Saturday, December 21, 2013

Islamists' Ghost Houses in Syria

The Wahabi/Ansar Sunna/Salafi/Muslim Brothers/etc advocates showed the world what their human rights agenda for the Syrian people if they seized power.

Similar to their 'brothers' in Sudan they started building their own 'Ghost Houses' in Northern Syria. Thanks to Amnesty International report that exposed this plan


PRESS RELEASE
DECEMBER 18, 2013
Contact: Carol Gregory, cgregory@aiusa.org, 202-675-8759, @AIUSAmedia

Torture, flogging, and summary killings are rife in secret prisons run by the Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), an armed group that controls large areas of northern Syria, said Amnesty International in a briefing published today.
ISIS, which claims to apply strict Shari'a (Islamic law) in areas it controls, has ruthlessly defied the rights of local people. In the 18-page briefing entitled, Rule of Fear: ISIS Abuses in Detention in Northern Syria, Amnesty International identifies seven detention facilities that ISIS uses in al-Raqqa governorate and Aleppo.
Torture, flogging, and summary killings are rife in secret prisons run in Syria by the Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS)
"Those abducted and detained by ISIS include children as young as eight who are held together with adults in the same cruel and inhuman conditions," said Philip Luther, Amnesty International's director for the Middle East and North Africa.
Former detainees describe a shocking catalogue of abuses in which they or others were flogged with rubber generator belts or cables, tortured with electric shocks or forced to adopt a painful stress position known as aqrab (scorpion), in which a detainee's wrists are secured together over one shoulder.
Some of those held by ISIS are suspected of theft or other crimes; others are accused of "crimes" against Islam, such as smoking cigarettes or zina, sex outside marriage. Others were seized for challenging ISIS's rule or because they belonged to rival armed groups opposed to the Syrian government. ISIS is also suspected of abducting and detaining foreign nationals, including journalists covering the fighting in Syria.
Several children were among detainees who received severe floggings, according to testimonies obtained by Amnesty International. On one occasion, an anguished father had to endure screams of pain as ISIS captors tormented his son in a nearby room. Two detainees related how they witnessed a child of about 14 receive a flogging of more than 90 lashes during interrogation at Sadd al-Ba'ath, an ISIS prison in al-Raqqa governorate. Another child of about 14 who ISIS accused of stealing a motorbike was repeatedly flogged over several days.
The flag of the al-Qaeda linked Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, at the entrance to al-Raqqa.
"Flogging anyone, let alone children, is cruel and inhuman, and a gross abuse of human rights," said Luther. "ISIS should cease its use of flogging and other cruel punishments."
Amnesty International is calling on ISIS to end its appalling treatment of detainees and for the group's leaders to instruct their forces to respect human rights and abide by international humanitarian law.
Several former detainees told the organization that they were seized by masked gunmen who took them to undisclosed locations, where they were held for periods of up to 55 days. Some never learned where they were but Amnesty International has identified ISIS prisons at seven locations: Mabna al-Mohafaza, Idarat al-Markabat and al-Mer'ab, all in al-Raqqa city; Sadd al Ba'ath and al-'Akershi oil facility, both elsewhere in al-Raqqa governorate; and Mashfa al-Atfal and Maqar Ahmed Qaddour in Aleppo.
The Sadd al-Ba'ath prison is beside a dam on the Euphrates River at al-Mansura, where the local Shari'a court judge, who invariably appeared wearing an explosives belt, has instituted a reign of terror over its detainees.
Former detainees accuse him of presiding over grotesquely unfair "trials" lasting no more than a few minutes as other detainees look on, and handing down death penalties which are subsequently carried out. At his direction, detainees have been mercilessly flogged; on at least one occasion, he is said to have personally joined in the flogging.
At al-'Akershi oil facility, which ISIS also appears to use as a military training ground, detainees were subjected to the aqrab as a means of torture, according to the testimonies of two men who were held there in recent months. One spent 40 days in solitary confinement, for part of which he was chained up in a tiny room full of electrical equipment with fuel on the floor.
"After years in which they were prey to the brutality of the al-Assad regime, the people of al-Raqqa and Aleppo are now suffering under a new form of tyranny imposed on them by ISIS, in which arbitrary detention, torture and executions have become the order of the day," said Luther.
Amnesty International is calling on the international community to take concrete steps to block the flow of arms and other support to ISIS and other armed groups implicated in committing war crimes and other serious human rights abuses.
"The Turkish government, in particular, should prevent its territory being used by ISIS to bring in arms and recruits to Syria," said Luther. "As well, Gulf states that have voiced support for the armed groups fighting against the Syrian government should take action to prevent arms flows, equipment or other support reaching ISIS in view of its appalling human rights record."
Amnesty International also renews its call to the Syrian government to allow unfettered access to Syria by the independent international Commission of Inquiry and by international humanitarian and human rights organizations, and to end its violations of human rights and international law, including the use of torture in its own detention centers.

GATS Cosponsor the Human Rights Day in Amherst



A lot of activities and events mark the month of December in Amherst. However, the Human Rights Day is the one our Group usually taking part in.


Along with few more human rights group, GATS cosponsored the screening and discussion of the important documentary Dirty Wars at the Amherst Public Library (aka Jones Library) on Sat 12/7. In addition, Amnesty International used the case of one of GATS founders as a strong evidence of how grassroots can make a difference in releasing human rights defenders.



In a large laminated poster put on a chair by the podium, the Urgent Action # UA 162/92 of Amnesty International of 1992 there was the photo of Mohamed Elgadi, a co-founder of GATS. "Here is one strong evidence that signing petitions does work" said Martha Spiegelman, leader of the local chapter of Amnesty in Amherst before inviting him to speak to the audience.


GATS was alo present at the annual Candle Vigil organized by the Amherst Human Rights Commission (HRC) on Tues 12/10, the United Nations designated Human Rights Day.