killed in the attack this morning when armed men stormed the station’s headquarters in the town of Drousha, about 15 miles south of Damascus. Several representatives of the opposition have claimed publicly that members of armed opposition groups or defectors carried out the attack.
The privately-owned pro-governmental Ikhbariya TV station has broadcast programmes throughout the 15-month crisis which have blamed the violence on “terrorists” and shown what appear to be forced “confessions” of alleged dissidents. It has also carried apparently coerced statements denouncing as “traitors” individuals who have criticised the Syrian government made by their neighbours and others.
Under international humanitarian law, in an armed conflict, only combatants and military objectives may lawfully be attacked. Military objectives are limited to those objects which make an effective contribution to military action and whose destruction offers a definite military advantage.
Amnesty International Middle East and North Africa Deputy Director Ann Harrison said:
“Even a media organisation engaged in propaganda is still a civilian object, so it and those working for it must never be deliberately targeted.
“All parties should condemn this attack and make clear to those under their command that attacks of this nature and other such violations will not be tolerated.”
New UN report on Syria:
The attack came as the Independent Commission of Inquiry’s latest update on Syria said that Syrian government forces have committed human rights violations across the country "on an alarming scale" over the last three months.
The Commission says it continues to investigate May’s massacre at Houla which led to the death of more than 100 people. Based on its investigations so far, it says that “forces loyal to the Government may have been responsible for many of the deaths”. The Commission has been unable to visit the area until now as it has not been given access to the country by the government.
The update also documents a range of abuses by anti-government armed groups which have been reported to the Commission, including the torture and killing of captured soldiers and shabiha as well as the kidnapping and killing of people known or suspected to support or work with the government and its forces and militias.
Amnesty, which is investigating human rights abuses by members of the opposition, has condemned without reservation such abuses and in its latest report earlier this month called on the leadership of all armed opposition groups in Syria to publicly state that such acts are prohibited and to do all within their power to ensure that opposition forces put an immediate end to such abuses.
Ann Harrison added:
“There is now an urgent need for the international community to review the Annan plan, including the terms of the UN observer mission and consider how it could be better established and equipped to deliver human rights protection on the ground.”