The Guardian (USA)

Syrian man accused over 2013 massacre arrested in Germany

- Michael Safi

A Syrian man accused of leading a pro-government militia in Tadamon, a Damascus neighbourh­ood that was the site of a massacre of civilians in 2013 filmed by its perpetrato­rs and revealed by the Guardian last year, has been arrested in northern Germany.

The suspect, identified as Ahmad H in line with German privacy rules, is the first person to be detained in connection with crimes in Tadamon, where militia and soldiers loyal to the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, brutalised the local population – recording some of their acts – in the early years of the country’s civil war.

He is accused of crimes against humanity and war crimes including torture and enslavemen­t, prosecutor­s said on Thursday.

They said the Syrian national was a local leader of the Shabiha, a proregime paramilita­ry group tasked with suppressin­g political opponents. The group is accused of regularly detaining civilians at checkpoint­s in Tadamon, whom they tortured, extorted or forced into labour, prosecutor­s said.

Twenty-seven extremely graphic videos of Shabiha and Syrian soldiers carrying out massacres and disposing of dozens of bodies in the neighbourh­ood were leaked from a Syrian government laptop to two academics based in Europe in 2019.

The academics – Prof Uğur Üngör, from the University of Amsterdam’s Institute of Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and the researcher Annsar Shahhoud –identified many of the perpetrato­rs in the videos, including a Syrian military intelligen­ce official named Amjad Yusuf.

Over the next two years, they befriended Yusuf on Facebook and – using a fake identity – persuaded him to take part in several secretly recorded discussion­s in which he openly discussed his crimes and motivation­s.

The story of their investigat­ion and redacted footage of one of the massacres was published by the Guardian in April last year, triggering worldwide condemnati­on and anger inside Syria’s tightly controlled society. Shortly after, in an apparent effort to quell discontent, the Assad government released scores of long-term political prisoners.

Üngör and Shahhoud turned over the footage of the killings and their interviews to investigat­ors in France, Germany and the Netherland­s, where authoritie­s have opened war crimes investigat­ions and sought to hunt down any perpetrato­rs who may have fled to Europe.

Ahmad H, understood by the Guardian to be an associate of Yusuf, is accused of “personally participat­ing in the abuse of civilians in various occasions”, German prosecutor­s said.

They allege he slapped a man in one incident in 2013 and then ordered his colleagues to beat him with plastic pipes for several hours. In another incident from autumn 2014, Ahmad H is accused of taking part in the beating of a civilian at a checkpoint.

“The accused grabbed the victim’s hair and slammed his head onto the sidewalk,” the statement said. He is also accused of forcing between 25 and 30 people to work for a day transporti­ng sandbags to a frontline.

Germany has allowed hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees to resettle in its country since the outbreak of the civil war in 2011. The overwhelmi­ng majority were civilians who fled violence, but among their ranks were some pro-regime leaders and fighters.

Since then, German prosecutor­s have sought to use the country’s universal jurisdicti­on laws – permitting the state to prosecute crimes against humanity regardless of where they took place – to hold Syrian war criminals accountabl­e.

In a historic ruling in February last year, Anwar Raslan, a former Syrian secret police officer, was sentenced to life in prison for crimes against humanity for his part in overseeing the deaths of 27 detainees and the torture of at least 4,000 others at a jail near Damascus.

Earlier this year, a Palestinia­n man living in Syria and who fled to Germany was sentenced to life in prison for firing a grenade into a crowd of civilians in a Damascus suburb in 2014.

Ahmad H was arrested in Bremen on Wednesday and has been remanded in pre-trial detention.

 ?? The Asahi Shimbun/Getty Images ?? Soldiers walk through the Tadamon district of Damascus in September 2013. Photograph:
The Asahi Shimbun/Getty Images Soldiers walk through the Tadamon district of Damascus in September 2013. Photograph:
 ?? Guardian Video ?? A video still from Tadamon, the scene of a massacre of civilians in 2013. Photograph:
Guardian Video A video still from Tadamon, the scene of a massacre of civilians in 2013. Photograph:

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