Body of UK doctor who died in Syria going to Beirut: ICRC

AFP, Saturday 21 Dec 2013

The body of Abbas Khan, the British doctor who died in a Syrian jail, was to be taken to Beirut Saturday, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.

In the Lebanese capital, the remains of the 32-year-old orthopaedic surgeon would be handed over to the British embassy.

"The body will be handed over to the ICRC at a Damascus hospital and then taken to Beirut," spokesman Simon Schorno told AFP early Saturday.

Khan's body was due at the frontier with Lebanon at midday (1000 GMT), where it would be transferred to another ICRC team.

Previously, Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Muqdad told AFP the body would be transported to Beirut by Friday "at the latest".

Schorno did not say why there had been a delay.

Muqdad had also said the ICRC attended a final autopsy on Khan's body, but Schorno said his organisation "did not take part in any autopsy."

London has held Damascus responsible for Dr Khan's death.

But Syrian authorities said on Wednesday the doctor was found "hanging" in his cell, where he was being held for "unauthorised activities," and that he had committed suicide.

Muqdad said President Bashar al-Assad had decided to grant Khan an amnesty and hand him over to his mother and British MP George Galloway at a news conference in Damascus.

A Syrian monitoring group has also blamed Damascus, saying scores of detainees who had allegedly committed suicide had actually been tortured to death.

Khan, a volunteer with London-based charity Human Aid UK, had travelled to Aleppo in northern Syria last year to help civilians when he was arrested by the regime.

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