Syria’s Assad scraps notorious military field courts

President Bashar Al-Assad (C) speaking with fire fighters and emergency responders at the site of a forest fire in the countryside of the northwestern Latakia province. (AFP)
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Updated 04 September 2023
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Syria’s Assad scraps notorious military field courts

  • Syrian lawyer Ghazwan Kronfol told AFP the courts’ jurisdiction was expanded to civilians in response to unrest in the 1980s

BEIRUT: Syrian President Bashar Assad announced Sunday the scrapping of military field courts where thousands are thought to have been sentenced to death without due process, but activists remained cautious about the move’s impact.
Assad issued a legislative decree “ending the work” of the original 1968 proclamation that created the courts, the presidency said in a statement.
“All cases referred to the military field courts are to be referred... to the military judiciary,” said the statement posted on the Telegram messaging app, adding that the move went into effect immediately.
According to a 2017 report from rights group Amnesty International, the military field court’s rules and proceedings “are so summary and arbitrary that they cannot be considered to constitute an actual judicial process.”
It said military field court trials take just a few minutes.
It added that thousands of people detained at the notorious Sednaya prison had been killed in mass hangings after “trials” at such a court.
Syrian lawyer Ghazwan Kronfol told AFP the courts’ jurisdiction was expanded to civilians in response to unrest in the 1980s.
The courts are not required to follow due process, there is “no role for the lawyer” in the proceedings, and sentences cannot be appealed, he added.
“During the years of the revolution and armed conflict, a lot of detainees have been sentenced to death in these courts” and their executions carried out as soon as the sentences were approved, he added.
Syria’s civil war broke out in 2011 with the government’s repression of peaceful protests.
“Thousands may have been executed according to rulings from those courts,” Kronfol added.
An activist who declined to be identified due to security concerns also estimated that thousands or “maybe even tens of thousands” had died due to the military field courts.
Sunday’s decision was “long overdue” but “should be treated with caution... particularly because the regime has never acknowledged that these courts violate detainees’ human rights” and can still detain people without trial, the activist added.
Diab Serriya, from the Association of Detainees and the Missing in Sednaya Prison, said that “if detainees are referred to military courts” instead of military field courts, “they will at least be allowed a lawyer.”
“Around 70 percent” of detainees at the Sednaya facility after 2011 “went before the military field court, which handed most of them death sentences,” he said.
He expressed hope that if the military field courts are closed and their archives can be accessed, families will be able to know “the fate of their loved ones who have been missing and forcibly disappeared for years.”

 


Syria arrests group behind Mezzeh airport attacks, weapons traced to Hezbollah

Updated 01 February 2026
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Syria arrests group behind Mezzeh airport attacks, weapons traced to Hezbollah

  • Authorities seized a number of drones the group was preparing to use in further operations

DAMASCUS: Syria said on Sunday it had detained a group behind recent rocket attacks on the ​Mezzeh military airport in Damascus, with investigators tracing the weapons to Iran-backed Hezbollah.
The interior ministry said security units arrested all members of the group, which it said had carried out several strikes on the airport in ‌recent months, after ‌surveillance of suspected launch ‌sites ⁠in ​several ‌areas of the capital.
The weapons used in the attacks originated from Lebanon’s Hezbollah, an ally of former President Bashar Assad that once had a large military presence across Syria supporting Assad’s army, ⁠the ministry said.
Hezbollah denied the allegations and ‌said it had no ‍activity or ties with ‍any group inside Syria. Authorities said ‍they also seized a number of drones the group was preparing to use in further operations.
The ministry said only that ​the detainees had links to unidentified “foreign entities,” without mentioning Hezbollah or Iran.
Reuters reported ⁠in November that Washington was planning to establish a military presence at an air base in Damascus to help enable a security pact that Washington is brokering between Syria and Israel. The government denied the report.
Security sources say Hezbollah left behind weapons stockpiles, including drones, in parts of Syria after withdrawing its ‌forces following the collapse of Assad’s rule.