Protesters in Syria demand justice for disappeared activists and
accountability from all factions
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[January 02, 2025]
By OMAR ALBAM and SALLY ABOU ALJOUD
DOUMA, Syria (AP) — Protesters in Syria held a sit-in Wednesday
demanding justice for four activists who were forcibly disappeared in
2013 and whose fate remains one of the most haunting mysteries of the
country's 13-year civil war.
On Dec. 9, 2013, gunmen stormed the Violation Documentation Center in
Douma, northeast of Damascus, and took Razan Zaitouneh, her husband Wael
Hamadeh, Samira Khalil and Nazem Hammadi.
Outspoken and defiantly secular, Zaitouneh was one of Syria’s most
well-known human rights activists. Perhaps most dangerously, she was
impartial. She chanted in protests against then-President Bashar Assad
but was also unflinching in documenting abuses by rebels fighting to
oust him.
There has been no sign of life nor proof of death since she and her
colleagues were abducted.
Since the ouster of Assad on Dec. 8, protests have erupted across Syria
demanding information about thousands of people who were forcibly
disappeared under his rule. The new leadership under the Islamist group
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, which orchestrated the offensive to oust Assad,
has maintained a neutral stance regarding accusations against various
armed groups for forcibly disappearing activists. At the same time, HTS
has aligned with activists in their efforts to uncover the truth and
seek justice.
“We are gathering here to remind the world of their case,” Yassin Haj
Saleh, Khalil’s husband, said Wednesday, adding that the disappearance
of activists represents “the deepest wounds” of Syria’s conflict. “This
is the first opportunity that allows us to be in Douma, and in front of
the place that they were kidnapped from, to speak up about the case,
taking advantage of the political change that took place in the
country.”
Saleh said they had repeatedly appealed to various armed groups for
cooperation in finding the four activists in the years before Assad's
ouster but were met with silence.
Strong clues had pointed to the Army of Islam, the most powerful rebel
faction in Douma at the time, as the perpetrators. The group, made up of
religious hard-liners who were pushing out other rebels and imposing
strict Shariah rules, long denied involvement. An Army of Islam
official, Hamza Bayraqdar, told The Associated Press in 2018 they
brought Zaitouneh to Douma to protect her from the Assad government.
The Army of Islam repeatedly blamed the Assad government, along with the
Nusra Front — an al-Qaida-linked group originally founded by the current
HTS leader — for his wife's disappearance, Saleh said.
Zaitouneh was a prominent human rights lawyer and founder of the
Violation Documentation Center. She also helped organize networks of
activists like the Local Coordination Committees, an umbrella network
made up of activists who organized protests as part of the Syrian
uprising.
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Relatives take part in a protest demanding the whereabouts of four
activists who disappeared during the war between opposition groups
and former President Bashar Assad's forces, in Douma, Syria,
Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)
Her work earned her international recognition, including an
International Woman of Courage award presented by U.S. first lady
Michelle Obama in 2013.
Several of those who spoke to the AP in 2018 said the Army of Islam
saw Zaitouneh documenting abuses as a threat and resented her local
administration plan as an encroachment on their power. Zaitouneh
received a series of threats that friends and activists said traced
back to the Army of Islam.
The Army of Islam was forced to move north in 2018 after the Assad
government retook Douma, leading to the group's weakening and
disintegration. Hopes that Zaitouneh and her colleagues would emerge
among released prisoners during that time were unmet.
Today, the Army of Islam remains an armed faction backed by Turkey.
It did not fight alongside the other Islamist factions that led the
offensive against Assad and remains excluded from the HTS-led Syrian
leadership. Recently, an Army of Islam delegation met HTS leader
Ahmad Sharaa to explore integration into the new Syrian system, but
no agreement has been reached.
Protesters on Wednesday held banners openly accusing the Army of
Islam and reading “Freedom” in English and “Traitor who kidnaps a
revolutionary” in Arabic, alongside posters of the four missing
activists.
Saleh described the plight of the disappeared as uniquely painful,
saying, “Those who die are mourned, but the forcibly disappeared are
forbidden from both living and being mourned.”
Their bodies must be found, he said, adding: “For Syria to heal,
truth and justice must prevail.”
Wafa Moustafa, whose father was forcibly disappeared separately in
2013, also attended the protest.
“Justice in Syria cannot be limited to those detained by the Assad
regime,” she said. “For many years, other factions controlled parts
of Syria and committed similar crimes of detention, torture and
killing. If justice does not include all victims, it will remain
incomplete and threaten Syria’s future.”
Syrian delegation arrives in Saudi Arabia
A Syrian delegation led by the foreign and defense ministers, along
with the head of intelligence, arrived in Saudi Arabia on their
first official foreign trip, Syrian state media reported, citing a
foreign ministry official.
Relations between Syria and Saudi Arabia have long been tense. Many
Arab nations cut ties with Assad’s government after it relied on
support from Iran and Russia to suppress uprisings. But the Arab
League reinstated Syria in 2023, and regional leaders are
increasingly open now to renewing diplomatic ties.
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Abou AlJoud reported from Beirut, Lebanon.
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