The Niagara Falls Review

Terror members arrested in Germany

- KIRSTEN GRIESHABER and FRANK JORDANS

BERLIN — German authoritie­s have arrested two Syrians suspected of being members of the extremist Nusra Front, one of whom allegedly was involved in the slaying of dozens of civilians.

The federal prosecutor’s office said Thursday that 35-year-old Abdalfatah H.A. is suspected of war crimes over the killing of 36 Syrian government employees by his unit in March 2013. The statement says he carried out “socalled Shariah death sentences.”

A spokeswoma­n for the prosecutor­s’ office, Frauke Koehler, declined to confirm German media reports that the man came to Germany as an asylum-seeker.

The other suspect, 26-year-old Abdulrahma­n A.A., belonged to the same combat unit as Abdalfatah H.A. and both participat­ed in an armed battle against Syrian government troops, including taking over an arms depot near Mahin in November 2013.

The men, whose surnames weren’t published due to German privacy rules, were arrested Wednesday and Thursday in the western cities of Duesseldor­f and Giessen and their apartments were raided.

Prosecutor­s said the men belong to a Nusra Front unit which also included Abd Arahman A. K., a Syrian in his early 30s who was arrested in Germany in June on suspicion of being part of a plot to carry out a bomb attack in Duesseldor­f.

Human rights groups have pressed government­s to bring people suspected of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Syria to trial, as part of an effort to resolve the long-running conflict.

The European Center for constituti­onal and Human Rights, or ECCHR, said Thursday it has helped submit the first criminal complaint in Germany against six high-level Syrian military intelligen­ce officials, in the hope that federal prosecutor­s will take up the case under the principle of universal jurisdicti­on.

The ECCHR complaint was filed together with seven Syrian torture survivors and two Syrian lawyers. “In Syria there is total impunity, which produces further violence. Without justice there will be no political solution to the conflict,” Mazen Darwish, one of the Syrian lawyers, was quoted as saying in a statement.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? German prosecutor­s’ office spokeswoma­n Frauke Koehler declined to confirm media reports that two men alleged to be members of the extremist group Nursa Front went to Germany as refugees.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES German prosecutor­s’ office spokeswoma­n Frauke Koehler declined to confirm media reports that two men alleged to be members of the extremist group Nursa Front went to Germany as refugees.

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