GE.17-05491(E)



Human Rights Council Thirty-fourth session

27 February–24 March 2017

Agenda item 4

Resolution adopted by the Human Rights Council on 24 March 2017

34/26. The human rights situation in the Syrian Arab Republic

The Human Rights Council,

Guided by the Charter of the United Nations,

Reaffirming all previous Human Rights Council resolutions on the Syrian Arab

Republic,

Reaffirming also its strong commitment to the full respect of sovereignty,

independence, unity and territorial integrity of the Syrian Arab Republic,

Demanding that the Syrian authorities meet their responsibility to protect the Syrian

population,

Condemning the grave deterioration of the human rights situation and the

indiscriminate or deliberate targeting of civilians as such, in violation of international

humanitarian law, and acts of violence that foment sectarian tensions,

Reiterating that the only sustainable solution to the current conflict in the Syrian

Arab Republic is through an inclusive, Syrian-led and Syrian-owned political process under

the auspices of the United Nations, based on the Geneva communiqué of 30 June 2012 as

endorsed by the Security Council in its resolutions 2118 (2013) of 27 September 2013,

2254 (2015) of 18 December 2015 and 2268 (2016) of 26 February 2016 and relevant

statements of the International Syria Support Group,

Expressing full support for the efforts of the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General

for Syria to facilitate an inclusive and Syrian-led process in accordance with the Geneva

communiqué and Security Council resolution 2254 (2015), with a view to establishing

credible, inclusive and non-sectarian governance, in accordance with the aforementioned

documents, and urging the Special Envoy to continue to push the parties to negotiate a

political transition,

Demanding that all parties to the cessation of hostilities in the Syrian Arab Republic

fulfil their commitments, and urging all Member States, especially the members of the

International Syria Support Group, to use their influence with the parties to the cessation of

hostilities to ensure fulfilment of the ceasefire and to support efforts to render the ceasefire

durable and to end violations, which is essential to achieving a political solution to the

conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic and to bringing to an end the systematic, widespread

and gross violations and abuses of human rights and violations of international

humanitarian law,

Welcoming Security Council resolution 2336 (2016) of 31 December 2016, and

supporting the efforts of Turkey and the Russian Federation, particularly the ceasefire that

they helped to establish and that came into effect on 30 December 2016,

Welcoming also the international meeting on the Syrian Arab Republic, held in

Astana on 23 and 24 January, as anticipated in Security Council resolution 2336 (2016),

and encouraging all parties to fully implement the ceasefire established pursuant to the

arrangements of 29 December 2016,

Recalling the statements made by the Secretary-General and the United Nations

High Commissioner for Human Rights that crimes against humanity and war crimes are

likely to have been committed in the Syrian Arab Republic,

Expressing its deepest concern about the findings of the Independent International

Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic,

Deploring the lack of cooperation by the Syrian authorities with the Commission of

Inquiry,

Acknowledging the ongoing efforts by human rights defenders active in the Syrian

Arab Republic to document violations and abuses of international human rights law and

violations of international humanitarian law, despite grave risks,

1. Calls upon all Member States, especially members of the International Syria

Support Group, to create conditions that foster continued negotiations for a political

solution to the Syrian conflict, under the auspices of the United Nations Office at Geneva,

by working to strengthen the nationwide ceasefire, to enable full, immediate and safe

humanitarian access, and to lead to the release of detainees, as only a durable political

solution to the conflict can bring an end to the systematic, widespread and gross violations

and abuses of international human rights law and violations of international humanitarian

law;

2. Welcomes the work of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry

on the Syrian Arab Republic, established by the Human Rights Council in its resolution S-

17/1 of 22 August 2011 to investigate all alleged violations and abuses of international

human rights law since March 2011 in the Syrian Arab Republic, to establish the facts and

circumstances and to support efforts to ensure that perpetrators of abuses and violations,

including those who may be responsible for crimes against humanity, are held accountable,

and notes the importance of the work of the Commission of Inquiry and the information it

has collected in support of future accountability efforts, in particular the information on

those who have allegedly violated international law;

3. Decides to extend for one year the mandate of the Commission of Inquiry;

4. Requests the Commission of Inquiry to provide an oral update to the Human

Rights Council during an interactive dialogue at its thirty-fifth session, and to present a

written updated report during an interactive dialogue at the thirty-sixth and thirty-seventh

sessions;

5. Demands that the Syrian authorities cooperate fully with the Human Rights

Council and the Commission of Inquiry by granting it immediate, full and unfettered access

throughout the Syrian Arab Republic;

