Syria: refugees face detention, torture and death on return – new report

Published By Amnesty International UK [English], Mon, Sep 6, 2021 4:59 PM


One woman and her five-year-old daughter both raped at border crossing

Another woman who was raped was told, ‘This is to welcome you to your country’

‘They electrocuted me between the eyes. I felt my whole brain was shaking’ - Ismael

‘Any government claiming Syria is now safe is wilfully ignoring the horrific reality on the ground’ - Marie Forestier

‘It’s long overdue that the UK granted full refugee protection to all those in Britain who’ve fled Assad’s murderous regime’ - Steve Valdez-Symonds

The security forces in Syria have subjected Syrian refugees who returned to the country to detention, disappearance and horrific torture - including sexual violence - Amnesty International said today in a shocking new report.

Amnesty’s 51-page report - You’re Going To Your Death - documents appalling human rights violations committed by Syrian intelligence officers against 66 returnees, including 13 children. Five people died in custody, while the fate of 17 forcibly disappeared people remains unknown.

The report - coming against a backdrop of the Damascus authorities publicly encouraging returns and refugee-hosting countries increasingly pressuring people to go back - shows how the Syrian authorities have explicitly targeted returning refugees because of their original decision to flee Syria, accusing them of disloyalty or “terrorism.”

Amnesty’s report documents 59 cases of men, women and children who were arbitrarily detained after returning to Syria, most frequently following broad accusations of “terrorism”. In 33 of the cases, returnees were subjected to torture or other ill-treatment during detention or interrogation. Intelligence officers used torture to force detainees to confess to alleged crimes or to punish them for alleged opposition to the government. In some cases, returnees were targeted simply because they came from parts of Syria which had been under opposition control.

The report includes shocking details of 14 cases of sexual violence committed by the Syrian security forces - including seven cases of rape - against five women, a teenage boy and a five-year-old girl. Testimonies are consistent with well-documented patterns of sexual violence and rape committed against civilians and detainees during the Syria conflict by pro-government forces.

When Noor* returned from Lebanon in the summer of 2019 she was stopped at the border by a security officer who said:

The officer subsequently raped Noor and her five-year-old daughter in a small room used for interrogations at the border crossing. He also took photographs of them naked. 

  

Yasmin* returned from Lebanon with her teenage son and three-year-old daughter. The security forces arrested them at a border crossing, accused Yasmin of spying for a foreign country and detained Yasmin and her children for 29 hours. Intelligence officers then raped Yasmin in front of her children and took her son to another room where they also raped him with a shisha pipe. Yasmin told Amnesty how the officer who raped her said:

In another case, Karim* was arrested four days after he returned from Lebanon to his village in Homs province. During six-and-a-half months of detention, security officials accused him of being “a terrorist” because he was from a well-known pro-opposition village.  

  

Karim told Amnesty of the after-effects of his torture during captivity:

In another case, Yasin* was arrested at a checkpoint after he crossed the Lebanon-Syria border and spent four months in prison. He said:

Ismael*, who was detained in four different intelligence branches over three-and-a-half months, said:

Marie Forestier, Researcher on Refugee and Migrants Rights at Amnesty International, said:

Amnesty’s report recorded 27 cases of enforced disappearance. In five cases, the authorities eventually informed the families that their disappeared relative had died in custody; five were eventually released; the fate of the other 17 people remains unknown.  

 

Ola*, who returned from Lebanon with her brother in 2019, said security forces arrested her brother at the border crossing. In the following weeks, they also visited Ola at her home and interrogated her about her reasons for leaving and returning to Syria. “They see us as terrorists because we left to Lebanon”, she said. Five months later the authorities informed Ola’s family that her brother had died in detention.

Ibrahim* told Amnesty that his cousin - alongside his wife and their three young children, aged two-, four- and eight-years-old - were arrested after returning from France in early 2019. At the time of writing the family has been subjected to enforced disappearance for two years and eight months.  

 

Amnesty has also documented 27 cases where returnees were detained as a means of extortion, with families paying as much as £20,000 for the release of their relatives.

*All names have been changed

Some refugee families have arranged for women to return to Syria ahead of their husbands assuming they would be less likely to be arrested - partly because women are not subject to compulsory military service in Syria. However, Amnesty has documented the arbitrary or unlawful detention of 13 women, some of whom were interrogated about their male relatives, and of ten children - aged between three-weeks-old and 16-years-old - who were arrested along with their mothers. Security forces subjected five children to torture and other-ill treatment. In Amnesty’s assessment women are as much at risk as men when they return to Syria and should therefore be granted the same level of protection overseas.

 

European countries pressuring people to return

Denmark and Sweden have recently reassessed the residency permits of asylum-seekers who come from regions in Syria they consider safe for return, including Damascus and the surrounding countryside. However, a third of the cases documented in Amnesty’s report involve human rights violations in Damascus and the Damascus area. Amnesty believes that no part of Syria is safe for returnees. Anyone who has left Syria since the beginning of the conflict is at real risk of suffering persecution upon return given perceptions about their political opinions or simply as punishment for having fled the country.

The immigration authorities in the UK are not presently known to be considering forced returns of Syrians. Instead, the Home Office is currently attempting to strike deals with other European countries in much-criticised efforts to remove asylum applicants from the UK. Thus far, the UK has reportedly been unable to secure any such deals. According to official data, there were 1,583 Syrian asylum claims outstanding in the UK at the end of June 2021, a very large increase on the figures from two years earlier (there were fewer than 350 cases in the system at the end of June 2019).

Amnesty’s report documents serious human rights violations committed against refugees who returned from Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan, the UAE, France, Germany and Rukban (an informal settlement on the Jordanian-Syrian border) between mid-2017 and spring 2021, based on interviews with 41 Syrians, including returnees and their relatives and friends, as well as lawyers, humanitarian workers and Syria experts.   

Press release distributed by Media Pigeon on behalf of Amnesty International UK, on Sep 6, 2021. For more information subscribe and follow


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