Searching for Justice and the Missing in the New Syria

When human rights attorney Noura Ghazi received the news in early December that Bashar al-Assad had fled Syria, she was overcome with shock. The regime had dictated the terms of her family’s life for as long as she could remember. When she was just 5 years old, the regime imprisoned her father for his labor activism. Her husband, in turn, was detained during the first years of the Syrian civil war. She would later learn that Assad’s government had executed her husband in prison. Now Assad was gone.
As rebel fighters overtook Damascus last month, they unlatched prison doors, allowing thousands of Syrians to walk free. People freed from Sednaya Prison, notorious as a “human slaughterhouse,” or prisons in cities like Homs rejoiced in the light of day in images circulated widely online. But as misinformation about the missing also swirled online, complicating the good news, Ghazi had little time to celebrate.
Her organization Nophotozone, which she co-founded with her late husband Bassel Khartabil Safadi, represents 3,500 Syrian families whose loved ones were arbitrarily detained by the Assad government. An estimated 150,000 people have gone missing within Syria’s prison system throughout the civil war. With the majority of her clients’ family members remaining unaccounted for, Ghazi and her colleagues have spent the past month, through many sleepless nights, searching for them and providing medical attention to newly released individuals.
At the same time that they work to locate the living, her organization is scrambling to preserve recently unearthed documents, formerly kept under lock and key, that the Assad regime used to record their abuses.
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As the country starts to rebuild and shape its new government after more than 50 years of dictatorship, Syrians are grappling with a complex search toward accountability for the war crimes committed by the Assad regime. Throughout Assad’s rule, the government imprisoned, tortured, and executed thousands of people. Its military killed thousands more during the civil war, targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure, such as hospitals, with bombs and chemical warfare. Various rebel factions have also been accused of human rights abuses. While the overthrow has brought an end to the fighting, scars of the war threaten the newfound peace.
“In rebuilding Syria, there will be no peace without justice and accountability,” Ghazi told The Intercept.

Photo: Hasan Belal/Anadolu/Getty Images
Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, which led the 10-day offensive against Assad and has announced it will remain in place as the transitional government until March, has indicated it is serious about addressing war crimes of the past. It has announced the formation of a judicial and human rights commission that will help shape its constitution and has said it has a list of senior officials involved in torture, pledging rewards to those who have information that could lead to the capture of others.
Fear about how the country’s new Sunni Islamist rulers will act toward Syria’s various minorities, such as the Kurds and Alawites, is already brewing. Some rights groups and critics have pointed to HTS’s own alleged rights abuses and violent crackdowns during its time ruling the Idlib province as cause for concern.
But other rights groups credit HTS for aiding efforts to preserve evidence of mass atrocities. Along with its prisons, the Syrian government also abandoned its intelligence offices as they fled, where troves of documents and case files are kept, detailing the actions of its military and police forces. Syrian civil society organizations have rushed to enter these facilities to record as many documents that can be used to build cases for future war crimes prosecution as possible.
This approach has yielded results in the past. Earlier in the civil war, the Syrian government abandoned its intelligence facilities in regions overtaken by rebel forces. The Syrian Justice and Accountability Centre was able to collect 500,000 pages of documents from those offices, which it has stored, analyzed, and used in prosecution of cases against the Assad government throughout Europe, in the U.S., and other jurisdictions, said Roger Lu Phillips, the organization’s legal director.
“Some individuals are trying to destroy the documentation, probably remnants of the Assad regime.”
In recent weeks, the group has deployed Syrian-led teams to access the newly opened buildings to photograph as many documents it considers high-value as possible, Phillips said. Some of the facilities are guarded by HTS fighters, who have allowed human rights volunteers and press to enter at times, but have at other times denied entry. Other facilities lack any such guards, leaving potential evidence vulnerable to damage.
“Some of the locations we entered into, we go back in a day later and the place has been burned,” Phillips said. “Some individuals are trying to destroy the documentation, probably remnants of the Assad regime, concerned with proof of what lies in the facilities.”
Ghazi, with Nophotozone, has been vocal about the need to preserve government documents and has criticized the mishandling of documents at prison facilities, hampering efforts to locate the missing. Last month, she posted a video from Sednaya Prison showing individuals stepping on piles of documents scattered across the floor, calling on authorities and international groups to intervene. Her organization has since entered an agreement with HTS and is working with the interim government to help preserve the documents that remain and share them with international bodies, such as the International Committee of the Red Cross.
“The most important step now is to protect the evidence, the documents, the mass graves, and then to study everything,” Ghazi said. “It needs to be a really long process in order to get to the accountability and achieve justice.”

Photo: Louai Beshara/AFP/Getty Images
Seeking justice within Syria was impossible with the Assad regime still in power. In the United Nations, Assad-allied Russia regularly thwarted previous attempts to refer war crime cases to The Hague with its veto vote in the U.N. Security Council. So Syrian civil society has turned to universal jurisdiction to pursue war criminals in courts in Europe, the United Kingdom, and the U.S. Universal jurisdiction allows governments, organizations, or individuals to prosecute people for war crimes within a country’s judicial system, even if the crimes were committed in another jurisdiction.
The Syrian government and pro-government forces have been responsible for the majority of atrocities in Syria, but due to lack of access to evidence and witnesses, the majority of Syrian war crimes cases in Europe and the U.S. have targeted the Islamic State group. The Syrian Justice and Accountability Centre has been involved in about 100 cases related to atrocities committed during the civil war, and has tracked 350 total cases unfolding across the globe, which Phillips referred to as “just a drop in the bucket.”
This strategy has found some success. In 2022, a judge in Germany handed a life sentence to Anwar Raslan, a former Syrian intelligence officer, for overseeing the torture of at least 4,000 people. He had fled to Europe seeking asylum before he was arrested in 2019.
Last May, after a trial held in absentia, Paris court sentenced three former high-ranking Syrian officials to life in prison for their role in the torture and killing of a French Syrian man and his son. Two of the men, Jamil Hassan and Abdul Salam Mahmoud, are also wanted by U.S. authorities, according to a Department of Justice complaint unsealed in December that accuses them of running a prison, infamous for torture, at the Mezzeh military airport in Damascus.

Photo: Emin Sansar/Anadolu/Getty Images
Also in France, prosecutors obtained an arrest warrant in 2023 for Assad himself, who is currently living under asylum in Russia. The case focuses on the chemical weapons attacks that Assad ordered in the Syrian cities of Ghouta and Douma in August 2013, where more than 1,000 people died, according to estimates, and hundreds more suffered injuries. Some died overnight as they slept.
The cases in Europe have been groundbreaking for Syrian society, in their scope and focus, allowing survivors and witnesses the chance to participate in criminal proceedings, with many giving harrowing testimony during trials, at times facing down the individuals who tortured them. But the European cases have also been reminders of how accountability for abuses had been absent within Syria’s own judicial system for decades under Assad.
“Right now, there’s a huge opportunity in Syria — accountability can mean a completely different thing — it’s not limited to what we can do in Europe or in the U.S.,” said Hadi Al-Khatib, founder of the Syrian Archive, which holds an open-source database of 3 million videos documenting war crimes in Syria. He and his organization have spent the last 10 years gathering and verifying the images through a painstaking vetting process to help prosecutors outside the country build criminal cases, including the landmark cases in France and the arrest warrant for Assad. Since December, when Syrian refugees began returning to the country, he and other groups have begun to form a new strategy with how to
Author Of article : Jonah Valdez
Saint James Talarico (he/him)
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