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KurdistanObserver.com
Syria: Rights Activists Detained In
Crackdown
24 Mar 2006 23
Source: Human Rights Watch
New York, March 25, 2006) – Syrian authorities
escalated a crackdown on the country's human rights activists by arresting four
of them over the past week, Human Rights Watch said today. As of Friday evening
Damascus time, only one had been released. Syrian security forces arrested Ali
al-Abdullah at his home at midday on Thursday. A few hours later, they returned
to arrest his son Muhammad, a law student and a human rights activist in his own
right. Ali and his son remain in detention. Another son, Omar, has been in
custody since March 18.
On Wednesday night, security forces detained
Muhammad Najati Tayyara, former vice-president of the Human Rights Association
in Syria. The authorities had summoned him for a meeting on Monday that he
declined to attend. Associates of Tayyara indicated that he was arrested for
remarks he made at a ceremony on March 12 held to commemorate the second
anniversary of clashes in March 2004 between Kurdish demonstrators and security
forces in the northern city of Qamishli that left more than 30 dead and 400
injured. The authorities released Tayyara late on Thursday evening after he had
spent 24 hours in a filthy jail cell.
"President Bashar al-Asad should immediately
free Ali al-Abdullah and his sons and order his security forces to halt this
blatant intimidation of human rights activists," said Joe Stork, deputy director
for the Middle East and North Africa at Human Rights Watch.
Since their arrest, the al-Abdullah family has
been unable to reach Ali or Muhammad, and the authorities have provided no
information regarding their whereabouts or the reasons for their detention. A
fellow activist told Human Rights Watch that on the day before their arrest, Ali
and Muhammad were monitoring the behavior of security forces outside the Supreme
State Security Court who were harassing relatives of defendants due to appear
before the court. Muhammad al-Abdullah told an officer that they had no right to
do so.
Another son, Omar, a university student
arrested on March 18 for campaigning to form a youth group, remains in
detention.
Ali and Muhammad were also both arrested in
2005 – Ali in May, for reading a message written by exiled Muslim Brotherhood
leader Ali Sader Eddine al-Bayanouni during a meeting of the Jamal Atassi
political discussion forum, and Muhammad in July, for participating in the
creation of a committee for the relatives of detainees in Syrian prisons.
Human Rights Watch called on President al-Asad
to end the harassment and persecution of human rights defenders and to release
Ali al-Abdullah and his two sons, Muhammad and Omar, immediately and without
condition.
These latest arrests fall within a pattern of
increased harassment of human rights activists in Syria. Two weeks ago, Syrian
security forces detained
Dr. Ammar Qurabi,
a spokesperson for the Arab Human Rights Organization in Syria, for 48 hours
following his return to Damascus from a trip to Washington, D.C., and Paris.
Last November, the human rights activist
Dr. Kamal al-Labwani
was arrested moments after he landed in Syria returning from a trip abroad. |