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About half the defectors interviewed by HRW said the commanders of their units or other officers also gave them direct orders to fire at protesters or bystanders and reassured them that they would not be held accountable. The report quotes defectors as saying that in some cases, officers themselves participated in killings. It said the abuses constitute crimes against humanity and that the U.N. Security Council should refer Syria to the International Criminal Court. Assad's regime claims armed gangs and terrorists are behind the uprising, not protesters seeking more freedoms and reform in one of the most totalitarian regimes in the Middle East. In the ABC interview with Barbara Walters, Assad claimed he never ordered the brutal suppression of the uprising, even though he commands the armed forces. The government has sealed off the country to most outsiders while clinging to the allegation that the uprising is the work of foreign extremists, not true reform-seekers aiming to open the authoritarian political system. The United Nations and others observers dismiss that notion entirely, blaming the regime for widespread killings, rape and torture. Witnesses and activists inside Syria routinely describe brutal repression, with government forces firing on unarmed protesters and conducting house-to-house raids in which families are dragged from their homes in the night. "Try as he may to distance himself from responsibility for his government's relentless brutality, President Assad's claim that he did not actually order the crackdown does not absolve him of criminal responsibility," said Neistat of Human Rights Watch. "As the commander in chief of the armed forces, he must have known about the abuses
-- if not from his subordinates, then from U.N. reports and the reports Human Rights Watch sent him."
[Associated
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