Syria’s war: Assad regime accused of a host of crimes

Witnesses described torture, including beatings, the use of electricity or car battery acid, sexual assault and mock executions under Assad’s regime. (AFP/SANA)
Updated 06 November 2018
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Syria’s war: Assad regime accused of a host of crimes

  • The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says at least 60,000 people have died from torture or harsh conditions in regime custody since the conflict began
  • It documented 27 detention facilities nationwide used to hold people swept up in the regime’s crackdown on protesters

BERIUT: The Syrian regime has been accused of various crimes during the conflict that started in 2011, including torture in prisons, summary executions and the use of chemical weapons.

Some European countries have, meanwhile, launched investigations into alleged crimes by the Syrian regime, such as France, which announced on Monday international arrest warrants for three senior intelligence officials over the deaths of two Franco-Syrian nationals in a Syrian jail.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says at least 60,000 people have died from torture or harsh conditions in regime custody since the conflict began.

Already in 2012 Human Rights Watch said Syria was holding tens of thousands of detainees in a “torture archipelago.”

It documented 27 detention facilities nationwide used to hold people swept up in the regime’s crackdown on protesters.

Witnesses described torture, including beatings, the use of electricity or car battery acid, sexual assault and mock executions.

In 2014, a former Syrian military photographer codenamed “Caesar” fled the country taking with him 55,000 images of abuses committed in its jails between 2011 and 2013. The digital images of 11,000 people alleged to have died in detention showed emaciated bodies. The evidence has been used in investigations in Germany and France.

In February 2016, UN investigators said the mass scale of deaths of detainees suggests that the Syrian regime is responsible for acts that amount to extermination.

A year later Amnesty International said as many as 13,000 people were hanged between 2011 and 2015 at the notorious Saydnaya military-run prison near Damascus.

This came on top of the 17,700 people it had already recorded as having perished in regime prisons since the start of the conflict.

In May 2017, Washington claimed that Damascus had built a “crematorium” at Saydnaya to cover up thousands of prisoner deaths.

Human Rights Watch has since 2012 accused the Syrian armed forces of using banned incendiary weapons against its opponents.

The Britain-based Observatory and other activists also claim the regime has dropped TNT-packed barrels from aircraft. There have also been several allegations of the use of chemical weapons, including sarin and chlorine, which the regime denies.

A UN inquiry published in March 2018 and based on 454 interviews said that Syrian troops and regime-linked militia systematically used rape and sexual violence against civilians.

Opposition fighters committed similar violations but at a considerably lower rate, the Independent International Commission of Inquiry for Syria said.


Iraq says it will prosecute Daesh detainees sent from Syria

Updated 8 sec ago
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Iraq says it will prosecute Daesh detainees sent from Syria

  • Iraq government says transfer was pre-emptive step to protect national security
  • Prosoners have been held for years in prisons and camps guarded by the Kurdish-led SDF
BAGHDAD: Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council said on Thursday it would begin ​legal proceedings against Daesh detainees transferred from Syria, after the rapid collapse of Kurdish-led forces in northeast Syria triggered concerns over prison security.
More than 10,000 members of the ultra-hard-line militant group have been held for years in about a dozen prisons and detention camps guarded by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in Syria’s northeast.
The US military said on Tuesday its forces had transferred 150 Daesh detainees from Syria to Iraq and that the operation could eventually see up to 7,000 detainees moved out of Syria.
It cited concerns over security at the prisons, which also hold thousands more women and children with ties to the militant group, after military setbacks ‌suffered by the ‌SDF.
A US official told Reuters on Tuesday that about 200 low-level ‌Daesh ⁠fighters ​escaped from ‌Syria’s Shaddadi prison, although Syrian government forces had recaptured many of them.
Iraqi officials said Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani mentioned the transfer of Daesh prisoners to Iraq in a phone call with Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa on Tuesday, adding that the transfers went ahead following a formal request by the Iraqi government to Syrian authorities.
Iraqi government spokesperson Basim Al-Awadi said the transfer was “a pre-emptive step to protect Iraq’s national security,” adding that Baghdad could not delay action given the rapid pace of security and political developments in Syria.
Daesh emerged in Iraq and Syria, and at the ⁠height of its power from 2014-2017 held swathes of the two countries. The group was defeated after a military campaign by ‌a US-led coalition.
An Iraqi military spokesperson confirmed that Iraq had received ‍a first batch of 150 Daesh detainees, including ‍Iraqis and foreigners, and said the number of future transfers would depend on security and field assessments. The ‍spokesperson described the detainees as senior figures within the group.
In a statement, the Supreme Judicial Council said Iraqi courts would take “due legal measures” against the detainees once they are handed over and placed in specialized correctional facilities, citing the Iraqi constitution and criminal laws.
“All suspects, regardless of their nationalities or positions within the terrorist ​organization, are subject exclusively to the authority of the Iraqi judiciary,” the statement said.
Iraqi officials say under the legal measures, Daesh detainees will be separated, with senior figures including foreign nationals to ⁠be held at a high-security detention facility near Baghdad airport that was previously used by US forces.
Two Iraqi legal sources said the Daesh detainees sent from Syria include a mix of nationalities, with Iraqis making up the largest group, alongside Arab fighters from other countries as well as European and other ‌Western nationals.
The sources said the detainees include nationals of Britain, Germany, France, Belgium and Sweden, and other European Union countries, and will be prosecuted under Iraqi jurisdiction.