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Check names of 8000 detainees tortured to death: lists

Check  the names of 8000 detainees who were tortured to death by the Syrian regime security.

 The list has been obtained in association with the Syrian Violations Documentation Center.

It inclues names of 7953 victims of different ages, including 125 children and 63 females, who were killed by the Syrian intelligence services, either immediately after their arrest or after physical and psychological torture.




   The death date of each torture victim is documented between 2011 and 2018  

(307 victims in 2011 - 1,199 victims in 2012 - 2,120 victims in 2013 - 2276 victims in 2014 - 1413 victims in 2015 - 401 victims in 2016 - 146 victims in 2017 - 170 victims in 2018)

1- Damascus suburbs 1856
2. Daraa 1283
3. Homs 1253
4. Damascus 870
5. Hama 762
6. Idlib 585
7. Aleppo 473
8. Deir Ezzor 450
9. Latakia 154
10. Quneitra 110
11. Raqqa 50
12. Hasaka 44
13. Tartus 28 (mostly from Banyas city)
14. Swaida 23
10 victims of non-Syrian nationalities, 2 of the victims were not affiliated with any nationality.

  Zaman al-Wasl hopes that all material, documentation and information provided in the detainees reports would be used for the  purposes of legal actions, proceedings, litigation, matters and international levels before courts, tribunals and human rights organisations.




Death certificates have been sweeping the registry offices. Most of the detainees were tortured to death by the 
Assad regime.



 At least 1000 detainees from Darayya, the western suburb of Damascus, were tortured to death in the Syrian security chambers, according to local activists who affirmed that the Intelligence Services had delivered the list of dead detainees to the civil registry office in the town.





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Sources assured that the Assad regime has been issuing death certificates for detainees tortured to death. 

The 'Coordination of the Darayya People in the Diaspora' said on Friday that 68 death certificates were issued for prisoners tortured to death, included seven execuation cases in the Saydnaya military prison on 15-1-2013.

The Coordination has also documented names of 2809 detainees and 122 disappeared.

 Activists and families are expected a new death list as about 3400 people were arrested from Darayya since the early days of the Syrian revolution and during the battle of Darayya between November 2012 and February 2013.


 In August 2012, the regime forces backed by allied militias defeated the rebel forces and took control of the town.  About 500 people were found executed by the regime in the bloody offensive.

According to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, 81,652 Syrian citizens were forcibly disappeared at the hands of the Syrian regime alone between March 2011 and June 2018, while around 13,066 victims died due to torture at the Syrian regime’s official and non-official prisons in the same period of time.

Zaman al-Wasl and The Gathering of Free Syrian Advocates have obtained names of  145 detainees were tortured to death as the regime ordered the civil registry office in Hama province to issue death certificates for the detainees which ignore the reason of death.

The same order took place in Hasaka for 600 detainees who also died of torture.

The advocate group has submitted the list to the United Nations, saying the regime security centers are a place for a genocide and ethnic cleansing.

Mohamed Nour Hmaidi, head of the Syrian Justice Gathering and the former head of Public Prosecution in Idlib province, said the regime is seeking to conceal its crimes backed by Iran and Russia as Assad thinks the war is over.

The death certificates were part of the post-war plans, Hamaidi said as about 600,000 Syrian are believed to be behind the bars.

The U.N. said in its reports over Syrian detainees that the scale of deaths in prisons indicated that the Assad regime was responsible for “extermination as a crime against humanity”.

In mid 2013, a team of war crimes prosecutors and forensic experts, had analyzed 55 thousand digital photos taken and provided by a Syrian defector codenamed "Caesar," who, along with his family, is now living outside Syria in an undisclosed location, according to CNN.  

 The 8000-detainee list is not related to Caesar's photos.

The team members shared their findings in a joint exclusive with CNN's "Amanpour" and The Guardian newspaper on January 20, 2014.  
 
Amnesty accused the Syrian regime of carrying out a "policy of extermination", repeatedly torturing detainees and withholding food, water, and medical care.

Prisoners were also raped or forced to rape each other, and guards would feed detainees by tossing meals on to the cell floor, which was often covered in dirt and blood, the report said.

Amnesty has previously said that more than 17,700 people were estimated to have died in regime custody across Syria since the country's conflict erupted in 2011.

Syria is not a member of the International Criminal Court. The only way the court could prosecute someone from Syria would be through a referral from the United Nations Security Council. 



 Fathi Ibrahim Bayoud al-Tamim

Editor-in-Chief





  
 

Zaman Al Wasl
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