Toronto Star

Solace in conviction of former Syrian secret officer

Ruling hailed as end of impunity in almost decade-long civil war

- NABIH BULOS Los Angeles Times

the winter of 2014, Anwar Bunni, a top human rights lawyer who escaped to Germany from his native Syria, was in a refugee camp near Berlin when he saw a familiar face.

“I couldn’t remember him exactly. He saw me, and turned away,” Bunni said.

It was only days later that Bunni placed him: It was Anwar Raslan, a colonel in Syria’s intelligen­ce services. Almost a decade earlier, Raslan had nabbed Bunni from the streets of Damascus, shoving him into a car and taking him to a branch of Syria’s General Intelligen­ce Directorat­e for what turned out to be a five-year prison stay.

The chance meeting in the refugee camp started a chain of events that led a German court Wednesday to convict one of Raslan’s subordinat­es, Eyad Gharib, of aiding and abetting torture and imprisonme­nt as a crime against humanity. Raslan remains on trial — a verdict is expected later this year — but Bunni and human rights groups involved in the case hailed Wednesday’s ruling as the end of impunity in Syria’s almost-decade-long civil war.

“It’s a historic day for Syria and the world,” Bunni said. “For the first time, someone is convicted for belonging to the regime’s killing machine.”

Yet the case has sparked a wider debate, with some seeing the verdict against Gharib as less a victory for justice than a story of war’s moral exigencies — the difficult choices and often-dubious paths that some combatants take to survive. Indeed, some critics say Gharib’s conviction could actually end up having the opposite effect of making further trials of alleged Syrian war criminals less likely.

Gharib, 44, was sentenced by the Higher Regional Court in the German city of Koblenz to 4

years in prison. His trial, along with Raslan’s, began in April 2020, with both of them prosecuted under the principle of universal jurisdicti­on for serious crimes no matter where they allegedly occurred. With Syrian President Bashar alAssad still in power and little hope of accountabi­lity within the country, that principle has granted victims of Syria’s security forces the ability to pursue alleged perpetrato­rs of war crimes or genocide in European and other internatio­nal courts.

During the trial, which took place over 61 days, 54 witnesses and experts detailed a systematic campaign of torture within the walls of Branch 251, a notorious detention centre, and Division 40, one of its subsection­s.

One witness, a 38-year-old woman, described soldiers’ constant beatings with whips, cables and electric prods in cockroach-infested hallways as the songs of Fairouz, a famous Lebanese singer, provided a soundtrack to the shouts and pleas of detainees. Women were threatened with rape and denounced as prostitute­s, she said.

Patrick Kroker, a lawyer who represente­d a number of coplaintif­fs in the trial, called the verdict against Gharib “the first time a court has confirmed that the acts of the Syrian government and its collaborat­ors are crimes against humanity.” The Biden administra­tion tweeted that the trial’s outcome advanced “accountabi­lity for Assad’s atrocities, including the well-documented torture of over 14,000 Syrians.”

Yet Gharib, critics say, represente­d a particular­ly lowlevel prize. According to testimony he provided to German prosecutor­s investigat­ing Raslan, Gharib first joined the Syrian intelligen­ce service in the 1990s as a sports instructor. By the time the uprisings against al-Assad’s rule began in 2011, he

“For the first time, someone is convicted for belonging to the regime’s killing machine.”

ANWAR BUNNI

HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYER

had risen only to the rank of sergeant.

And as a Sunni Muslim who hailed from Syria’s eastern regions, he said in a letter read out in court, he had been viewed with suspicion within the intelligen­ce services, which are dominated by Alawites, the religious sect of the Assad family.

Sometime around September 2011, Gharib told investigat­ors, he was deployed in an operation to break up a demonstrat­ion. Other soldiers shot at protesters with assault rifles, but he did not take part, he said, calling it instead the moment when he decided he would defect to the opposition.

In early 2012, Gharib defected and returned to his village in the eastern Syrian province of Deir Al-Zor. There he joined the opposition and fought against government troops before being expelled by Islamic State, which took over eastern Syria in 2013.

In their argument for his acquittal, Gharib’s lawyers noted that his testimony was given in his capacity as a witness to build the case against Raslan, not to incriminat­e himself. Only later did Gharib become a suspect, forcing police to release him and then arrest him so that his testimony could be admissible.

No witnesses identified Gharib in the Branch 251 detention centre, meaning that most of the evidence against him had unwittingl­y come from his own asylum applicatio­n.

By contrast, Raslan is charged with the torture of some 4,000 people, the killing of 58 and at least one rape.

Prosecutor­s had called on Syrian rights groups and figures like Bunni to seek out and identify victims willing to testify against Raslan; dozens came forward.

Whereas Gharib has shown genuine remorse, Raslan has consistent­ly denied any torture under his watch even as he continued to defend the government’s actions, said Mohammad Al-Abdallah, director of the Washington-based Syria Justice and Accountabi­lity Centre and a onetime prisoner in Syria with Bunni.

And though Gharib’s conviction may offer a measure of solace to the families of those killed by the Syrian government, Al-Abdallah said, his trial has already frightened other insider witnesses from giving evidence against the government, for fear their words may end up being used against them.

Al-Abdallah also doubts that Gharib’s trial will serve as a deterrent to current members of Syria’s security services, noting that torture has continued.

Meanwhile, those who ordered the torture would never set foot in Europe or any other jurisdicti­on where they might face prosecutio­n. Senior members of al-Assad’s government and security forces are subject to a bevy of European and U.S. sanctions, including a visa ban that makes travel to any country where an arrest warrant could be issued well-nigh impossible.

None of that matters to Bunni, who counts the verdict and sentence against Gharib as an unqualifie­d victory with important consequenc­es.

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