U.N.: More than 1.5 million fled Syria, 4 million more displaced within nation
By Saad Abedine. Joe Sterling and Laura Smith-Spark, CNN
May 18, 2013 -- Updated 0020 GMT (0820 HKT)
Assad's forces gaining momentum in Syria 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
        * NEW: Opposition group reports 113 dead, 39 of them in and around 
Damascus
        * Over 1.5 million are refugees, over 4 million are displaced 
internally, U.N. says 
        * Russia sending Syria missiles "will prolong the suffering," U.S. 
official says 
        * Rebel who apparently ate the heart of a government soldier appears in 
a new video
(CNN) -- The number of Syrian civilians who have 
fled their country to escape the civil war has passed 1.5 million, the 
U.N. refugee agency said Friday.
"The Syrian conflict 
continues to have a devastating impact on the lives of those who are 
forced to flee," said Dan McNorton, a spokesman for the Office of the 
U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, in Geneva, Switzerland.
"Refugees tell us the 
increased fighting and changing of control of towns and villages, in 
particular in conflict areas, results in more and more civilians 
deciding to leave. Over the past four months, we have seen a rapid 
deterioration when compared to the previous 20 months of this conflict," he 
said.
The real number of 
refugees is probably much higher, McNorton said, adding that "this is 
due to concerns that some Syrians have regarding registration."
Since the start of 2013 
alone, UNHCR has registered close to 1 million refugees -- which amounts to 
about 250,000 people each month.
Along with the refugees, 
more than 4 million people have been internally displaced, according to 
U.N. General Assembly President Vuk Jeremic.
Syria has a population of just more than 22 million, according to the CIA World 
Factbook. That means nearly 30% of Syrian people have left their homes amid the 
violence.
The war has left at least 80,000 dead, Jeremic said, since the start of the 
hostilities in Syria more than two years ago.
That death toll continues to climb. On Friday, the opposition Local 
Coordination Committees of 
Syria reported 113 dead -- 39 of them in and around Damascus, 17 in 
Idlib province, 15 in Homs, 14 in Deir Ezzor and others elsewhere.
U.S. official: Russian missiles will 'prolong the suffering'
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reiterated Moscow's position Friday that 
it will fulfill a deal to supply air defense missiles to the Syrian government.
At a news conference 
with U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in Russia's Black Sea resort 
city of Sochi, Lavrov said he did not understand the furor over the sale of the 
S-300 anti-aircraft missiles.
Delivery of the weapons 
will fulfill a signed agreement and will not give the Syrian government 
any advantage in its fight with the opposition, he said.
Moscow says 
international concerns voiced over the move by Russia, a longtime friend of 
Syria that has supported the regime of President Bashar al-Assad 
during the conflict, are unfounded.
"All who are not 
planning aggressive acts on a sovereign country, should not be worried, 
because air defense missiles are exclusively for defense (hence their 
name) and they are needed to fight an air attack," Lavrov said last 
week, according to the Foreign Ministry website.
"We are not breaking any laws and don't want to jeopardize our reputation of a 
trusted supplier."
Among those expressing 
concern about the missiles Friday was U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck 
Hagel, who said the sale "does not help" the situation in Syria. "It 
makes it more dangerous," he said.
U.S. Gen. Martin 
Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, elaborated further, 
calling Russia's move "at the very least a very unfortunate decision 
that will embolden the regime and prolong the suffering."
"What I really worry 
about is that Assad will decide that since he's got these systems, he's 
somehow safer or more prone to a miscalculation," Dempsey added.
Hagel noted U.S. 
efforts, led by Secretary of State John Kerry, to work with Russia to 
find common ground and help prevent the eruption of a regional war.
Lavrov and Ban said they were keen to see an international meeting held soon 
involving the Syrian government opposition.
The aim would be to 
implement last summer's Geneva communique brokered by Russia and the 
United States outlining how a transitional government could be formed.
Lavrov and Kerry said 
this month that they had agreed to try to organize a meeting "as soon as is 
practicable, possibly and hopefully, by the end of this month."
France: Iran shouldn't be part of Syria conference
Even though it's viewed as a civil war, the conflict in Syria has had a 
significant impact on its region.
Violence has spilled 
over into Turkey, Lebanon and Israel. And the conflict has become 
entangled in issues involving another hot-button nation in the Middle 
East: Iran.
On Friday, France's 
foreign ministry issued a statement opposing Iran's participation in an 
international peace conference on Syria.
Iran has been a strong 
ally of al-Assad and his government, as well as a focus of international 
condemnation over its nuclear program.
"The stability of the 
whole region is in question," the French ministry said. "We can't see a 
country, representing a threat to stability, taking part in this 
conference."
The French government 
said that Tehran should provide a "certain number of answers" and meet 
"international obligations" before it takes part in talks regarding 
Syria.
Gruesome footage shows man cutting out soldier's organs
Inside Syria itself, 
opposition groups responded Friday to widespread outrage this week over a 
horrific video showing a man said to be a Syrian rebel carving into the body of 
a government soldier, cutting out his heart and liver, and 
taking a bite of the heart.
Syrian rebel cuts out soldier's heart, eats it
The Syrian Observatory 
for Human Rights, a London-based activist group, questioned in a 
statement why the world had not paid the same attention to the many 
videos it has published showing atrocities allegedly carried out by 
forces loyal to al-Assad.
A new video purported to be of the Syrian rebel who carried out the atrocity, 
Khaled al-Hamad, 
known as Abu Sakkar, was also posted online Friday.
He is asked, "Abu 
Sakkar, do you regret what you have done? After the killing of the Assad 
militiaman and the mutilation of his body?"
He replies: "I am ready 
to face justice and be brought to trial for my actions on the condition 
that they need to bring Bashar and his thugs to stand trial as well, for the 
atrocities that they have committed against our women and 
children."
He warns that "if the 
bloodshed doesn't stop in Syria, all of the Syrian people will be Abu 
Sakkar. Everyone will be Abu Sakkar."
Although CNN cannot 
independently verify the authenticity of the videos, it interviewed a 
local rebel spokesman this week who confirmed the heart-eating incident 
and said he had spoken to the man involved.
Also Friday, Human 
Rights Watch urged the rebel groups now in control of Raqqa city, in 
northern Syria, to ensure that evidence of torture chambers in 
government security facilities seen by HRW researchers last month is 
preserved.
"The documents, prison 
cells, interrogation rooms, and torture devices we saw in the 
government's security facilities are consistent with the torture former 
detainees have described to us since the beginning of the uprising in 
Syria," said Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights 
Watch.
"Those in control of 
Raqqa need to safeguard the materials in these facilities so the truth 
can be told and those responsible held accountable."

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