Hadeel Kouki (born circa 1992) is a former human rights activist from Syria.
In early March 2011, while a 19-year-old student at the University of Aleppo, Kouki claims she was detained by Bashar al-Assad's government for 40 days and held in solitary confinement for distributing pro-revolution flyers. [1] She had no access to legal counsel and was allowed no visitors. Over the next few months she was arrested and detained twice more for attending demonstrations. In December 2011, when military intelligence agents summoned her, intending to arrest her for providing medical aid to protesters, she fled the country. [2] At first she hid in the desert, later making her way to Turkey with the help of the Free Syrian Army. [3] From there, she traveled to France and Sweden, and later to Egypt, working to help the Syrian opposition. Her family has since migrated to Europe, some of them smuggling themselves there by boat. [4]
On February 23, 2012, she claims Syrian secret police broke into her apartment in Cairo, Egypt, threatened her life, and severely beat her. [5] [6]
Kouki has addressed the United Nations Human Rights Council, [7] the Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy, [8] the New America Foundation, [9] the United States Institute of Peace, [10] and other groups.
Referring to the Assad regime during a speech in Lebanon, she said, "This regime under no terms could be considered as a protector of minority rights or of Christians." She has criticized the administration of President Barack Obama for not doing more to help Middle Eastern minorities such as Syrian Christians, secular Syrians, and Kurds. [2] She has also criticized Christian religious leaders for failing to speak out: "None of the Christian figures or leaders asked for us when we were being tortured or beaten in prisons." [4]
She has since been offered political asylum in a Western country. [1]
Ammar Abdulhamid is a Syrian-born author, human rights activist, political dissident, co-founder and president of the Tharwa Foundation. Ammar was featured in the Arabic version of Newsweek Magazine as one of 43 people making a difference in the Arab world in May 2005.
The Air Force Intelligence Directorate is an intelligence service of Syria, possibly the country's most powerful, owing its importance to Hafez al-Assad's role as the Air Force commander. Despite its name, it is mainly involved with issues other than air force intelligence, and took an active part in the suppression of the Muslim Brotherhood rebellion in the 1980s. Agents of this service have frequently been stationed in Syrian embassies or branch offices of the national airline.
Political Security Directorate is an intelligence service of the Syrian government. It is divided into an Internal Security Department and an External Security Department. It is active against the Syrian opposition. The PSD runs the detention centres of the Syrian regime. It monitors political dissent and all media outlets, as well as registered parties.
Sarah Leah Whitson is an American lawyer and former director of the Middle East and North Africa division of Human Rights Watch.
CyberDissidents.org is a division of Advancing Human Rights, a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization. CyberDissidents.org focuses on the human rights of online political activists. The group believes that highlighting the plight of individual democratic dissidents in the West affords a measure of protection against government oppression.
Tal Dosr al-Mallohi born January 4, 1991 is a Syrian blogger from Homs. In December 2009, Tal was taken from her home by Syrian forces, which took issue with the contents of her blog.
Haitham al-Maleh is a Syrian human rights activist and former judge. He is a critic of the current Syrian government under Bashar al-Assad and has been imprisoned by the Syrian government because he was calling for constitutional reforms. Maleh became an important opposition figure in the Syrian Civil War.
International reactions to the Syrian Civil War ranged from support for the government to calls for the government to dissolve. The Arab league, United Nations and Western governments in 2011 quickly condemned the Syrian government's response to the protests which later evolved into the Syrian Civil War as overly heavy-handed and violent. Many Middle Eastern governments initially expressed support for the government and its "security measures", but as the death toll mounted, especially in Hama, they switched to a more balanced approach, criticizing violence from both government and protesters. Russia and China vetoed two attempts at United Nations Security Council sanctions against the Syrian government.
The following is a timeline of the Syrian uprising from September to December 2011. This period saw the uprising take on many of the characteristics of a civil war, according to several outside observers, including the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, as armed elements became better organized and began carrying out successful attacks in retaliation for the ongoing crackdown by the Syrian government on demonstrators and defectors.
Razan Zaitouneh is a Syrian human rights lawyer and civil society activist. Actively involved in the Syrian uprising, she went into hiding after being accused by the government of being a foreign agent and her husband was arrested. Zaitouneh has documented human rights in Syria for the Local Coordination Committees of Syria. Zaitouneh was kidnapped on 9 December 2013, most likely by Jaysh al-Islam. Her fate remains unknown. It is suspected that she has been killed.
The National Coordination Committee for Democratic Change (NCC), or National Coordination Body for Democratic Change (NCB), is a Syrian bloc chaired by Hassan Abdel Azim consisting of 13 left-wing political parties and "independent political and youth activists". It has been defined by Reuters as the internal opposition's main umbrella group. The NCC initially had several Kurdish political parties as members, but all except for the Democratic Union Party left in October 2011 to join the Kurdish National Council. Some opposition activists have accused the NCC of being a "front organization" for Bashar al-Assad's government and some of its members of being ex-government insiders.
Razan Ghazzawi is a Syrian-American blogger, campaigner and activist and currently a PhD researcher at the University of Sussex. She has been highly involved in the events during the Syrian Civil War, and has been particularly outspoken on activists' arrests and the violations of human rights committed by the Bashar al-Assad government. She was called "iconic blogger and leading activist" by The Telegraph. Jillian York wrote that Ghazzawi was "one of [her] heroes."
Human rights violations during the Syrian civil war have been numerous and serious, with United Nations reports stating that the war has been "characterized by a complete lack of adherence to the norms of international law" by the warring parties who have "caused civilians immeasurable suffering". For a relatively small number of these war crimes, prosecution of Syrian civil war criminals has resulted.
Brian J. Dooley is an Irish human rights activist and author. He is Senior Advisor to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, and Senior Advisor at Washington DC-based NGO Human Rights First. He is a prominent human rights voice on Twitter (@dooley_dooley).
Women played a variety of roles in the Arab Spring, but its impact on women and their rights is unclear. The Arab Spring was a series of demonstrations, protests, and civil wars against authoritarian regimes that started in Tunisia and spread to much of the Arab world. The leaders of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and Yemen were overthrown; Bahrain has experienced sustained civil disorder, and the protests in Syria have become a civil war. Other Arab countries experienced protests as well.
The civil uprising phase of the Syrian Civil War, or as it was sometimes called by the media, the Syrian Revolution, was an early stage of protests – with subsequent violent reaction by the Syrian Arab Republic – lasting from March to 28 July 2011, as part of the wider spread Arab Spring in the Arab world. The uprising, initially demanding democratic reforms, evolved from initially minor protests, beginning as early as January 2011 and transformed into massive protests in March.
The Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy is an annual human rights summit sponsored by a coalition of 20 non-governmental organizations. Each year, on the eve of the United Nations Human Rights Council's main annual session, activists from around the world meet to raise international awareness of human rights situations.
Rosa María Payá Acevedo is a Cuban activist for freedom and human rights. The daughter of activist Oswaldo Payá, head of the Christian Liberation Movement, she took up much of his activist work after he died by involuntary manslaughter of Ángel Carromero on 22 July 2012.
Dima Moussa is a Syrian lawyer, feminist and politician who was elected vice president of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces in May 2018.
Karam Alhamad is a Syrian journalist and human rights activist, and former political detainee. Alhamad is also known for his efforts to cover the Syrian uprising, including being jailed four times between 2011 and 2014.