Mazen al-Hamada

Last updated

Mazen al-Hamada
Born1977 (1977)
Deir ez-Zor, Syria
DisappearedFebruary 23, 2020 (aged 42–43)
Status Missing for 4 years, 2 months and 20 days

Mazen al-Hamada (born 1977) is a Syrian activist from Deir ez-Zor. [1] Hamada was imprisoned and tortured for one and a half years for participating in anti-government protests in the context of the Arab Spring in 2011. After being exiled from Syria, he became an asylum seeker in the Netherlands where he publicly testified to the abuse he suffered. On February 23, 2020, Hamada became the victim of enforced disappearance, when he was arrested by Syrian intelligence. He has been missing since then.

Contents

Biography

Hamada was a graduate of the Institute of the Petroleum Industry,[ citation needed ] and working as a technician for the French multinational oil and gas company Schlumberger. [2]

He took part in demonstrations calling for more freedom and democracy, and decided to film these events with his phone. [2] Hamada was arrested for the first time on April 24, 2011, by Syrian intelligence services. [3] He was released a week later. After a second arrest on December 29, 2011, and two weeks of detention in the same branch, he decided to leave for Damascus. [4] [ better source needed ]

Arrests, imprisonment, and torture

In March 2012, Hamada attempted to smuggle 55 packages of baby formula to a suburb of Damascus. Soon after, Hamada and his two nephews were arrested. They were brought to the branch of the air force intelligence service of Mezzeh Military Airport. Hamada's two nephews would later die in detention. [1] [3] Two weeks after the arrest, he was detained "in a small hangar, a little more than forty feet long and twenty feet wide" [1] with 170 other prisoners. [5]

Under torture, Hamada was forced to confess to being a terrorist, possessing weapons, and the murder of government soldiers. When he refused to confess, agents were called to come and torture him. He was beaten and suspended by the wrists. To alleviate his suffering, he agreed to sign a forced confession, admitting that he possessed a weapon to protect the demonstrators, but he refused to admit having committed any crimes. He was then transferred to another interrogation room, where he was undressed and sexually abused. After this torture he signed all of the documents. [1] [6]

At the beginning of 2013, he was ill and taken to military hospital 601, nicknamed by other detainees as a "slaughterhouse". In transit to the hospital, Hamada was physically assaulted. He was told to forget his name, and was assigned the number "1858". There he saw detainees tortured to death, corpses piling up in the toilets and hospital staff beating patients to death. Hamada begged the doctor to be returned to detention. [1] [5]

Back at Mezzeh airport he was treated for a month by a detained doctor, before being transferred to the Qaboun military police on June 1, 2013, and then to Adra Prison on June 5, 2013, where he remained for about two months.[ citation needed ] Mazen eventually was taken to the anti-terrorism court, [1] which ordered his release on September 3, 2013.[ citation needed ]

During his imprisonment, which lasted 1 year and 7 months, Hamada was violently tortured. He suffered physical, mental, and sexual abuse. Mazen has permanent physical and psychological injuries from his detention in government prisons, including genital injuries that made having children impossible. [6] [7]

Exile

After his release, Mazen al-Hamada was still wanted by the intelligence services. He therefore decided to leave Syria and asked for asylum in the Netherlands. [7]

Return to Syria and forced disappearance

Hamada decided to try to return to Syria. This decision was incomprehensible to his relatives and the people who have met him. [6]

According to his friends and family, Hamada suffered a lot, both physically, from the consequences of torture and psychologically, both from not having a future and not being able to testify against the Syrian government in court. Hamada also was demoralized because he felt his many testimonies, interviews, and demonstrations had little effect for the people still detained in Syria. Hamada also had significant financial problems. Eventually Hamada cut himself off from friends, and felt that he could not find a therapist who seemed to understand what he had been through. [6]

Hamada wanted to help the Syrians still detained, and he felt powerless to improve their situation. He seems to have been approached by people from the Syrian embassy, close to the Assad regime, and to have been lured back to Syria with promises of releasing detainees. [6] Hamada wrote that he was ready to sacrifice himself to save others.[ citation needed ]

Hamada went to Berlin where he obtained a passport and visa from the embassy. [6] Upon his arrival at Damascus airport on February 23, 2020, Hamada was apprehended by the regime's security services, and has been missing since. [6] [8] [9]

See also

Related Research Articles

Tadmor prison was located in Palmyra in the deserts of eastern Syria approximately 200 kilometers northeast of Damascus.