6. Strongly condemns the continued systematic, widespread and gross violations

and abuses of human rights and all violations of international humanitarian law by the

Syrian authorities and affiliated militias, including foreign terrorist fighters and those

foreign organizations fighting on behalf of the Syrian authorities, in particular Hizbullah,

and expresses deep concern that their involvement further exacerbates the deteriorating

situation in the Syrian Arab Republic, including the human rights and humanitarian

situation, which has a serious negative impact on the region;

7. Also strongly condemns the terrorist acts and violence committed against

civilians by the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Daesh), al-Nusrah Front or

other terrorist organizations, designated by the Security Council, and their continued gross,

systematic and widespread abuses of international human rights law and violations of

international humanitarian law, reaffirms that terrorism, including the actions of the so-

called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Daesh), cannot and should not be associated

with any religion, nationality or civilization, and stresses the importance of the full

implementation of Security Council resolution 2170 (2014) of 15 August 2014;

8. Condemns in the strongest terms the gross and systematic abuse of women’s

and children’s rights by the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Daesh), in

particular the enslavement and sexual abuse of women and girls, enforced disappearances

and the forced recruitment and abduction of children;

9. Condemns all violations and abuses of international human rights law and all

violations of international humanitarian law, including against women and children and

persons with disabilities;

10. Urges all parties to the conflict not to commit indiscriminate attacks against

the civilian population and civilian objects, including against medical facilities, personnel

and transport and schools as such, to comply with their obligations under international

humanitarian law and to respect international human rights law;

11. Strongly condemns the besiegement and bombardment of eastern Aleppo in

the second half of 2016, which, as made clear by the Commission of Inquiry in its most

recent report,1 subjected the civilian population of the city to untold suffering and claimed

hundreds of lives;

12. Expresses its profound concern at the findings of the Commission of Inquiry

in its report, including those suggesting that the offensive against Aleppo involved serious

violations and abuses of international human rights law and violations of international

humanitarian law by all parties to the conflict, which, according to the Commission, in

many cases amounted to war crimes, in particular by the Syrian authorities and its allies;

13. Also expresses its profound concern at the Commission’s findings that

strongly suggest that pro-regime forces committed the war crimes of intentionally targeting

protected objects under international law, including medical personnel and transport;

14. Strongly condemns the attack on a humanitarian aid convoy on 19 September

2016, killing at least 14 people, which, according to the Commission of Inquiry in its

report, was conducted by the Syrian air force, and amounts to the war crimes of deliberately

attacking humanitarian relief personnel, denial of humanitarian aid, and attacking civilians;

15. Also strongly condemns the indiscriminate use of weapons against civilian

areas, such as barrel bombs, cluster munitions and incendiary weapons, which, according to

1 A/HRC/34/CRP.3.

the Commission of Inquiry in its report, were conducted by the regime and pro-regime

forces and amounts to the war crime of indiscriminate attacks against a civilian population;

16. Further strongly condemns the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian

regime, which, according to the Commission of Inquiry in its report, were used by Syrian

forces and amounts to the war crime of indiscriminate attacks against a civilian population;

17. Condemns the use of unguided and imprecise weaponry, which, according to

the Commission of Inquiry in its report, was used by armed groups during the shelling of

western Aleppo and amounts to the war crime of indiscriminate attacks against a civilian

population;

18. Urges all parties to the conflict to heed the recommendations made by the

Commission of Inquiry in its report, including the need to comply with their respective

obligations under international human rights and international humanitarian law, including

refraining from disproportionate and indiscriminate attacks;

19. Strongly condemns the widespread practice of enforced disappearances,

arbitrary detention and the use of sexual violence, torture and ill-treatment, especially in

detention facilities run by the Syrian authorities, including those acts referenced in the

reports of the Commission of Inquiry, as well as those depicted in the evidence presented

by “Caesar” in January 2014, and notes that such acts may constitute violations and abuses

of international human rights law or violations of international humanitarian law;

20. Condemns the denial of medical services in all prisons and detention

facilities;

21. Recognizes the permanent damage that torture and ill-treatment, including

sexual abuse and violence, causes to its victims and their families;

22. Calls for the appropriate international monitoring bodies to be granted

immediate access without undue restriction to all detainees, and for the Syrian authorities to

publish a list of all detention facilities;

23. Demands the immediate release of all persons arbitrarily detained, including

women, children, human rights defenders, humanitarian aid providers, medical personnel

and journalists;

24. Recalls the decision of the Security Council that the Syrian Arab Republic

shall not use, develop, produce, otherwise acquire, stockpile or retain chemical weapons,

or, transfer, directly or indirectly, chemical weapons to other States or non-State actors2

and, in keeping with the decision of the Council, expresses its strong conviction that those

individuals responsible for the use of chemical weapons in the Syrian Arab Republic should

be held accountable;

