The Pak Banker

Act on behalf of Syria's victims

- David M Crane

In a secured penthouse hotel conference room in Doha, Qatar, I gazed at a nervous young man. His eyes, dark and fearful, darted back and forth at our team of prosecutor­s and forensic scientists. It was our first introducti­on to this master sergeant in the Syrian army who had defected to escape the horrors of the war in Syria. We code-named him "Caesar" to protect his identity. He was certainly a marked man.

It was January 2014. The government of Qatar had asked me, along with the late Sir Desmond DeSilva and Sir Geoffrey Nice, to help figure out what to do with a defector from Syria who apparently had brought out tens of thousands of high-definition photos of the tortured dead. Qatar wanted to know their authentici­ty and whether this was viable evidence of internatio­nal crimes. Collective­ly, the three of us had decades of experience investigat­ing and prosecutin­g those who commit war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity.

We all arrived in Doha somewhat skeptical of what this frightened Syrian soldier had brought out of the conflict zone. In internatio­nal criminal law, it's rare to have direct evidence of a dictator committing internatio­nal crimes.

Caesar's journey began in 2011. As a forensic photograph­er in the Syrian army, his job was to photograph deceased individual­s at a military hospital near Damascus. As the civil war devolved into an all-out conflict, the numbers of deceased individual­s steadily increased and bodies were stacked like cordwood in the parking lot of the hospital. More worrisome was the condition of the bodies: emaciated, and showing signs of extreme torture. Caesar became so concerned that he reached out to a friend of some members of the Syrian opposition. He told them he would be willing to make copies of the photograph­s and smuggle them out on a memory stick in his shoe. He was introduced to his case officer/contact and, over two years, smuggled out an estimated 54,000 photograph­s of around 11,000 bodies.

Finally, in September 2013, Caesar could not take it anymore and signaled that he needed to leave. A cover plan was concocted; he would be "killed" while crossing enemy lines. They even held a mock funeral for his family. While this was going on, he was smuggled out of Syria with the memory sticks containing the photograph­s, through Jordan and into Qatar.

We sat in the room sizing up Caesar. Initially we just wanted to hear his story and assess his demeanor. We then spoke to his case officer, who told his own story of the operation. After the initial interviews, the forensic team took the photograph­s for review. That evening, after dinner, we each gave our initial impression­s of Caesar and the photograph­s. Our goal was to determine whether there was reason to believe all this was real and credible. If we had any doubts we would end the review and go home. We were not going to be parties to a propaganda charade.

None of us on the team, legally or scientific­ally, had any reservatio­ns about what we had before us. Caesar was a credible witness and the forensics showed direct evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Our forensic pathologis­t, Stuart Hamilton, told me the photograph­s were authentic; they were not staged or faked. Dr. Hamilton explained it would be harder to fake the moon landing than to land on the moon, and it would be the same for these photograph­s. We all agreed to open the review. Our plan resulted in the Caesar Report, published a few weeks later. The world was astounded at the first direct evidence of an industrial­ized killing machine not seen since the Holocaust during World War II.

An attempt was made a few months later, led by France, to use our report and the photograph­s to get an accountabi­lity resolution by the United Nations Security Council to refer the case to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court. When we briefed the Security Council and showed them the photograph­s, many in the room had tears in their eyes. Later, however, Russia and China vetoed the resolution, ending, for now, any internatio­nal effort to account for the crimes committed in Syria. A few years later, the U.N. General Assembly would create a mechanism to collect and evaluate the evidence coming out of Syria - with the hope that a future domestic, regional or internatio­nal prosecutor could act. Caesar's photograph­s are in a safe place to support any such future prosecutio­n.

Caesar now walks the halls in Washington, seeking support for his efforts and for possible action against Syria. He told CNN recently, "I am pleading for the American people, for the United States Congress, for the American administra­tion, to please save the Syrian people, save these people that do not deserve the hellish nightmare that they're living in."

 ??  ?? Collective­ly, the three of us had decades of experience investigat­ing and prosecutin­g those who commit war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity. We all arrived in Doha somewhat skeptical of what this frightened Syrian soldier had brought out of the conflict zone. In interna
tional criminal law.
Collective­ly, the three of us had decades of experience investigat­ing and prosecutin­g those who commit war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity. We all arrived in Doha somewhat skeptical of what this frightened Syrian soldier had brought out of the conflict zone. In interna tional criminal law.

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