Human rights groups from around the world Thursday urged the 193 United Nations member
states to adopt a resolution in the General Assembly demanding that the Syrian government
halt the use of deadly and excessive force against demonstrators. The 29 rights groups
include Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International. They said in the joint appeal
that the General Assembly must take action against Syria following vetoes by Russia
and China on Oct. 4 of a Security Council resolution that threatened sanctions against
Bashar Assad's regime if it didn't immediately halt its military crackdown against
civilians. There are no vetoes in the General Assembly, but unlike the Security Council,
its resolutions are not legally binding. The rights groups said the resolution should
call for an end to arbitrary detention and torture of detainees, an account of those
who have disappeared, cooperation with investigators from the U.N. Human Rights Council
and unrestricted access for human rights monitors. It should also ask UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon to name a special envoy for Syria, they said. According to the UN more
than 3,000 people have been killed in the government crackdown on the protests, and
international pressure has been building for Assad to step down.