Two Lebanese rights groups, Support of Lebanese in Detention and
Exile (SOLIDE) and the Lebanese Center for Human Rights, urged on Wednesday U.N.-Arab
League envoy Kofi Annan and Syrian National Council chief Abdul Basset Sayda to
express a clear stance regarding the 11 abducted Lebanese in Syria.
The two groups issued a joint open letter, urging Annan and Sayda
to express a clear stance regarding the practices that violate human rights,
hoping that such practices “will not be the kind of change sought in the future
Syria.”
The letter said that “on May 22, a bus carrying 11 Lebanese
pilgrims was hijacked in Syrian territory by Free Syrian Army members,” adding
that a so-called group, “Syria Revolutionaries-Aleppo Countryside,” claimed the
abduction of the 11 Shiite pilgrims.
SOLIDE and the Lebanese Center for Human Rights considered the
abduction as a “flagrant violation of the most basic human rights,” pointing
out that the moral and legal responsibility falls on the abductors, and all
sides concerned with the Syrian crisis.”
The open letter expressed “disappointment towards certain
justification saying that the pilgrims were taken hostages because they belong
to the Shiite community which gives the kidnappers the argument to abduct them
and negotiate for their return.”
“These justifications do not take into consideration that the
abduction is a crime against humanity and should be strongly condemned and
denounced from all sides, especially SNC chief Sayda, U.N. envoy Annan and all
countries refusing the practices of the Syrian regime,” the letter added.
The groups condemned the abduction and the “insulting treatment to
the families of the abductees, which proves that the international community
does not care about the fate of the Lebanese.”
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http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/43312
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