LONDON: The body of a British doctor who mysteriously died in a Syrian jail was flown back to London on Sunday, London’s Heathrow Airport said.
An airport spokeswoman said the body of Abbas Khan, who Britain claims was “effectively murdered” by the Syrian regime, arrived in London early Sunday after being flown home from Beirut.
The Syrian government claims the 32-year-old orthopedic surgeon, who was arrested last year after traveling to Aleppo to treat wounded civilians, committed suicide.
His body was brought to Lebanon on Saturday and returned to his family, who have dismissed suggestions that he took his own life just days before he was due to be freed and handed over to a British lawmaker.
Khan’s sister Sara on Sunday described the regime’s explanation for his death, which was announced earlier this week, as “despicable.”
“We want the British government to help the family in getting those answers from the Syrians as somebody needs to own up for this absolutely cruel injustice that has been done to my brother,” she said.
The family say Khan paid the ultimate price for trying to help innocent civilians caught up in Syria’s brutal 33-month war.
The doctor’s brother Shah Nawaz Khan blasted Britain’s handling of the case and suggested that British authorities — like their Syrian counterparts — had been suspicious about the doctor because he was a Muslim of Indian origin.
“In Syria, he’s been executed for being British — and he’s been let down by his own government for not being British enough,” he told Sky News.
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