The Daily Telegraph

Assad’s lead role in war crimes exposed in smuggled files

- By David Blair CHIEF FOREIGN CORRESPOND­ENT

INTERNATIO­NAL investigat­ors have amassed the strongest evidence “since Nuremberg” for the prosecutio­n of Bashar al-Assad and his allies for war crimes, smuggling 600,000 pages of official documents out of Syria.

The trove, weighing several tons, includes the records of a secret committee of security chiefs placed in charge of crushing the revolt. Another 500,000 pages are still inside Syria, awaiting safe transit out of the country.

The evidence is being held in an undisclose­d European city by the Commission for Internatio­nal Justice and Accountabi­lity, an organisati­on of lawyers and investigat­ors partly funded by the British Government.

The most striking evidence concerns Assad’s response to the mass protests against his rule that swept Syria from 2011 onwards. He appointed a “Central Crisis Management Cell” and gave the security chiefs on this committee supreme responsibi­lity for suppressin­g the unrest.

The cell held daily meetings in Damascus, chaired by Mohammad Said Bekheitan, the second most senior member of the ruling Ba’ath party.

But the 24-year-old official who kept the committee’s records and transmitte­d its orders, Abdelmajid Barakat, was secretly working for the opposition. In 2013, he escaped from Syria into neighbouri­ng Turkey, taking as many of the cell’s documents as he could carry.

The paper trail shows that Assad himself “reviewed the proposals [of the cell], signed them, and returned them for implementa­tion”, according to the

New Yorker, adding: “Sometimes he made revisions, crossing out directives and adding new ones.” Mr Barakat was “certain that no security decision, no matter how small, was made without Assad’s approval”.

During this period, thousands of Assad’s opponents were killed, detained or tortured. Hospitals were transforme­d into torture centres, with bodies being stacked in the lavatories after the morgues overflowed.

Stephen Rapp, the former chief prosecutor of the United Nations court handling the Rwandan genocide, said “When the day of justice arrives, we’ll have much better evidence than we’ve had anywhere since Nuremberg.”

Mr Rapp described the evidence gathered in Syria as “much richer than anything I’ve seen – and anything I’ve prosecuted – in this area.”

At present, however, there is no court before which Assad or his allies could stand trial. Russia vetoed an attempt in 2014 to refer the situation in Syria to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

 ??  ?? A child walks past obliterate­d buildings in Deir Ezzor in 2013. ‘No security decision was made without Assad’s approval,’ say papers
A child walks past obliterate­d buildings in Deir Ezzor in 2013. ‘No security decision was made without Assad’s approval,’ say papers

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