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UN

‘You killed my son!’: Mum confronts Syrian regime

Crying with grief and anger, Fatima Khan stormed forward in a hallway at the United Nations in Geneva and shouted: "You killed my son!"

'You killed my son!': Mum confronts Syrian regime
Fatima Khan talks to Syrian journalists at the UN. Photo: Philippe Desmaze/AFP

As Syria's warring sides held a sixth day of UN-brokered peace talks, the mother of a British doctor who died in the custody of President Bashar al-Assad's regime confronted his aides on Thursday.
   
Syria says that Abbas Khan, 32, was found hanging in a prison cell on December 16th 2013, and that he committed suicide.
   
His relatives are adamant he was murdered by his captors.
   
Having travelled from Britain to Switzerland and obtained a visitor's pass to the UN's European offices — where the talks were under way behind closed doors — Fatima Khan waited for hours for delegates to emerge and speak to journalists in the garden.
   
She seized her chance when top Assad aide Buthaina Shaaban came out for the cameras.
   
Shaaban appeared caught off guard, asking who the distraught woman was.
   
"The doctor's mother," responded a man in the crowd.
   
Shaaban did not comment on Khan's charge, simply murmuring: "Let's get away from here."
   
Khan was ushered away by UN security guards, as reporters from across Syria's divide traded barbs.
   
A pro-regime journalist told her to get lost, sparking an irony-laced reaction from an anti-regime rival: "In Syria you lay down the law, but not here! So the doctor killed himself? Are you sure you didn't kill him?"
   
Khan, the father of two children, was detained in November 2012 in the war-ravaged city of Aleppo just 48 hours after entering Syria from Turkey without a visa to help treat victims of hospital bombings.
   
"For five months he was in a civil prison, and for eight months he was in a torture prison, where they are torturing and killing thousands of people," his mother told AFP.
   
She received a Syrian visa and visited him behind bars in July 2013.
   
"When I saw him in prison, he told me, 'Mummy, look, I'm a doctor, I'm a humanitarian aid worker, and look what they did to me," she said.

"So imagine what they're doing to their own people.'"
   
Despite saying the world should be rid of the Assad regime, Khan denied she had become an opposition tool.
   
"I'm not representing the opposition, I'm representing half a million mothers inside Syria," she told AFP.

'Caught with a medical kit, not a weapon'

The Syrian conflict erupted in March 2011 after a crackdown on pro-democracy protests and morphed into a war that has killed more than 130,000 people and driven millions from their homes.
   
The regime spotlights the role of hardline Islamists from Syria and abroad that are fighting it, and slaps the "terrorist" label on the entire opposition.
   
The opposition Free Syrian Army, which is itself fighting the jihadists as well as Assad, says that is an excuse for regime brutality.
   
Khan had been due at a terrorism court the day after his body was found.

His mother rejected suggestions that he had an ulterior motive for entering Syria.
   
"He was not caught with a weapon, he was caught with a medical kit," she said, adding that he had a return flight booked from Turkey on November 24th, 2012.
   
"If they don't understand what a doctor's profession is, if they don't know what a humanitarian aid worker is, then they should not be in power."
   
Khan worked at London's Royal Orthopaedic Hospital.
   
His mother, an Indian immigrant, tearfully recalled the sacrifices that helped him achieve that.
   
"We were very poor, we were working hard, I used to cook and sell food to have some money for private tuition," she said.
   
Khan's body was escorted from Syria on December 22nd by the Red Cross to family members waiting in Lebanon.
   
Arriving back in Britain, the body underwent a CT scan and a post-mortem, before his burial on December 26th.
 
A British inquest to establish the cause of death is due on February 27th.

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UN

‘The war must end now’: UN Sec-Gen meets Swedish PM in Stockholm

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres met Sweden's Prime Minister in Stockholm on Wednesday, ahead of the conference marking the 50th anniversary of the city's historic environment summit .

'The war must end now': UN Sec-Gen meets Swedish PM in Stockholm

After a bilateral meeting with Magdalena Andersson on the security situation in Europe, Guterres warned that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could lead to a global food crisis that would hurt some of the world’s most vulnerable people. 

“It is causing immense suffering, destruction and devastation of the country. But it also inflames a three-dimensional global crisis in food, energy and finance that is pummelling the most vulnerable people, countries and economies,” the Portuguese diplomat told a joint press conference with Andersson. 

He stressed the need for “quick and decisive action to ensure a steady flow of food and energy,” including “lifting export restrictions, allocating surpluses and reserves to vulnerable populations and addressing food price increases to calm market volatility.”

Between the two, Russia and Ukraine produce around 30 percent of the global wheat supply.

Guterres was in Stockholm to take part in the Stockholm 50+ conference, which celebrates the 50th anniversary of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment. 

The conference, which was held on the suggestion of the Swedish government in 1972 was the first UN meeting to discuss human impacts on the global environment, and led to the establishment of the UN Environment Program (UNEP). 

At the joint press conference, Andersson said that discussions continued between Sweden and Turkey over the country’s continuing opposition to Sweden’s application to join the Nato security alliance. 

“We have held discussions with Turkey and I’m looking forward to continuing the constructive meetings with Turkey in the near future,” she said, while refusing to go into detail on Turkey’s demands. 

“We are going to take the demands which have been made of Sweden directly with them, and the same goes for any misunderstandings which have arisen,” she said. 

At the press conference, Guterres condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine as “a violation of its territorial integrity and a violation of the UN Charter”.

“The war must end now,” he said. 

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