Syria's regime is committing human rights atrocities, including torture of men arbitrarily detained by security forces, that could amount to "crimes against humanity," U.S. envoy Robert Ford said Tuesday.
Ford also told a U.S. congressional hearing that President Bashar al-Assad showed "little interest in human rights" but argued against further militarization of the conflict, saying diplomatic pressure should prevail on Assad to give up power.
Ford, in Washington after having been recalled for security reasons, painted a picture of horrific and worsening violence in the Middle Eastern nation which has endured a year-long uprising against the Assad regime.
"I raised human rights continually during my tenure in Damascus, starting with my first meeting" with Assad 13 months ago, he said.
"Assad showed little interest in human rights. In fact he was rather annoyed that I raised it.
"And his callous disregard over the past year has degenerated into massive human rights violations that may amount to crimes against humanity."
In short but powerful testimony before the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission of the House of Representatives, Ford said that in the past year, "the human rights situation there has become much worse."
The envoy cited figures from U.N. and rights groups which say that between 8,000 and 10,000 people have died.
"Beyond the brutal killings of peaceful demonstrators... the worst human rights violations occur in detention facilities, where dozens of methods of torture have been documented by observers and researchers," Ford said.
"Syrian security forces even today are still entering restive neighborhoods and towns and cities... and they are arbitrarily detaining people, especially men, usually between the ages of 16 and 45, but even sometimes women and children."
U.S. President Barack Obama has long called for Assad to relinquish power, and the administration has slammed Russia and Iran for their apparent military aid to Damascus.
But Ford suggested that arming the opposition, as has been called for by U.S. Senator John McCain, was not the right move.
"I don't want to speculate about what might be warranted in the future, but I do want to underline, we do not believe now that further militarization of the situation in Syria is the best course forward," he said.
On Sunday, Obama and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan agreed on the need to send "non-lethal" aid to Syrian rebels, including communications equipment and medical supplies.
Ford recalled the brutal assault in the city of Hama, where Assad's father Hafez al-Assad "instituted a security operation that killed tens of thousands in 1982."
"This is not 1982, and those members of (today's) security forces should understand that we are watching."
Assad "seems to think that he can kill, that he can arrest thousands of people, that he can repress a generally peaceful protest movement and survive. And that the world will eventually forget," Ford said.
"This time, unlike Hama, we have a very detailed picture of what happened," he said, citing "evidence of atrocities" collected by rights groups and thousands of refugees.
Democratic Representative Maxine Waters told the hearing that she agreed that the Syrian regime has committed "ghastly forms of torture on individuals in its prisons."
"They are crimes against humanity and there's no excuse for them," she said.
Democrat Keith Ellison, who is sponsoring a resolution condemning systemic human rights violations of the Syrian regime, said "political conflict should be resolved at the ballot box, not in a torture chamber."
Ford assumed a high profile in Syria last year, traveling to the focal points of protests against the regime to show U.S. backing for democratic change.
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