Mezzeh prison is a now-defunct Syrian prison overlooking the capital, Damascus. Mezzeh is the name of a neighborhood in western Damascus.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Human rights in Syria</span>

The situation for human rights in Syria is considered one of the worst in the world and has been globally condemned by international organizations like the United Nations, Human rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the European Union. Civil liberties, political rights, freedom of speech and assembly are virtually non-existent under the Ba'athist government of Bashar al-Assad; which is regarded as "one of the world's most repressive regimes". The 50th edition of Freedom in the World, the annual report published by Freedom House since 1973, designates Syria as "Worst of the Worst" among the "Not Free" countries. The report lists Syria as one of the two countries to get the lowest possible score (1/100).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mezzeh</span> Municipality in Damascus Governorate, Syria

Mezzeh is a municipality in Damascus, Syria, due west of Kafr Sousa. It lies to the southwest of central Damascus, along the Mezzeh highway.

Dr Ammar Al-Qurabi is a Syrian human rights activist and executive director of the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria since April 2006. He was elected in April 2011 as member of the board of trustees of the Arab Human Rights Organization in Syria.

This article details the Syrian government's response to protests and civilian uprisings of the Syrian revolution which began in early 2011, that unravelled the socio-political stability of Syria, eventually plunging the country into a nationwide civil war by mid-2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mazen Darwish</span> Syrian lawyer and free speech advocate

Mazen Darwish is a Syrian lawyer and free speech advocate. He is the president of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression. News organizations, including Reuters and the Associated Press, have described him as one of Syria's most prominent activists. He was imprisoned in Syria from 2012 until his release in August 2015.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sednaya Prison</span> Syrian military jail, near Damascus

Sednaya Prison, nicknamed the "Human Slaughterhouse" is a military prison near Damascus in Syria operated by the Syrian government. The prison has been used to hold thousands of prisoners, both civilian detainees and anti-government rebels. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) estimated in January 2021 that 30,000 detainees have perished in Sednaya from torture, ill-treatment and mass executions since the outbreak of the Syrian Civil War, while Amnesty International estimated in February 2017 "that between 5,000 and 13,000 people were extrajudicially executed at Saydnaya between September 2011 and December 2015."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mezzeh Military Airport</span> Airport in Mezzeh, Damascus

Mezzeh Military Airport is a Syrian Air Force military air base located in Mezzeh, Damascus, Syria, south-west of the old centre of Damascus. It has one runway of 8258 ft length, at elevation 2407 ft. In mid-2013 the airport was described by the BBC as "an important strategic installation [which] plays a significant role in distributing the government's military supplies." Reuters reported in mid-2013 that it was "used by Syria's elite Republican Guards, Special Forces and Air Force Intelligence, [and] also serves as a private airport for the Assad family." It also said that during the Syrian civil war the base was "used to fire rockets and artillery at rebellious Sunni Muslim neighbourhoods on the edge of the capital." The location of the Mezzeh military airport has also been used by the Syrian regime as a jail to imprison opponents during the Syrian civil war. Various inquiries and investigations reported that acts of tortures and possible war crimes were committed in the jails of Mezzeh military airport.

The 2014 Syrian detainee report, also known as the Caesar Report, formally titled A Report into the credibility of certain evidence with regard to Torture and Execution of Persons Incarcerated by the current Syrian regime, is a report that claims to detail "the systematic killing of more than 11,000 detainees by the Syrian government in one region during the Syrian Civil War over a two and half year period from March 2011 to August 2013". It was released on 21 January 2014, a day before talks were due to begin at the Geneva II Conference on Syria, and was commissioned by the government of Qatar. Qatar has been a key funder of the rebels in Syria. The Syrian government questioned the report due to its ties to hostile sides against the Syrian government and pointed to how many of the photos were identified as casualties among international terrorists fighting the Syrian government or Syrian army troops or civilians massacred by them due to supporting the Syrian government.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mansour al-Omari</span> Syrian journalist and human rights activist

Mansour al-Omari is a Syrian journalist and human rights defender, he contributed to the documentation of human rights violations in Syria with the beginning of the Syrian Uprising. al-Omari was born in the Syrian capital of Damascus in 1979 to a middle-class family, and he was raised in Damascus. al-Omari studied English literature at Damascus University. While a student in college he started his translation and journalism work.

From 1964 until 2011, the State of Emergency Law in Syria allowed government forces to arbitrarily detain political suspects at will for unlimited duration of time. During this time, tens of thousands have reportedly been arrested, tortured, and held in isolation for months to years without charge or trial. Although the state of emergency was lifted in 2011 at the outbreak of the Syrian Civil War, arrests continue. Civil society activists, media workers, and medical and humanitarian workers have reportedly been targeted by government forces, pro-government militias, and increasingly by non-state armed groups.

