sammuel
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2017
- Messages
- 3,266
- Reaction score
- 2
- Country
- Location
The Syrian government has begun updating the records of tens of thousands of activists who disappeared during the early stages of its seven-year civil war, in the first tacit admission that many of them died while held by the regime.
Families who have spent years awaiting answers over loved ones are now streaming into civil registry offices to collect the final official recognition of an estimated 13,000 deaths in detention.
Experts believe Russia has pushed Bashar al-Assad's government to draw a line under the deaths as a first step to possible "reconciliation", which a war-weary Moscow is eager to bring about. The 400 certificates issued so far have mostly recorded verdicts of heart attacks or strokes, but relatives suspect detainees were probably tortured to death or hanged without trial. None have had the bodies of loved ones returned or been told where they can find them.
Amnesty International has described the Sednaya prison, outside Damascus, as a "human slaughterhouse", where detainees have been killed on an industrial scale. In a report released last year the civil rights group said at least 13,000 people had been executed in secret.
It was claimed that on the site of the prison complex, which sits in the hills above Syria's capital, was a crematorium used to "manage" the sheer numbers of bodies. The issue of political prisoners is one of the thorniest and most sensitive of the war and has been the major sticking point at peace talks - both at the UN-sponsored negotiations in Geneva and the Russia, Iran and Turkey-backed ones in Astana.
Hassan Hassan, senior fellow at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy, agreed it was a calculated move rather than a sudden pang of conscience.
"This makes sense these days after the regime has secured most of the south," he said. "The regime has been preparing for the post-war period through new legitimations and this might be part of it."
https://www.smh.com.au/world/middle...oints-to-health-problems-20180730-p4zuci.html
Families who have spent years awaiting answers over loved ones are now streaming into civil registry offices to collect the final official recognition of an estimated 13,000 deaths in detention.
Experts believe Russia has pushed Bashar al-Assad's government to draw a line under the deaths as a first step to possible "reconciliation", which a war-weary Moscow is eager to bring about. The 400 certificates issued so far have mostly recorded verdicts of heart attacks or strokes, but relatives suspect detainees were probably tortured to death or hanged without trial. None have had the bodies of loved ones returned or been told where they can find them.
Amnesty International has described the Sednaya prison, outside Damascus, as a "human slaughterhouse", where detainees have been killed on an industrial scale. In a report released last year the civil rights group said at least 13,000 people had been executed in secret.
It was claimed that on the site of the prison complex, which sits in the hills above Syria's capital, was a crematorium used to "manage" the sheer numbers of bodies. The issue of political prisoners is one of the thorniest and most sensitive of the war and has been the major sticking point at peace talks - both at the UN-sponsored negotiations in Geneva and the Russia, Iran and Turkey-backed ones in Astana.
Hassan Hassan, senior fellow at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy, agreed it was a calculated move rather than a sudden pang of conscience.
"This makes sense these days after the regime has secured most of the south," he said. "The regime has been preparing for the post-war period through new legitimations and this might be part of it."
https://www.smh.com.au/world/middle...oints-to-health-problems-20180730-p4zuci.html