U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and UN Sec
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and UN SecReuters

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Thursday the death toll in Syria may have reached 90,000, citing figures given to him by his Saudi counterpart Prince Saud al-Faisal.

"I had occasion ... to speak this morning with the foreign minister of Saudi Arabia. The first thing he mentioned to me was in his estimate perhaps as many as 90,000 people who have been killed in Syria," Kerry told reporters, according to AFP.

The figure is much higher than estimates given this week by UN rights chief Navi Pillay who said the death toll from the civil war was "nearing 70,000."

The newly appointed Kerry said that the "desperate humanitarian situation" in Syria would be one of the issues topping a packed agenda for his first meeting at the State Department with UN chief Ban Ki-moon.

Kerry said Wednesday after talks with Jordan's Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh that Washington and Jordan could take renewed steps to urge Syrian ally Russia to bring more pressure on President Bashar al-Assad to quit.

"I want to learn from the secretary general what he thinks we can do... to try to change President Assad's calculations, to stop the bloodshed and begin a peaceful political transition towards a democratic future," Kerry said, according to AFP.

The "vast numbers of refugees" fleeing the 23-month conflict pose a huge burden for Syria's neighbors, Kerry warned.

Jordan’s health system has begun to crack under the strain of caring for 340,000 Syrian refugees and Amman is already seeking help with the effort.

UN and U.S. estimates say more than 750,000 people have fled the country, while a further 2.5 million are displaced internally.

"President Assad has the ability to be able to make the difference here by deciding to engage in a legitimate diplomatic process. He must end this killing," Kerry stressed.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland meanwhile scotched rumors that Kerry, who has met with Assad in the past, was planning to visit Damascus on his first foreign trip as secretary of state, which has yet to be unveiled.

"The secretary of state has no intention to go to Damascus, not on this first trip and not until we are in a place where the Syrian people have gotten on the road to meeting their aspirations for a free and democratic country," Nuland said.

"He also has zero intention to talk to Assad," she stressed.

Ban meanwhile said the UN supported a proposal from Ahmed Moaz al-Khatib, the head of the opposition umbrella National Coalition, who has called on the Assad regime to open a dialogue to end the bloodshed.

Such a dialogue "is an opportunity we should not miss," Ban said, according to AFP.

He was speaking amid reports that a new peace plan for Syria, involving the creation of a senate to oversee a power transition, is currently making the rounds in the United Nations.

Saudi daily newspaper Asharq al-Awsat reported it had obtained a copy of the plan which it said had been drafted "under UN supervision" with members of the Syrian opposition.

It foresees the creation of a 140-member senate body tasked with leading the dialogue process between the regime and the opposition during a transitional phase, said Asharq al-Awsat.