The death toll in Syria's
conflict has risen to at least 125,835, more than a third of them civilians,
but the real figure is probably much higher, the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights said on Monday.
The
pro-opposition monitoring group also appealed to U.N. Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon and "all people in the international community who have a
conscience" to increase their efforts to end the 2-1/2 year war.
The
conflict began as peaceful protests against four decades of rule by President
Bashar al-Assad's family, but under a fierce security force crackdown, turned
into an armed insurgency.
The
Observatory, based in Britain but with a network of activists across Syria, put
the number of children killed in the conflict so far at 6,627.
It put
the death toll among rebels fighting the Assad government at at least 27,746
rebels, including more than 6,000 categorised as foreign fighters or unknown
combatants.
"The
number is likely much higher but in many battles, the number of rebels killed
is hidden, especially by the (al Qaeda-linked) Nusra Front and Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant," Rami Abdelrahman, head of the Observatory, told
Reuters.
He said
the observatory had documented 50,430 deaths among the Syrian armed forces and
local militias supporting Assad, but said that number too was probably higher.
"There
are at least 40,000 more dead combatants but they were not included in the toll
because the cases were not documented well enough," Abdelrahman said.
"The
Observatory calls for ... serious efforts (by the international community) to
stop the killing in Syria and help its people transition to a democratic state
with freedom, justice and equality," it said in a statement.
The
United Nations does not give regular casualty counts for Syria. It has said for
months that more than 100,000 have died.
International
efforts have largely concentrated on a planned peace conference in Geneva next
month and on the destruction of Syria's stockpile of chemical weapons.
The
West blames Assad for a poison gas attack near Damascus on Aug. 21 that killed
hundreds of people, but are now working with his forces to remove and destroy
such weapons from Syria.
However,
regular combat continues, including daily air strikes. The Observatory, which
gives daily death tolls in Syria as well, usually cites more than 100 people
killed each day, although the death toll in recent days has been double that.
"They should not just be concerned
with destroying chemical weapons when tens of thousands of Syrians have been
killed by all kinds of weapons since the poison gas attacks of Damascus,"
the group. (Agencies)
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