Syrian doctor on trial in Germany over torture in military hospitals
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[January 19, 2022]
By Riham Alkousaa and Patricia Uhlig
FRANKFURT (Reuters) -A Syrian doctor
suspected of crimes against humanity, including torturing prisoners at
military hospitals in Syria, went on trial in Germany on Wednesday in
the second such case over alleged state-backed torture in Syria's
conflict.
After a landmark German court ruling last week sentencing a Syrian
former intelligence officer to life imprisonment for crimes against
humanity, the trial of the 36-year-old doctor started at the Higher
Regional Court in Frankfurt am Main.
The defendant, identified as Alaa M. under German privacy laws, is
accused of torturing opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad while
working as a doctor at a military prison and hospitals in Homs and
Damascus in 2011 and 2012.
The Assad government denies accusations of having tortured prisoners.
Alaa M. arrived in Germany in 2015 to work as a doctor until he was
arrested in June 2020 and placed in pre-trial detention.
Addressing the court, Alaa M. - dressed in a dark suit and white shirt -
spoke calmly in fluent German about his life in Syria until he applied
for a visa at the German Embassy in Lebanon in early 2015 to come as a
migrant. He became one of some 5,000 Syrian doctors in Germany who have
helped ease acute staff shortages in the health sector.
The father of two children, who has worked in several German hospitals,
did not address the charges in his initial remarks but acknowledged he
had worked at a military hospital in Syria.
He said he had no problems living as a Christian in mainly Muslim Syria
before the war and that he made a payment of $8,000 to be exempted from
compulsory military service there.
Lawyers for the defendant have not said how they will plead in response
to the charges. Under German law, a suspect can only enter a plea once
the trial has begun.
UNIVERSAL JURISDICTION
German prosecutors have used universal jurisdiction laws that allow them
to seek trials for suspects in crimes against humanity committed
anywhere in the world.
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Syrian doctor, 36, known as M. by German media sits with his head
covered, accompanied by one of his lawyers Ulrich Endres, as he goes
on trial in Frankfurt, Germany, January 19, 2022. He is accused of
crimes against humanity, with prosecutors saying he physically and
mentally tortured political prisoners opposed to President Assad at
an army hospital in Homs in 2011 and 2012 before he arrived in
Germany in 2015 where he continued to practice medicine until his
arrest in June 2020. Boris Roessler/Pool via REUTERS
Prosecutors have charged Alaa M.
with 18 cases of torture and say he killed one of the prisoners. In
one of the cases, the defendant is accused of carrying out a bone
fracture correction surgery without sufficient anaesthesia.
He is also accused of attempting to deprive prisoners of their
reproductive capacity in two cases.
Other torture methods that prosecutors say he used against detained
civilians include dousing the genitals of a teenage boy with alcohol
at Homs military hospital and igniting them with a lighter.
"The prisoners were civilians who were against the Assad regime, and
the accusation is that he specifically targeted these people to
repress them," court spokesperson Gundula Fehns-Boeer said before
the trial began.
The doctor also worked at the Mezzeh 601 military hospital in
Damascus, whose morgues and courtyard, according to Human Rights
Watch, were seen in a cache of photographs which depicted the scale
of state-sponsored torture against civilians and were smuggled
abroad by a government photographer known as Caesar.
Antonia Klein, a legal adviser at the European Center for
Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR), which is supporting a
plaintiff in the case, said sexual violence as a crime against
humanity will play an important role in the trial.
"The trial also shows ... how diverse the crimes (in Syria's
conflict) are and how much is still to come," said Klein.
Syrian lawyer Anwar al-Bunni, who heads a human rights group in
Berlin that helped build the case against Alaa M., said the trial
would yield more evidence that the Syrian government abetted torture
to overcome an uprising against Assad.
"We hope he will get a life sentence," al-Bunni said, adding he
expected a verdict in the case by the end of this year.
(Additional reporting by Petra WischgollEditing by Joseph Nasr and
Mark Heinrich)
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