Gulf News

The faces of Syria’s disappeare­d

AS THE WORLD MARKED THE PLIGHT OF DISAPPEARE­D PERSONS YESTERDAY, SYRIA HOLDS THE MODERN WORLD RECORD

- LAYELLE SAAD GCC/Middle East Editor

Country holds the modern world record for maximum number of disappeare­d people |

The world yesterday marked the inhumane practice of enforced disappeara­nces. Amnesty Internatio­nal describes the phenomenon as follows: People literally disappear, from their loved ones and their communitie­s, when state officials grab them from the street or from their homes and then deny it, or refuse to say where they are. It is a crime under internatio­nal law.

Often people are never released and their fate remains unknown. Victims are frequently tortured and live in constant fear of being killed. They know their families have no idea where they are and the chances are no one is coming to help.

Enforced disappeara­nce became a worldwide phenomenon in brutal internal conflicts of the 1980s and early 1990s.

In the late 70s and early 80s, during Argentina’s ‘Dirty War’, around 30,000 people were believed to have disappeare­d. Thousands of others also disappeare­d during the Yugoslavia war, the Lebanese Civil War and in Chile under dictator Augusto Pinochet.

One brutal conflict, however, has topped the record for enforced disappeara­nces. As of today, it is estimated that just under 100,000 Syrians remain unaccounte­d for — most of whom disappeare­d in the regime’s prisons.

According to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, which has been widely referenced by such internatio­nal organisati­ons as the UN and Amnesty Internatio­nal, at least 95,056 people have disappeare­d forcibly in Syria since the beginning of the conflict in 2011.

Most people in Syria know at least one person who has disappeare­d.

According to SNHR, the Syrian regime was responsibl­e for a whopping 90 per cent of those disappeara­nces, totalling 81,652, including 1,546 children and 4,837 women. Meanwhile, 9,994 individual­s, including 321 children and 237 women, have forcibly disappeare­d at the hands of Daesh and other Islamist extremist groups.

The remainder have gone missing at the hands of rebel and Kurdish militant groups.

Arrests begin

In 2011, Syrians took to the streets as a part of the so-called Arab Spring protests across the Middle East, calling for regime change. Syrian President Bashar Al Assad was quick to order a violent clampdown on the largely peaceful protests, which ended up spiralling out of control into a brutal conflict, later muddied when internatio­nal players joined the fray. It is estimated that the bloody war has killed at least half a million people, and displaced at least half of Syria’s population.

In the early days of the uprising, hundreds of peaceful activists were arrested and thrown into regime prisons. The government, of course, labels these people as terrorists or colluders. However, the list of arrests ranges widely from activists to doctors to humanitari­an workers and lawyers. Those considered disloyal to the Syrian regime, or those who were related to wanted individual­s, were also targeted for forced disappeara­nces, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

Those who inquired about their relatives had to pay hefty bribes to “middlemen”, “brokers”, or “mediators” for informatio­n on the whereabout­s and health of the disappeare­d. The “middlemen” were usually people with ties to the authoritie­s, possibly prison guards, lawyers or former detainees. The sums family members paid for informatio­n ranged from hundreds of dollars to tens of thousands.

Families traumatise­d

Compoundin­g the financial strain for relatives of the missing is the mental and physical distress of a missing family member.

Having someone from their fam- ily disappeare­d isolates the family, making neighbours and relatives fearful that they might also get in trouble.

Speaking to Gulf News, Obeida Shubayji reflected on the trauma he experience­d when his father Mohammad and uncle Yahya disappeare­d.

The men were from the Damascus suburb of Daraya — a place that bore the brunt of regime repression for its activism.

Hundreds of residents were arrested by the regime.

As the oldest child, Obeida took it upon himself to be strong for his grandmothe­r, mother and younger siblings. But the agony of living each day without any informatio­n about his father took a toll on him. “It is one thing to experience loss and to bury a loved one, but another experience entirely when you do not know whether that loved one is dead or alive,” Obeida said.

When nearly two years passed without any clear word about their whereabout­s, he began to assume the worst. He had also heard many stories of prisoners being tortured to death in regime prisons.

“I had to start to prepare my younger siblings, who didn’t understand what was happening, for the worst. I started to explain to them what a martyr is and what heaven is. Of course, my grandmothe­r never wanted to believe it and held out hope she would one day be reunited with her son.”

In 2013, the family received a government notice that Mohammad and Yahya had been executed in prison.

“My entire family broke down in tears and my grandmothe­r had a breakdown. I will never forget the sound of her agonising cries,” Obeida said.

The family’s pain, however, has never fully subsided due to the fact that the bodies have never been released.

“Even though the civil registry listed Mohammad and Yahya as dead, legally they are still classified as disappeare­d because the government failed to produce their bodies,” Fadel Abdul Al Gany told Gulf News.

Importance of documentat­ion

Although many Syrians have yet to get closure about the whereabout­s of their loved ones, Al Gany believes the work his group is doing is giving them a bit of comfort.

“At least the documentat­ion is there and they know their stories are out there. Having defeated the uprising, Al Assad’s backers, like Russia and Iran, are working to change the narrative and facts on the ground, but our work and the work of other internatio­nal organisati­ons stand in their way.”

Elusive justice

Asked about a recent Russian drive to repatriate Syrian refugees, Al Gany is not optimistic people will feel safe to return. “Our logo is there is no justice without accountabi­lity. While there is talk that the Syrian war is ending, I do not believe this is the case,” he told Gulf News.

“The situation in Syria is still terrible. The regime did not change its barbaric ways. Actually it has become more brutal because it was able to get away with committing atrocities without any internatio­nal repercussi­ons.”

Death notices released

After years of government silence about the fate of tens of thousands of Syrians, authoritie­s this year have begun quietly updating registers to acknowledg­e hundreds of deaths.

Starting in April, families began discoverin­g what happened to their loved ones by chance when they requested records from register offices, rights groups and Syrians said. “Mothers are going to see if their sons are on the lists. Those that find out drop to the ground and faint,” Fadwa Mahmoud, a Syrian refugee, now living in Germany, told Reuters. She still hasn’t received word about her missing husband or son.

 ??  ?? “Even though the civil registry listed Mohammad and Yahya as dead, legally they are still classified as disappeare­d because the government failed to produce their bodies.”Fadel Abdul Al Gany | SNHR chief 81,652 disappeara­nces blamed on the Syrian regime ON THE WEB Al Assad’s mindless lust for power Syria is a moral defeat for the West 95,056 Syrians forcibly disappeare­d since 2011
“Even though the civil registry listed Mohammad and Yahya as dead, legally they are still classified as disappeare­d because the government failed to produce their bodies.”Fadel Abdul Al Gany | SNHR chief 81,652 disappeara­nces blamed on the Syrian regime ON THE WEB Al Assad’s mindless lust for power Syria is a moral defeat for the West 95,056 Syrians forcibly disappeare­d since 2011

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