Nizar Nayyouf is a Syrian journalist, human rights activist, and dissident. He was one of the founding members of the Committee for the Defence of Democratic Freedom, a banned political organization in Syria, as well as editor-in-chief of صوت الديمقراطيِّة Sawt al-Democratiyya. He has criticized the Syrian government for human rights abuses, for which he was arrested and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment in 1991, most of which he spent in Mezzeh prison outside Damascus.

Yara Bader, also known as Yara Badr, is a Syrian journalist and human rights activist. She leads the independent Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression (CMFE), founded in Damascus in 2004, along with her husband, prominent lawyer and free speech advocate Mazen Darwish.

International and national courts outside Syria have begun the prosecution of Syrian civil war criminals. War crimes perpetrated by the Syrian government or rebel groups include extermination, murder, rape or other forms of sexual violence, torture and imprisonment. "[A]ccountability for serious violations of international humanitarian law and human rights is central to achieving and maintaining durable peace in Syria", stated UN Under-Secretary-General Rosemary DiCarlo.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Omar Alshogre</span> Syrian refugee, torture survivor, a public speaker and human rights activist

Omar Alshogre is a Syrian refugee, a public speaker and a human rights activist. He is currently the Director for Detainee Affairs at the Syrian Emergency Task Force. He is known for his efforts to raise awareness of human rights abuses in Syria and his personal experience of torture and starvation by the Syrian government during his three years of detention.

Khalil Maatouk is a Syrian lawyer and human rights defender. Arrested at a roadblock in October 2012, he has been missing since then.

Anwar Raslan is a Syrian former colonel who led a unit of Syria's General Intelligence Directorate. In January 2022, he was convicted of crimes against humanity in a German Higher Regional Court under universal jurisdiction. The specific charges against him were 4,000 counts of torture, 58 counts of murder, rape, and sexual coercion. His case was the first international war crimes case against a member of the Syrian government during the presidency of Bashar al-Assad.

Wafa Mustafa is a Syrian journalist and activist who campaigns for the release of Syrian detainees. As an activist and former member of Families for Freedom, Mustafa has extensively lobbied the United Nations Security Council to call for the release of the names and locations of all those that Syrian authorities have in captivity. She calls for all detainees in Syria to be freed, whether they are held by the Assad regime or by opposition groups, though she also supports the public demonstrations that began in 2011 against the government of Bashar al-Assad.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mazen Al-Tarazi</span> Syrian businessperson

Mazen Samir Al-Tarazi, also known as Mazen Al Tarazi and Mazin Al Tarazi, is a Syrian-Canadian businessman with close ties to the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad. He has significant activities in the media sector in Kuwait. He is the founder and CEO of Marketing Group for Advertising, Publishing and Distribution and the Dar al-Hadaf Newspaper Company, which he founded with Kuwaiti businessman Ahmed Al-Jarallah. Until December 2022, he was a board member of Dar Al Seyassah Company for Printing, Publishing and Distribution WLL in Kuwait, the publisher of the Arab Times and Al-Seyassah newspapers. He is sanctioned by the United Kingdom and EU for his material support to the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Taub, Ben (April 11, 2016). "Exposing Assad's War Crimes". The New Yorker. Condé Nast. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  2. 1 2 Bussard, Stéphane (March 5, 2021). "Mazen al-Hamada, un tragique destin syrien". Le Temps (in French). ISSN   1423-3967 . Retrieved December 11, 2021.
  3. 1 2 Bussard, Stéphane (March 14, 2017). "Le combat de Mazen, digne survivant de la dictature syrienne". Le Temps (in French). ISSN   1423-3967 . Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  4. "Center for Documentation of Violations in Syria - The Testimony of the Detainee: Mazen Besais Hamada On Air Force Branch-Mazzeh Military Airport". www.vdc-sy.info. Retrieved December 11, 2021.
  5. 1 2 Cluzel, Thomas (March 17, 2017). "La Syrie, une salle de torture". France Culture (in French). Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Sly, Liz (March 4, 2021). "He told the world about his brutal torture in Syria. Then, mysteriously, he went back". Washington Post . Retrieved December 11, 2021.
  7. 1 2 Mohammad, Linah (March 29, 2021). Where is Mazen al-Hamada?. Washington Post . Retrieved December 11, 2021.
  8. "Re-arrest of former detainee Mazen al-Hamada". www.shrc.org. Retrieved December 11, 2021.
  9. "What's Happened to Mazen Hamada?". The Syrian Observer. February 25, 2020. Retrieved December 18, 2021.