They arrived
with bulldozers and ordered him to leave. When the Syrian restaurant owner
asked why, he was threatened with detention.
The security
forces that had arrived unannounced that morning denied him permission to
remove anything from the shop his grandfather had opened. He was forced to
leave on foot, his motorcycle left behind.
"As I
was walking, I looked back and I saw the bulldozer demolishing my shop,"
said the man, who's from the Qaboun neighborhood in the Syrian capital of
Damascus.
"The
shop was opened by my grandfather many years ago. I personally managed the
restaurant for eight years. Before my eyes, all of my family's hard work was
destroyed in one second."
The man,
Human Rights Watch says, is one of the thousands of Syrians who have seen their
homes or other premises razed as part of what it says is a collective
punishment by authorities against residents of opposition strongholds.
In a report
released Thursday, the New York-based rights group says the Syrian government
"deliberately and unlawfully" demolished thousands of homes in rebel
strongholds in the cities of Damascus and Hama in one year.
It says
satellite imagery taken over both cities revealed seven areas where
neighborhoods have been largely demolished. None of the destruction was caused
in combat, it said. Rather, the buildings were destroyed with bulldozers and
explosives placed by troops who ordered residents to leave, then supervised the
demolitions.
"Wiping
entire neighborhoods off the map is not a legitimate tactic of war," Ole
Solvang, an HRW emergencies researcher, said in a prepared statement.
"These unlawful demolitions are the latest additions to a long list of crimes committed by the Syrian government."
Satellite
images
The 38-page
report, "Razed to the Ground: Syria's Unlawful Neighborhood Demolitions in
2012-2013" was released as government and opposition delegates attended
peace talks in Geneva, Switzerland.
It said
state officials and pro-government media outlets have said the demolitions were
part of urban planning efforts or the removal of illegally constructed
buildings.
However, HRW
says the demolitions were supervised by military forces and often followed
fighting in the areas between government and opposition forces.
Claims of
widespread abuses have been routinely leveled by the Syrian government and the
opposition during almost three years of conflict in the country, which has
killed more than 100,000 people and displaced millions.
HRW said
that as far as it could determine, there had not been similar demolitions in
areas that generally support the government, although it said many houses in
those areas were also allegedly built without necessary permits.
It published
before-and-after satellite images of the destruction, along with witness
testimony.
HRW said
Syrian authorities flattened the districts in the year from July 2012,
estimating the total built-up area destroyed at 145 hectares (360 acres) -- the
equivalent of 200 soccer fields -- and said many of the buildings were
apartment blocks up to eight stories high.
It named the
districts as Masha'a al-Arbaeen and Wadi al-Jouz in the central city of Hama,
and Qaboun, al-Tadamon, Barzeh, Harran al-Awamid and Mezze airport in and
around Damascus.
Calls for
compensation
HRW said
some of the demolitions took place around government military or strategic
sites that opposition forces had attacked.
"While
the authorities might have been justified in taking some targeted measures to
protect these military or strategic locations, the destruction of hundreds of
residential buildings, in some cases kilometers away, appears to have been
disproportionate and to have violated international law," it said.
HRW demanded
the Syrian government immediately end the demolitions and provide compensation
and alternative housing to the residents affected.
It also
urged the U.N. Security Council to refer the situation in Syria, where fighting
first began in March 2011, to the International Criminal Court.
"No one
should be fooled by the government's claim that it is undertaking urban planning
in the middle of a bloody conflict," Solvang said.
"This
was collective punishment of communities suspected of supporting the
rebellion." Source: CNN
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