SYRIA: Outrage over Boy's Alleged Torture Death

  •  doha
  • Inter Press Service

The video, provided to Al Jazeera by sources inside Syria, shows the mutilated body of 15-year-old Thamer al-Sahri, who was arrested for participating in an anti-government demonstration.

Hundreds of residents of the Syrian town of Jeeza filled the streets to mourn his death on Wednesday, the day his body was released from the mortuary and returned to his parents, six weeks after he went missing.

The amateur video shows al-Sahri's body riddled with bullets, missing an eye, several teeth, and according to Al Jazeera's source, returned to his family with a broken neck and leg.

Al Jazeera is unable to independently verify the footage due to restrictions on journalists in the country. Al-Sahri was arrested along with his friend, 13-year-old Hamza al-Khateeb - the teenager whose brutal death caused much of the world to pay closer attention to the events in Syria. Al-Khateeb's body was also mutilated.

The Syrian government has denied using torture against protesters, but the latest video could lead to renewed demonstrations in the country against alleged excesses by the Syrian security forces.

The footage emerged as Russia rejected a possible U.N. Security Council resolution condemning the violence in Syria, saying that the situation in the country does not present a threat to international stability.

'Russia is against any U.N. Security Council resolution on Syria,' Alexander Lukashevich, a foreign ministry spokesman, told journalists at a briefing in Moscow on Thursday. 'We do not believe the Syrian issue is a subject for consideration by the Security Council, let alone the adoption of some kind of resolution. [...] The situation in this country, in our view, does not present a threat to international peace and security.'

On Wednesday, Britain, France, Germany and Portugal floated a draft resolution condemning Syria at the Security Council as the U.S. and its allies seek to raise the pressure on Syria to end its violent crackdown on anti-government protesters.

Mark Lyall Grant, the British U.N. envoy, said the resolution could be put to the vote in the coming days at the U.N. despite the threat of a Russian veto. 'We would like a vote as soon as possible, before the end of the week,' Grant, said.

The proposal falls short of calling for military action or further U.N. sanctions against the Syrian government. Russia and China, which both hold vetoes, have made clear they dislike the idea of council involvement, which they say could help to destabilise a strategic Middle Eastern country.

Moscow has long been an ally and arms supplier of Syria. Russia, citing NATO's inconclusive bombing of the Libyan capital, Tripoli, said it would veto intervention against Syria in the Security Council.

Meanwhile, the number of Syrians who have fled to Turkey fearing bloodshed in their country has increased by some 400 to more than 2,400, Ahmet Davutoglu, the Turkish foreign minister said on Thursday. The total number of refugees was nearly 1,900 earlier on Thursday, according to Anatolia news agency.

© Inter Press Service (2011) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service