Report of the UN Secretary-General on the situation in Syria
(implementation of the 6-point peace plan; UNSMIS activities; level of
violence; humanitarian situation; detention; freedom of movement of
journalists; freedom of assembly and peaceful protest)
[ID 221583]
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Syria: Stop Torture of Children
Security Forces Detain Juveniles, Occupy Schools
February 3, 2012
(New
York) – Syrian army and security officers have detained and tortured
children with impunity during the past year, Human Rights Watch said
today. Human Rights Watch has documented at least 12 cases of children
detained under inhumane conditions and tortured, as well as children
shot while in their homes or on the street. Human Rights Watch has also
documented government use of schools as detention centers, military
bases or barracks, and sniper posts, as well as the arrest of children
from schools.
Human Rights Watch urged the United
Nations Security Council to demand that the Syrian government end all
human rights violations and cooperate with the commission of inquiry
dispatched by the UN Human Rights Council and the Arab League observer
mission. The government should stop deploying security forces in schools
and hospitals, Human Rights Watch said.
“Children
have not been spared the horror of Syria’s crackdown,” said Lois
Whitman, children’s rights director at Human Rights Watch. “Syrian
security forces have killed, arrested, and tortured children in their
homes, their schools, or on the streets. In many cases, security forces
have targeted children just as they have targeted adults.”
Human
Rights Watch has documented widespread government violence against
peaceful demonstrators, systematic killings, beatings, torture using
electroshock devices, and detention of people seeking medical care.
Widespread Arbitrary Detention and Torture of Children
Human
Rights Watch has interviewed more than 100 individuals detained by
Syrian security forces in cities across Syria since protests began in
March 2011, including several children and a number of adults who
encountered children while in custody. Interviewees described rampant
use of torture in detention centersagainst even the youngest detainees,
even beyond the 12 cases specifically documented by Human Rights Watch.
Interviews
with defecting army officers also corroborate accounts by detainees. An
army officer who had been deployed in Douma as part of the 106th
Brigade, Presidential Guard,and another deployed in Talbiseh with the
134th Brigade, 18th Division,told Human Rights Watch that they had
orders to arrest any male over the age of 14 or 15 in large-scale raids.
Some
of the arrests took place in schools. “Nazih” (not her real name), a
17-year-old girl from Tal Kalakh, told Human Rights Watch that in May
2011, security forces entered her school and arrested all the boys in
her class, after questioning them about the anti-regime slogans painted
on the school walls.
“About four [officers] jumped
over the walls, and the rest came through the main gate. They hit [the
boys] with their hands and cursed them. I left school three days after
that. I don’t know if [the boys] ever came back,” she said.
Her
brother “Ri’ad” also said that armed men visited his school and
questioned students. Their father told Human Rights Watch that he
stopped his children from attending school after these incidents.
“We
heard of kids younger than Ri’ad being taken,” he said. “We know
there’s no big difference [to the security forces] between a child and
an adult.”
Children, some as young as 13, reported
to Human Rights Watch that officers kept them in solitary confinement,
severely beat and electrocuted them, burned them with cigarettes, and
left them to dangle from metal handcuffs for hours at a time,
centimeters above the floor. Detention facilities where children
reported being tortured include: the military security detention center
in Homs, the military security detention center in Tartous, the Balooneh
detention center in Homs, the Palestine detention center in Damascus,
and the 291 detention center in Damascus. All children interviewed said
that they received inadequate food and water in detention, and most
received no medical treatment for torture-inflicted injuries.
“Ala’a,”
a 16-year-old boy from Tal Kalakh, told Human Rights Watch that Syrian
security forces detained him for eight months, starting in May 2011,
after he participated in and read political poetry at demonstrations. He
was released in late January 2012 after his father bribed a prison
guard with 25,000 Syrian pounds (US$436). During his detention he was
held in seven different detention centers, as well as the Homs Central
Prison. Ala’a told Human Rights Watch that at the Military Security
branch in Homs:
When they started interrogating me,
they asked me how many protests I had been to, and I said “none.” Then
they took me in handcuffs to another cell and cuffed my left hand to the
ceiling. They left me hanging there for about seven hours, with about
one-and-a-half to two centimeters between me and the floor – I was
standing on my toes. While I was hanging there, they beat me for about
two hours with cables and shocked me with cattle prods. Then they threw
water on the ground and poured water on me from above. They added an
electric current, and I felt the shock. I felt like I was going to die.
