The death toll
from months of violent clashes
between Syrian Government forces and
pro-democracy protesters has now
climbed to 2,900, the United Nations
human rights office said today.
Rupert
Colville, a spokesperson for the UN
Office of the
High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR),
said the total number has passed
2,900, “according to the list of
individual names we have been
compiling.” Previous estimates had
placed the toll at about 2,700.
Senior UN
officials have repeatedly voiced
concern about the situation in Syria,
where large-scale protests calling
for greater freedoms have been held
since March – part of the so-called
Arab Spring movement that has
affected much of North Africa and
the Middle East this year.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
has stressed that the violence and
suffering in Syria is unacceptable
and must end, and that the
international community has a moral
obligation to try to prevent further
bloodshed.
The Human
Rights Council has ordered a
commission of inquiry into the
violence after an earlier OHCHR fact-finding
mission outlined a series of
Government abuses ranging from
murders, enforced disappearances,
the deprivation of liberty and
torture.
On Tuesday,
the Security Council did not adopt a
draft resolution that strongly
condemned Syrian authorities for
their crackdown after Russia and
China exercised their vetoes.
Representatives of Russia and China
said the draft text as it stood
would exacerbate tensions rather
than lead to a resolution of the
crisis.
A spokesperson
for Mr. Ban said yesterday that the
Secretary-General regretted that
Council members have not been able
to agree and hoped they would
overcome their divisions and find a
collective way to address the
situation