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KurdistanObserver.com
Syrian Regime Detains 2500 Kurds in the
infamous Seidnaya Prison
SYRIA: Activists welcome prisoner releases
DAMASCUS, 6 November (IRIN) - The recent
release of 190 political prisoners in Syriawas lauded by local human rights
activists and lawyers, although they say the government must put an end to the
country's 42-year-old emergency law and its wide use of security courts.
"We welcome all prisoner releases," said Anwar
al Bunni, a human rights lawyer and Chairman of the Syrian Centre for Judicial
Research. "But the fact that they didn't release all prisoners suggests the
regime is only interested in improving its image."
He added: "The government is playing for time
rather than coming to a clear decision to release all political prisoners and
cancel the use of exceptional courts."
The prisoners were pardoned by Syrian President
Bashar Assad on 2 November in a move which state news agency SANA reported was
meant to "fortify national unity."
Significantly, the release comes in the wake of
intense international pressure following a recent UN resolution demanding full
Syrian cooperation in an ongoing investigation into the assassination of former
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
Since coming to power in 2000, President Assad
has released hundreds of political prisoners, but it remains unclear how many
continue to be held in Syrian jails. Estimates vary from between 1,500 to 2,500,
mostly Kurdish and Islamist detainees, held mainly in the infamous Seidnaya
prison, 50 km north of Damascus.
Prisoners are also reportedly held at a number
of local security prisons administrated by the 15 different branches of Syria's
intelligence services.
According to human rights lawyers, 101 of the
recent releases were members of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood, which was
outlawed in 1980 after the organisation led an armed uprising against the state.
Six members of the radical Hizb ul-Tahrir, the
Islamic Liberation Party, were also released. According to a statement from the
group issued on 5 October, members of the party were tortured while in prison.
Syrian authorities, meanwhile, have not
responded to these claims.
Also released were some 50 Kurds, arrested
after clashes with Arab groups in the northern city of Qamishli in March 2004;
20 members of Palestinian organisations; 20 members of the Democratic Socialist
Arab Ba'ath Party; and six people accused of espionage.
Muhammad Ra'dun, head of the Arab Organisation
for Human Rights in Syria, was also released, having been held since May for
openly criticising human rights abuses by the regime. Ali al-Abdullah, a
dissident writer also jailed in May after publicly reading a statement from an
exiled leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, was pardoned.
Veteran human rights activist Haithem Maleh
welcomed the releases, but pointed out that six remaining detainees from the
so-called "Damascus Spring" group were still imprisoned. The group emerged in
2000 following a brief thaw in political life in the wake of President Assad's
assumption of power, but was soon subject to a crackdown by the authorities.
"This step is not enough. There is no reason
for the remaining prisoners to be in jail," said Maleh.
When questioned on whether any of the released
detainees had complained of torture while in prison Maleh, said: "Anyone who is
arrested is automatically tortured. Torture is normal."
In a 4 November statement from Amnesty
International, the organisation stated that it "greatly welcomes" the release,
but continues its call for the "immediate and unconditional release" of
remaining "prisoners of conscience."
The statement urged Syrian authorities to
"promptly implement meaningful reform of the justice sector and significantly
curtail the powers of the security forces."
In a September 2004 report, Amnesty
International cited "38 types of torture and ill-treatment" that had been
documented in Syrian prisons.
Human rights lawyers also re-issued a
longstanding call for the government to open a file on the hundreds of suspected
opponents of the state, both Syrian and foreign, who have "disappeared" over the
years after being detained by Syrian security forces.
Syrian emergency laws allow for the use of
security courts, where cases that "threaten the national interest" are tried
quickly and without recourse to appeal. According to the UN Human Rights
Committee, such courts are "incompatible with the provisions of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Syria is a state
party."
The official Syrian news agency promised
"further steps to be taken in this regard." |