They did this three times. Then I told them, “I will confess everything,
anything you want.”
He said that in the Homs
Central Prison, he was kept in a large cell with some 150 boys under age
18, as well as around 80 men over the age of 50.
The
parents of “Fouad,” a 13-year-old from Latakia, told Human Rights Watch
that in December military security officers arrested him and held him
for nine days. According to his parents, he was accused of burning
photos of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, vandalizing security forces’
cars, and inciting other children to protest. Security officers burned
Fouad with cigarettes on his neck and hands, they said, and threw
boiling water on his body. He spent three days in solitary confinement,
according to his parents.
“Hossam,” age 13, told
Human Rights Watch that security forces detained him and a relative,
also 13, in May 2011 and tortured him for three days at a military
security branch about 45 minutes by car from Tal Kalakh:
Every
so often they would open our cell door and yell at us and beat us. They
said, “You pigs, you want freedom?” They interrogated me by myself.
They asked, “Who is your god?” And I said, “Allah.” Then they
electrocuted me on my stomach, with a prod. I fell unconscious. When
they interrogated me the second time, they beat me and electrocuted me
again. The third time they had some pliers, and they pulled out my
toenail. They said, “Remember this saying, always keep it in mind: We
take both kids and adults, and we kill them both.” I started to cry, and
they returned me to the cell.
Following his release, Hossam and his family escaped to Lebanon.
A
number of adult detainees and security force members who had defected
and who were interviewed by Human Rights Watch confirmed the presence
and torture of child detainees in facilities across Syria. “Samih,” a
former adult detainee held in a political security facility in Latakia,
told Human Rights Watch that children were subjected to worse treatment
than adults, including sexual abuse, because they were children.
We
were 70 to 75 people in a group cell that was 3 by 3 meters. We slept
with our knees to our chests. Some people had broken hands, legs, their
heads were swollen. There were 15- and 16-year-old kids in the cell with
us, six or seven of them with their fingernails pulled, their faces
beaten. They treat the kids even worse than the adults. There is
torture, but there is also rape for the boys. We would see them when the
guards brought them back to the cell, it’s indescribable, you can’t
talk about it. One boy came into the cell bleeding from behind. He
couldn’t walk. It was something they just did to the boys. We would cry
for them.
“It’s clear from the brutal methods used
against children that Syrian security forces show child detainees no
mercy,” said Whitman. “We fear that children will continue to face
horrendous punishment in detention until Syrian officials understand
they will pay a price for such abuse.”
Article 37
of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) states that: “No
child shall be subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment,” and that “No child shall be deprived of his
or her liberty unlawfully or arbitrarily. The arrest, detention or
imprisonment of a child … shall be used only as a measure of last resort
and for the shortest appropriate period of time.” Syria ratified the
Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1993.
Children in Solitary Confinement and Inhumane Detention Conditions
Four
children interviewed by Human Rights Watch said that they were detained
in solitary cells, sometimes with no light or windows, sometimes for
several days. “Ahmed,” age 16, spent a total of 10 days in solitary
confinement in the Tartous military security detention center:
They
put me in a solitary cell, about one meter by one meter. I was still
blindfolded, and there was no light – I didn’t know night from day.
Every night I would hear the cries of men and women being tortured.
Every day new buses of people would come.
“Ala’a,” also 16, told Human Rights Watch that:
[A]t
the 291 Branch in Damascus, they took us to a place underground, three
floors down. They put me in solitary, I spent three days there. If I
stood up, my head hit the ceiling. There was a toilet, a pitcher of
water, one small light bulb. It was very cold, and I slept on the floor.
Then, because I was begging them and crying, I told them I have only
one lung and can’t breathe, one officer let me go to a group cell.
In
October 2011, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture called for an
absolute ban on solitary confinement for juveniles, while the Committee
on the Rights of the Child has also noted in General Comment No. 10 that
solitary confinement should be “strictly forbidden” for those under the
age of 18.
“Confinement in a dark, cramped space
with no human contact but for prison guards can break a grown man,” said
Whitman. “Children should never face the horrors of solitary
confinement.”
Children also told Human Rights
Watch that security forces kept them in overcrowded group cells,
deprived of food and water. Hossam said he received only one meal a day,
consisting of a spoiled potato and a piece of bread. Ala’a said:
There
were 75 people in a very small cell, 4 by 6 meters. The cell was not
even fit for animals, the smell of blood was unbearable. I spent 10 days
there. We had to take turns standing and sitting to sleep. How did they
give us water? They’d take a bottle, maybe 1.5 liters, and spray it in
the air, everyone would open their mouths and try to catch a few drops.
