Report: Syria Photos Prove Mass Torture by Assad Regime

W460

Syrian officials could face war crimes charges based on photographs from a defector proving the "industrial-scale" torture and killing of 11,000 detainees by the regime, international prosecutors say.

Evidence smuggled out by a former Syrian military police photographer was reminiscent of the conditions in the death camps in Nazi Germany in World War II, the three investigators said.

A report by the prosecutors -- commissioned by Qatar, which backs the Syrian rebels -- provides "clear evidence" of the starvation, strangulation and beating of detainees in President Bashar Assad's prisons.

The release of the report, which was first revealed by The Guardian newspaper, CNN and Turkey's Anatolia news agency, came a day before talks were due to begin in Geneva aimed at negotiating an end to Syria's bloody civil war.

"There is clear evidence, capable of being believed by a tribunal of fact in a court of law, of systematic torture and killing of detained persons by the agents of the Syrian government," the report said.

"Such evidence would support findings of crimes against humanity against the current Syrian regime. Such evidence could also support findings of war crimes against the current Syrian regime."

Syria has previously denied torturing detainees but the government had no immediate reaction to the report.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said the report "offers further evidence of the systematic violence and brutality being visited upon the people of Syria by the Assad regime".

The report was written by Desmond de Silva, former chief prosecutor of the special court for Sierra Leone; Geoffrey Nice, the former lead prosecutor in the trial of former Yugoslavian president Slobodan Milosevic; and David Crane, who indicted Liberian president Charles Taylor.

It also features testimony from a forensic pathologist, an anthropologist who investigated mass graves in Kosovo and an expert in digital images.

'Pictures of emaciated bodies'

The defector, identified only as "Caesar" for his own safety, presented forensic experts commissioned by a London legal firm representing Qatar with around 55,000 digital images of 11,000 dead detainees since the start of the uprising in Syria in March 2011. The images were on memory sticks.

He claims the victims all died in captivity before being taken to a military hospital to be photographed.

De Silva said the report was the "smoking gun" showing evidence of "industrial-scale" killing by the Syrian regime.

"The pictures of emaciated bodies are reminiscent of the sort of pictures one saw after the Second World War when the Nazi concentration camps were opened," he told the BBC.

"The pictures show over a period of years the systematic murder of detainees by starvation, by torture, the gouging out of eyes, the hideous beating of people, the mutilation of bodies."

The report says that all but one of the victims were male. Most appeared to be aged between 20 and 40.

The defector photographed as many as 50 bodies a day, the report said.

He said the purpose of the photos was firstly to be able to issue death certificates -- falsely saying that the victims had died in hospital -- and secondly to confirm to the regime that executions had been carried out.

The bodies would then be buried in rural areas.

'He couldn't take it anymore'

The authors of the report said they found the informant and his evidence to be credible after subjecting them to "rigorous scrutiny" and have made their findings available to the United Nations, governments and human rights groups.

The defector, who said he had never witnessed any executions himself, later escaped from Syria fearing for the safety of his family.

"There came a point a few months ago where he decided that he couldn't take it anymore, so he decided to defect and he left. He could well have gone to Qatar, yes," said De Silva.

Sunni-ruled Qatar was quick to back rebels who rose up in 2011 against the rule of Assad, who is backed by Shia powerhouse Iran.

Crane called the evidence "amazing".

"This is the first provable, direct evidence of what has happened to at least 11,000 human beings who have been tortured and executed and apparently disposed of," he said.

Comments 8
Missing voiceofreason 21 January 2014, 15:42

Sad revelation. Yet important for those backing the regime, or maybe at this point they have already closed their hearts so it doesn't matter anyway.

Missing abraham 21 January 2014, 15:55

gabby14 and voice of reason read the article before making a judgemant
It says 3 investigators commissioned by QATAR ( who is the main backer of the rebels).
What did you expect those 3 guys to say
are you guys so naïve
or are blinded that anything Qataris say is the truth and absolute truth

Missing voiceofreason 21 January 2014, 17:33

"The report was written by Desmond de Silva, former chief prosecutor of the special court for Sierra Leone; Geoffrey Nice, the former lead prosecutor in the trial of former Yugoslavian president Slobodan Milosevic; and David Crane, who indicted Liberian president Charles Taylor."

I think you need to read the article my friend. Qatar paid for it, but wasn't the investigator. I bet Qatar or even the rebels could have done their own investigation, but they commissioned (and probably paid dearly) these respected international fellows precisely for the reason so that people like you would not parade around and trumpet the same old tunes "Qatar! Qatar! It was done by Qatar! don't listen to it!".

Sorry, the whole world is not conspiring against an innocent Assad.

Thumb _mowaten_ 21 January 2014, 18:32

qui donne ordonne. might have cost them a lot to buy those guys, but it doesnt change the fact that they wouldnt have paid for something that didnt go their way.
but either it's useless, only naive people and your fellow brainwashed haters will fall for it, and you never needed it in the first place.

Missing abraham 21 January 2014, 20:33

Voice of reason, I call you a naïve person, is because you believe everything you read or your so called leaders telling you the truth.
As an old wise man I tell you the reason The Arab world is in turmoil
because of our so called leaders have sold us down the drain.
Show me which leader in Lebanon or any other country who really thinks about the welfare of their nation, all they care of how to load their pockets with corrupt money.

Missing voiceofreason 21 January 2014, 22:26

Your reply makes a lot more sense than your first post. Nobody is denying the leaders of any Arab nation are corrupt, nor are they claiming to be saints. I agree compeletely that "the reason The Arab world is in turmoil
because of our so called leaders have sold us down the drain" plus other reasons, such as western colonization and support for these despots.

But that very statement rings true for Assad as much if not more than any other Arab nation. Hence the 55,000 images of torture. What is naïve my friend (and hypocritical), is to automatically claim 55,000 images (according to the article) are fabricated because it was financed by Qatar, especially when you inadvertently claim the Assad regime (which is part of the Arab world you mentioned) has sold out its people.

Missing abraham 21 January 2014, 20:28

Gabby my friend I'm a Lebanese who has lived the good life 60's 70's
the bad life 70's 80's till now.
I don't condone what Assad or his father did.
The Lebanese so called politicians sold their soul to S.Arabia, Qatar, Syria or wherever. There is no 1 politician who has a clean hand.
I tell you guys are naïve because this whole Syrian supposed revolution is a way of weakening the whole Arab world.
Look around you the biggest Arab armies, (Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Libya) have been disintegrated in 10 year period.
Who you think did it? think about it.

Missing voiceofreason 21 January 2014, 22:32

Your theory makes a lot of sense, and it may have some truth to it, but there's no denying the despots brought it upon thesmelves by oppressing and murderong their own people for decades. Some say these so-called conspirators are attempting the same thing in Turkey with its current unrest (who also has a strong military and economy), yet they have thus-far failed. Why might we ask? Because the Turkish government, although not an angel, has not oppressed its people, and rather has experienced tremendous economic growth over the past decade, something the Turkish people are aware of, and I believe that's why so many citizens there actually support their government out of joy, not fear.