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    UPDATE 3-Syria launched "indiscriminate attack" on civilians-UN

    * Russia, China veto of UN action "emboldened" Syria

    * Pillay: Civilians to keep suffering if world doesn't act

    * Syrian envoy rejects Saudi-drafted UN assembly resolution

    (Adds Pillay quotes, timing of UN assembly vote)

    UNITED NATIONS, Feb 13 (Reuters) - The U.N. human

    rights chief ramped up the pressure on Syrian President Bashar

    al-Assad on Monday, accusing his government of launching an

    "indiscriminate attack" on civilians and other grave human

    rights violations in its suppression of pro-democracy protests.

    U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said the

    Feb. 4 veto by Russia and China of a draft Security Council

    resolution condemning the Syrian government and endorsing an

    Arab League plan for Assad to step aside had only encouraged

    Damascus to intensify its attacks on civilians.

    "The failure of the Security Council to agree on firm

    collective action appears to have emboldened the Syrian

    government to launch an all-out assault in an effort to crush

    dissent with overwhelming force," Pillay told the 193-nation

    U.N. General Assembly.

    Her speech again raised the possibility that the Syrian

    government, which for 11 months has used its security forces to

    attack protesters opposed to Assad, was committing serious human

    rights violations that amounted to "crimes against humanity."

    The Syrian army, she said, was implementing a

    "shoot-to-kill" policy.

    "I am particularly appalled by the ongoing onslaught on

    Homs," Pillay said, noting that Assad's forces have been using

    tanks, mortars and artillery in the assault on the city.

    "According to credible accounts, the Syrian army has shelled

    densely populated neighborhoods of Homs in what appears to be an

    indiscriminate attack on civilian areas," she said in one of her

    toughest speeches on Syria to date.

    It is difficult to establish how many people have died in

    the Syrian conflict, though the figure was more than 5,400 and

    rising every day, Pillay said.

    "More than 300 people have reportedly been killed in the

    city (of Homs) since the start of this assault 10 days ago," she

    said. "The majority of them were victims of the shelling."

    She had other statistics: tens of thousands of people,

    including children, arrested, with over 18,000 still detained;

    25,000 seeking refuge in foreign countries; and more than 70,000

    internally displaced.

    "Extensive reports of sexual violence, in particular rape,

    in places of detention, primarily against men and boys, are

    particularly disturbing," Pillay said.

    She reiterated her hope that the Security Council would

    refer the Syrian repression to the International Criminal Court

    in The Hague, as it did in the case of Libya last year. But

    council envoys say veto-holders Russia and China oppose that.

    "The longer the international community fails to take

    action, the more the civilian population will suffer from

    countless atrocities against them," Pillay said.

    Syrian U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari, backed by delegates

    from Iran and North Korea, tried unsuccessfully to block Pillay

    from addressing the assembly by citing procedural arguments.

    SYRIA REJECTS ALLEGATIONS

    Ja'afari accused the Qatari president of the General

    Assembly, Nassir Abdulaziz al-Nasser, of political bias against

    Syria and rejected Pillay's allegations against Damascus.

    "After today how can we trust the high commissioner for

    human rights on issues related to defending and promoting human

    rights?" he said, accusing Pillay of adopting an "unprincipled

    (stance) against the Syrian government."

    He said Syria has been trying to establish security and

    stability "in exercise of its exclusive right to protect its

    citizens" and charged that some U.N. member states were helping

    al Qaeda launch attacks in Syria against the government.

    "How can the United Nations combat the terrorism of al

    Qaeda, wearing one hat, while at the same time some of its

    member states are financing, providing succor, indeed sending

    combatants from al Qaeda to commit terrorist acts in Syria?"

    Pillay told reporters the United Nations was seeking

    information related to the Syrian allegation about al Qaeda.

    Libyan U.N. envoy Ibrahim Dabbashi predicted that "the

    Syrian despots will meet the same destiny" as Libyan leader

    Muammar Gaddafi, who was killed last year by rebels who

    overthrew his government.

    Dabbashi added that Russia and China's veto of the Security

    Council's draft resolution had given the Syria government a

    "license to kill."

    A Saudi delegate echoed Dabbashi's remarks, adding that he

    hoped all U.N. member states would support a draft General

    Assembly resolution that Egypt is expected to formally circulate

    to the assembly later on Monday. The draft could be put to a

    vote later this week, U.N. diplomats told Reuters.

    The Saudi-drafted resolution, seen by Reuters, is similar to

    the vetoed Security Council resolution. It "fully supports" the

    Arab League plan and introduces a call for the appointment of a

    joint U.N.-Arab League envoy. There are no vetoes in General

    Assembly votes and its decisions are not legally binding.

    Ja'afari dismissed the assembly draft resolution as a

    "back-door" attempt by the Saudis and Gulf Arabs to achieve in

    the General Assembly what they failed to do in the Security

    Council.

    Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said the assembly meeting

    on Syria should never have taken place. He reiterated Moscow's

    position that both the opposition and the Syrian government were

    to blame for the crisis, a view Western and Gulf Arab

    governments roundly reject.

    (Additional reporting by Patrick Worsnip; editing by

    Christopher Wilson)

     

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