With the fall of the Assad regime overnight and a transition process now underway, it feels good to be able to write more freely and freely use the term regime without having to worry about exposing contacts in regime-held territories to risk of arrest and reprisal, particularly given that one of my friends was being held in Saydnaya Prison and fortunately remained alive to get out among the freed prisoners.
I can’t help but reflect on Amnesty International’s 2017 report, “Human Slaughterhouse,” and hold onto the hope that while the rebels advocate for reconciliation and peace, the scoundrels and sadists who operated Assad’s hellish prisons will be brought to justice. The haunting image of dozens of weeping women being released from Saydnaya Prison, clutching one another in sheer disbelief, remains one of the most profoundly emotional moments I have ever witnessed. The vast infrastructure that enabled the operation of these prisons will undoubtedly be dismantled, but true justice demands accountability for those who perpetuated such atrocities.
Now syria will be ruled by isis and al Qaeda. Good luck
I can’t help but reflect on Amnesty International’s 2017 report, “Human Slaughterhouse,” and hold onto the hope that while the rebels advocate for reconciliation and peace, the scoundrels and sadists who operated Assad’s hellish prisons will be brought to justice. The haunting image of dozens of weeping women being released from Saydnaya Prison, clutching one another in sheer disbelief, remains one of the most profoundly emotional moments I have ever witnessed. The vast infrastructure that enabled the operation of these prisons will undoubtedly be dismantled, but true justice demands accountability for those who perpetuated such atrocities.
Dogs of the zionists.
What factions make up the Southern Operations Room? Are they all Druze?