25. Welcomes the reports of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical

Weapons – United Nations Joint Investigative Mechanism of 24 August and 21 October

2016,3 and expresses grave concern at its findings that the Syrian armed forces were

responsible for the use of chemical weapons (chlorine) in three attacks in the Syrian Arab

Republic – in Talmenes in 2014 and Qmenas and Sarmin in 2015 – and that the so-called

Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Daesh) was responsible for one sulphur mustard attack

in the Syrian Arab Republic, in Marea in 2015;

2 See Security Council resolution 2235 (2015).

3 See S/2016/738.

26. Condemns in the strongest possible terms the use of chemical weapons in the

Syrian Arab Republic, as reported by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical

Weapons – United Nations Joint Investigative Mechanism, which violates the Chemical

Weapons Convention, Security Council resolution 2118 (2013), and the decisions of the

Executive Council of the Organization, including decision EC-M-33/DEC.1, as well as the

use of chemical weapons in contravention of well-established international standards and

norms against such use, and expresses its strong conviction that those individuals

responsible for the use of chemical weapons must be held accountable;

27. Demands that all parties identified in the reports of the Organization for the

Prohibition of Chemical Weapons – United Nations Joint Investigative Mechanism as

having been involved in the use of toxic chemicals as weapons to desist immediately from

any further use;

28. Calls upon the Syrian authorities and all other parties to the conflict to ensure

the effective implementation of Security Council resolutions 2139 (2014) of 22 February

2014 and 2254 (2015), and in particular to end the arbitrary detention and torture of

civilians in the Syrian Arab Republic, notably in prisons and detention facilities, as well as

kidnappings, abductions and forced disappearances, as demanded by the Council in its

resolution 2139 (2014);

29. Strongly condemns all use of starvation of civilians as a method of combat,

and all besiegement directed against civilian populations;

30. Condemns the reported forced displacement of populations in the Syrian

Arab Republic and its alarming impact on the demography of the country, and calls upon

all parties concerned to cease immediately all activities that cause these actions, including

any activities that may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity;

31. Also condemns the Syrian authorities’ indiscriminate use of heavy weapons

and aerial bombardments, including cluster munitions, incendiary weapons, ballistic

missiles and barrel bombs, and calls for an immediate end to all attacks against civilians

and civilian infrastructure, including medical facilities;

32. Stresses the need to promote accountability for those responsible for the

unlawful killings of civilians, and also stresses the importance of holding to account those

responsible for all violations of international humanitarian law and violations and abuses of

international human rights law;

33. Strongly condemns violence against all persons based on their religious or

ethnic affiliation;

34. Demands that all parties take all appropriate steps to protect civilians,

including members of ethnic, religious and confessional communities, and stresses that, in

this regard, the primary responsibility to protect the Syrian population lies with the Syrian

authorities;

35. Strongly condemns the damage and destruction of the cultural heritage of the

Syrian Arab Republic, in particular the destruction of the cultural heritage in Palmyra, and

the organized looting and trafficking of Syrian cultural property, as outlined by the Security

Council in its resolution 2199 (2015) of 12 February 2015;

36. Affirms that attacks intentionally directed against historic monuments may

amount to war crimes, and underlines the need to bring the perpetrators of such crimes to

justice;

37. Calls upon the international community to support the leadership and full and

meaningful participation of women in all efforts, including decision-making, with the aim

of finding a political solution to the conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic, as envisaged by

the Security Council in its resolutions 1325 (2000) of 31 October 2000, 2122 (2013) of 18

October 2013, 2254 (2015), 2268 (2016) of 26 February 2016, 2332 (2016) of 21 December

2016 and 2336 (2016), and welcomes the participation of the Women’s Advisory Board

and civil society in the United Nations-led talks in order to ensure that all resulting

peacebuilding efforts are gender-responsive and consider the differential impact of conflict

on women and girls, and their specific needs and interests;

38. Recalls that the International Criminal Court was established to help to end

impunity for applicable crimes where the State is unwilling or unable to genuinely carry out

investigations or prosecutions;

39. Emphasizes the need to ensure that all those responsible for violations of

international humanitarian law or violations and abuses of international human rights law

are held to account through appropriate, fair and independent domestic or international

criminal justice mechanisms, and stresses the need to pursue practical steps towards this

goal, noting the important role that the International Criminal Court can play in this regard;