For food, everyone had half a piece of bread.
All
children interviewed said their families were given no information about
their whereabouts and were denied permission to visit them.
“For
three months, my family didn’t know anything about where I was. They
heard that I had died and that my throat had been pulled out,” Ala’a,
16, told Human Rights Watch.
His mother learned
Ala’a was still alive after he bribed a guard to let him use a mobile
phone and called her. He said he spoke to her only twice during eight
months in detention. Article 37 of the CRC also provides that any child
detainee “shall have the right to maintain contact with his or her
family through correspondence and visits, save in exceptional
circumstances.”
Children Shot in Their Homes
Syrian
activists have reported dozens of cases in which children have been
killed by sniper fire or shelling from government security forces in
residential areas. In interviews with Human Rights Watch, army defectors
confirmed that they fired arbitrarily in residential areas in some
cases.
“Mohammed,” a doctor treating Syrians in
Lebanon who were injured in Syria, told Human Rights Watch in January
that he had treated 24 Syrian children in the last two months, and that
the majority of them were injured by bullets, some in their homes.
Human
Rights Watch interviewed two children who said they were shot while
inside their homes in Quseir. “Youssef,” age 11, told Human Rights Watch
that he was a student until the fall of 2011 when schools closed
because of the violence, and that after that he started work in a shop
as a car washer. He described being shot in the back at his home in late
January:
I came back to my house at 12:30 p.m. –
we closed the shop where I work because we knew there would be an
attack. Around 2 p.m. they started shelling the hospital near my house,
the national hospital, which is about 500 meters from the house. Then
they started to hit the baladiye [municipality] building, about 1 km
away. I was inside the house, my brother and all my siblings were with
me. I heard shooting and felt pain in my back. Then I fell unconscious.
“Fatima,”
17, also said she was shot in the back, in the courtyard of her family
home in Quseir in early October. She told Human Rights Watch:
It
was about 10:30 at night. I was going to the bathroom when I heard
gunfire. There were shots from all directions. We live in a traditional
house [where the bathroom is outside], there are no high walls.
Suddenly, I found myself on the floor, I just felt that I was on the
floor but I couldn’t feel anything.
A doctor
currently treating Fatima, interviewed by Human Rights Watch, said that
as a result of the gunshot wound, Fatima suffered a spinal injury and
was paralyzed from the waist down.
Military Use of Schools, Hospitals
The
government has used schools as detention centers, sniper posts, and
military bases or barracks. “Marwan,” from the Insha’at neighborhood in
Homs, and other Homs residents told Human Rights Watch that the army
attacked Bahithet Al-Badiyah school on Brazil Street on November 4, and
that military security forces then turned the school into a detention
center. Local activists also told Human Rights Watch that military
security turned Al-Ba’ath elementary school in Joubar, another Homs
neighborhood, into a military base and detention center in late
December.
One Hama resident interviewed by Human
Rights Watch in late January said that he saw snipers shooting from the
roof of the local children’s hospital and that soldiers were using part
of the hospital as an army barracks.
“Part of it
remains open as a hospital, but it’s hard for us to go there,” he said.
“If you go to the hospital, they search you and check your ID. People
are afraid [of the security forces] and then there are the snipers –
[they] are shooting people in the street.”
Human
Rights Watch also viewed a video that showed a sniper posted on a school
rooftop in the Qusoor neighborhood of Hama and spoke with the activist
who said he filmed the incident in September 2011.
Children
also told Human Rights Watch that their schools closed in 2011 due to
violence, or that it was no longer safe for them to go to school.
“Mohammed,” a 10-year-old boy from Homs, said, “I went to school for
only one day [this year]. The teachers just gave us the books and told
us not to come back. The road to school was not safe because of
snipers.”
“Ahmed,” 17, from Baniyas, said, “I went
to school for 15 days before I stopped, because it was dangerous. There
was a curfew, so I couldn’t leave the house, not even during the day.”
Marwan told Human Rights Watch that he stopped letting his 10-year-old
son go to school because of snipers targeting Brazil Street, the main
road leading to the school.
“We called it ‘the street of death’,” he said.
“Schools
across Syria are closed because it’s too dangerous for students to
attend, or because the military thinks schools are better used as
detention centers than educational establishments,” said Whitman. “How
long will Syrian children pay the price for the violence around them?”
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