AFP: BEIRUT: Documents and torture equipment found in
Syrian security buildings in rebel-held Raqa show detainees were tortured when President Bashar
al-Assad's regime held sway over the city, Human Rights Watch said on
Friday. A team of researchers working for HRW toured Raqa in northern
Syria in April, a month after the city fell into rebel hands, and found the incriminating evidence,
the New York-based watchdog said in a statement. "The documents, prison
cells, interrogation rooms, and torture devices we saw in the government's security facilities are
consistent with the torture former detainees have described to us since the beginning of the
uprising in Syria," said HRW deputy Middle East director Nadim
Houry. Among the implements the watchdog said it found is a cross-shaped
contraption known as "bsat al-reeh" (flying carpet) which "former detainees have said has been used
to immobilise and severely stretch or bend limbs". Torturers used the
device to "tie a detainee down to a flat board, sometimes in the shape of a cross, so that he is
helpless to defend himself," HRW said, citing former detainees. "In some
cases, former detainees said guards stretched or pulled their limbs or folded the board in half so
that their face touched their legs, causing pain and further immobilising
them." HRW researcher Lama Fakih told AFP that although the watchdog has
interviewed countless former detainees during the two-year conflict, "being inside the facility
makes it so much more real." "We know people are still being detained and
subjected to these practices," she said. One former detainee told HRW he
and his brother were tortured "in turns". "They started torturing him
with electricity for three, four hours, and then they threw him in a solitary cell... They wanted me
to tell them who used to go out to demonstrate with me... and they would make me hear my brother's
screams," said Ahmed, 24. Abdullah Khalil, who now heads the opposition
civilian council in Raqa, also testified to HRW. The long-time human
rights activist was detained by the security forces on May 1, 2011, less than two months into the
uprising. He was transferred to 17 different security branches while in
detention, HRW said. HRW last July mapped what it called Syria's "torture
archipelago", where tens of thousands of detainees are believed to be held and
mistreated. It urged opposition groups now controlling Raqa to safeguard
the evidence. "Destruction or mishandling of these documents and material
will weaken the possibility of bringing to justice those responsible for serious crimes," HRW
said.
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