40. Welcomes the establishment of the International, Impartial and Independent

Mechanism to Assist in the Investigation and Prosecution of Persons Responsible for the

Most Serious Crimes under International Law Committed in the Syrian Arab Republic

since March 2011 by the General Assembly in its resolution 71/248 of 21 December 2016,

and stresses the complementary nature of its mandate with that of the Commission of

Inquiry;

41. Invites Member States to support actively the International, Impartial and

Independent Mechanism;

42. Reaffirms that, in the context of an inclusive and credible dialogue, the Syrian

people should determine the appropriate process and mechanisms to achieve justice,

reconciliation, truth and accountability for gross violations and abuses of international law,

as well as reparations and effective remedies for victims;

43. Emphasizes that all efforts to bring a peaceful conclusion to the ongoing

conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic must fully reflect the importance of ensuring

accountability for the crimes committed in the country as a prerequisite to bringing about

reconciliation and sustainable peace;

44. Expresses deep concern at the growing number of refugees and internally

displaced persons fleeing the violence in the Syrian Arab Republic, welcomes the efforts by

neighbouring countries to host Syrian refugees, and acknowledges the socioeconomic

consequences of the presence of large-scale refugee populations in those countries;

45. Deplores the deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Syrian Arab

Republic, and urges the international community to provide urgent financial support to

enable the host countries to respond to the growing humanitarian needs of Syrian refugees,

while emphasizing the principle of burden-sharing;

46. Demands that the Syrian authorities facilitate, and all other parties to the

conflict do not hinder, the full, immediate and safe access of the United Nations and

humanitarian actors, including to hard-to-reach and besieged areas, in accordance with

Security Council resolutions 2139 (2014), 2165 (2014) of 14 July 2014, 2191 (2014) of 17

December 2014, 2254 (2015), 2258 (2015) of 22 December 2015 and 2268 (2016), and

calls upon Member States to fully fund the United Nations appeals;

47. Welcomes the progress made since 2013 by the international conferences on

supporting the Syrian Arab Republic and the region in Kuwait City and London, and the

initiative by the European Union, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern

Ireland, Kuwait, Qatar, Germany, Norway and the United Nations to host a follow-up

conference in Brussels on 5 April 2017 aimed at assessing progress in implementing the

commitments made at the London conference and to reconfirm and identify additional

support for the immediate humanitarian and long-term development needs in the Syrian

Arab Republic and the region and at boosting international support for the United Nations-

led intra-Syrian talks in Geneva;

48. Renews its call upon all members of the international community to respond

expeditiously to the Syrian 2017 humanitarian appeals and to deliver in full all pledges,

including multi-year pledges, made at the London conference;

49. Notes those countries outside the region that have put in place measures and

policies to assist and to host Syrian refugees, and encourages them to do more, and

encourages other States outside the region to consider implementing similar measures and

policies, also with a view to providing Syrian refugees with protection and humanitarian

assistance;

50. Reaffirms that there can only be a political solution to the conflict in the

Syrian Arab Republic, and urges the parties to the conflict to abstain from actions that may

contribute to the continuing deterioration of the human rights, security and humanitarian

situation in order to reach a genuine political transition, based on the Geneva communiqué,

consistent with Security Council resolutions 2254 (2015) and 2268 (2016), that meets the

legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people for a civil, democratic and pluralistic State,

where all citizens receive equal protection regardless of gender, religion or ethnicity;

51. Demands that all parties work urgently towards the comprehensive

implementation of the Geneva communiqué, including through the establishment of an

inclusive transitional governing body with full executive powers, which shall be formed on

the basis of mutual consent while ensuring the continuity of governmental institutions;

52. Decides to transmit all reports and oral updates of the Commission of Inquiry

to all relevant bodies of the United Nations, recommends that the General Assembly submit

the reports to the Security Council for appropriate action, expresses its appreciation to the

Commission for its briefings to members of the Security Council, and recommends the

continuation of future briefings;

53. Also decides to remain seized of the matter.

58th meeting

24 March 2017

[Adopted by a recorded vote of 27 to 7, with 13 abstentions. The voting was as follows:

In favour:

Albania, Belgium, Botswana, Brazil, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, El Salvador,

Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Hungary, Japan, Latvia, Netherlands, Panama,

Paraguay, Portugal, Qatar, Republic of Korea, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia,

Slovenia, Switzerland, Togo, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom of

Great Britain and Northern Ireland, United States of America

Against:

Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Burundi, China, Cuba, Iraq, Kyrgyzstan,

Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of)

Abstaining:

Bangladesh, Congo, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Kenya,

Mongolia, Nigeria, Philippines, South Africa, Tunisia]