Britain says Syria `murdered` jailed doctor

Britain accused Syria on Tuesday of effectively murdering a surgeon who was detained after volunteering at a hospital in the war-torn country and then died in jail.

London: Britain accused Syria on Tuesday of effectively murdering a surgeon who was detained after volunteering at a hospital in the war-torn country and then died in jail.

Abbas Khan, a 32-year-old orthopaedic surgeon from south London, travelled to the northern city of Aleppo last year to help civilians but was captured by the Syrian regime.

His family said on Tuesday that the father-of-two had died in detention, just days before he was due to be freed and handed over to a British lawmaker.

Syria`s deputy foreign minister said Khan had committed suicide, but British junior Foreign Office minister Hugh Robertson said the Assad regime was responsible for his death.

"There is no excuse whatsoever for the treatment that he has suffered by the Syrian authorities, who have in effect murdered a British national who was in their country to help people injured during their civil war," Robertson told the BBC.

"The fact remains that he went to Syria to help the people of Syria who were affected by the civil war."

Khan`s family said they were "shocked and devastated", as Syrian authorities had promised to release him this week but then days later told the family he was dead.

"We thought this Friday was to be the day. The deputy foreign minister of Syria called my mum to say they were going to let him go," his sister Sara Khan told Britain`s Sky News.

"We were so happy, we started decorating and preparing for his return."

The family then heard that Khan had been taken away from the prison as part of the final stage of his release, but they were sceptical.

She described the idea that he had killed himself as "ridiculous".

Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad said the doctor had hanged himself with his pyjamas.

"In fact he took off his pyjamas, hooked it to something on the window or on a hole, and committed suicide," Mekdad told BBC television.

Khan`s family had been unaware of his plight for eight months until his mother Fatima travelled to Damascus over the summer and managed to track him down.

Khan reportedly wrote to British Foreign Secretary William Hague earlier this year describing how he had lost around half his body weight in the squalid conditions of his detention, during which he had been forced to beat other prisoners.

The doctor had reportedly been moved by the plight of refugees and gone to Turkey to work in refugee camps. He had not planned to go to Syria but eventually went to Aleppo to treat those too badly injured to travel.

He was arrested just two days after crossing the border, the BBC reported.A Foreign Office spokesman said it had sought consular access to Khan on several occasions via Russian and Czech diplomats in Damascus, but all its requests had been ignored.

Firebrand lawmaker George Galloway -- a vocal critic of the western policy on supporting Syrian rebels, having bitterly opposed the Iraq war in 2003 -- said he had been due to fly out to Syria within days to bring the doctor home.

"Last week I received a call from the (Syrian) foreign minister telling me that the president had asked him to contact me to come to Damascus to bring Dr Khan home before Christmas," Galloway said in a statement.

"Obviously this had to be kept confidential but the family were kept fully informed. I was in the process of booking a flight for this Friday when I got the appalling news."

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights rejected the suicide claim, saying Syrian authorities were notorious for torturing prisoners.

"The Observatory believes there is an overwhelming likelihood he died of torture, because there are hundreds of similar cases in which the regime says a prisoner committed suicide when in fact they were tortured to death," founder Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

Rights group Amnesty International said this was "yet another deeply troubling death in custody in Syria" and called on the British government to "denounce" his death.

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