
Image Copyright Amnesty International – Amnesty International says Saydnaya prison may hold between 10,000 and 20,000 people.
As many as 13,000 people, most of them civilian opposition supporters, have been executed in secret at a prison in Syria, Amnesty International says.
A new report by the human rights group alleges that mass hangings took place every week at Saydnaya prison between September 2011 and December 2015.
Amnesty says the alleged executions were authorised at the highest levels of the Syrian government.
The government has previously denied killing or mistreating detainees.
However, UN human rights experts said a year ago that witness accounts and documentary evidence strongly suggested that tens of thousands of people were being detained and that “deaths on a massive scale” were occurring in custody.
Amnesty interviewed 84 people, including former guards, detainees and prison officials for its report.

Image Copyright Amnesty International – Former detainee Omar al-Shogre before his imprisonment, and after his release from the prison.
It alleges that every week, and often twice a week, groups of between 20 and 50 people were executed in total secrecy at the facility, just north of Damascus. They are by no means all opposition fighters. They include lawyers, doctors, journalists, and other professionals whose only “crime” is to be “on the other side”, even if their relationship with “the other side” may be nothing more than a geographical location.
Before their execution, detainees were brought before a “military field court” in the capital’s Qaboun district for “trials” lasting between one and three minutes, the report says.
A former military court judge quoted by Amnesty said detainees would be asked if they had committed crimes alleged to have taken place. “Whether the answer is ‘yes’ or ‘no’, he will be convicted… This court has no relation with the rule of law,” he chillingly said.
According to the report, detainees were told on the day of the hangings that they would be transferred to a civilian prison then taken to a basement cell and beaten over the course of two or three hours.
Then in the middle of the night they were blindfolded and moved to another part of the prison, where they were taken into a room in the basement and told they had been sentenced to death just minutes before nooses were placed around their necks, the report adds.
The bodies of those killed were allegedly then loaded onto lorries, and transferred to Tishreen military hospital in Damascus for registration and burial in mass graves located on military land.
On the basis of evidence of the testimony of its witnesses, Amnesty estimates that between 5,000 and 13,000 people were executed at Saydnaya over five years.
Witness accounts
A former judge who saw the hangings:
“They kept them [hanging] there for 10 to 15 minutes. Some didn’t die because they are light. For the young ones, their weight wouldn’t kill them. The officers’ assistants would pull them down and break their necks.”
‘Hamid’, a former military officer who was detained at Saydnaya:
“If you put your ears on the floor, you could hear the sound of a kind of gurgling. This would last around 10 minutes… We were sleeping on top of the sound of people choking to death. This was normal for me then.”
Former detainee ‘Sameer’ describes alleged abuse:
“The beating was so intense. It was as if you had a nail, and you were trying again and again to beat it into a rock. It was impossible, but they just kept going. I was wishing they would just cut off my legs instead of beating them any more.”
Source: Amnesty International
Although it does not have evidence of executions taking place since December 2015, the group says it has no reason to believe they have stopped and that thousands more were likely to have died.
Amnesty says these practices amounted to war crimes and crimes against humanity.
It also notes that death sentences have to be approved by the grand mufti and by either the defence minister or the army’s chief of staff, who are deputised to act on behalf of President Bashar al-Assad.
The human rights group says it contacted the Syrian authorities about the allegations in early January but has received no response.
Last August, Amnesty reported that an estimated 17,723 people had died in custody as a result of torture and the deprivation of food, water and medical care between March 2011 – when the uprising against President Assad began – and December 2015. That figure did not include those allegedly hanged at Saydnaya.
These are the people that the West have stood by and idly watched as Putin and others have rained bombs on civilians. Certainly some of the Opposition in Syria are bad guys, too. No question. But many – and many of those killed in the war or in prison – are democrats who thought they could wrest their country from the grip of a cruel fascist dictator and turn it to democracy.
Wellthisiswhatithink says:
Those who have been freed from Saydnaya, and those who have escaped its clutches, and those who have avoided being murdered by the secret police and paramilitary forces, and those who have escaped the barrel bombs and the poison gas, largely make up – with their families – those who have desperately fled Syria looking for refuge. Looking for the right to live in peace, free from fear of persecution.
You know: the ones that Donald Trump thinks are dangerous. To us. But Mr Putin and his cronies? They’re OK.
While it is never wise to think we have seen as much evil as man can commit, this new list of horrors and atrocities is just unspeakably awful. It is hard to see how good can survive when there is so much evil in the world – but that is when we must not give up, or evil will have won. Support Amnesty International!
As a correspondent on the BBC’s ‘Dateline London’ commented last weekend – Mr Trump has banned people from seven largely Muslim countries – but none of these has had any citizen who committed an act of terrorism against the US. Other countries that have had citizens who did so, happen to have firms in them connected with Trumps business empire – and those countries’ citizens, strangely, are not banned. Go figure.
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“The modern conservative is engaged in one of man’s oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness.” (John Kenneth Galbraith) But they think with their amygdalas, which makes thinking difficult. They appear to have no compassion at all. Donald John Trump is one of them. When he speaks of making America great again, he means making America great for Donald John Trump. Or maybe he means making Donald John Trump great. From this viewpoint, he has no clue what is dangerous for Americans, for all Americans, or for some Americans. If you try too hard to make sense of his “policies,” you may strain your brain.
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https://timhayward.wordpress.com/2017/01/23/amnesty-internationals-war-crimes-in-syria/
Do you have citations or references from amnesty international for these claims?
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Yes, it has been widely carried by news organisations all over the world.
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We all need to continue to be outraged, we need to write to our politicians and fight for democracy even though it feels like this world is spiralling out of control.
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“Those who do not campaign against injustice are complicit in it.”
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