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Syrians search for loved ones missing in Assad’s jails

People stand outside the infamous Saydnaya military prison, just north of Damascus, Syria, Monday, Dec. 9, 2024. (AP)
People stand outside the infamous Saydnaya military prison, just north of Damascus, Syria, Monday, Dec. 9, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 09 December 2024

Syrians search for loved ones missing in Assad’s jails

People stand outside the infamous Saydnaya military prison, just north of Damascus, Syria, Monday, Dec. 9, 2024. (AP)
  • On Monday, rescuers from the Syrian White Helmets said they were searching for secret doors or basements in Saydnaya prison, looking for detainees

DAMASCUS: Syrian rescuers searched a jail synonymous with the worst atrocities of ousted president Bashar Assad’s rule, as people in the capital flocked to a central square Monday to celebrate their country’s freedom.
Assad fled Syria as militants swept into the capital, bringing to a spectacular end on Sunday five decades of brutal rule by his clan over a country ravaged by one of the deadliest wars of the century.
He oversaw a crackdown on a democracy movement that erupted in 2011, sparking a war that killed 500,000 people and forced half the country to flee their homes.
At the core of the system of rule that Assad inherited from his father Hafez was a brutal complex of prisons and detention centers used to eliminate dissent by jailing those suspected of stepping out of the ruling Baath party’s line.
On Monday, rescuers from the Syrian White Helmets said they were searching for secret doors or basements in Saydnaya prison, looking for any detainees who might be trapped.
“We are working with all our energy to reach a new hope, and we must be prepared for the worst,” the organization said in a statement.
Aida Taha, aged 65, said she had been “roaming the streets like a madwoman” in search of her brother, who was arrested in 2012.
She said she went to Saydnaya, where she believes some prisoners are still underground.
“The prison has three or four underground floors,” Taha said. “They say that the doors won’t open because they don’t have the proper codes.”
“We’ve been oppressed long enough, we want our children back,” she added.
While Syria has been at war for 13 years, the government’s collapse ended up coming in a matter of days, with a lightning offensive launched by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS).
Rooted in Syria’s branch of Al-Qaeda, HTS is proscribed by Western governments as a terrorist group.
While it remains to be seen how HTS operates now that Assad is gone, it has sought to moderate its image and to assure Syria’s many religious minorities that they need not fear.
In central Damascus on Monday, despite all the uncertainties for the future, the joy was palpable.
“It’s indescribable, we never thought this nightmare would end, we are reborn,” 49-year-old Rim Ramadan, a civil servant at the finance ministry, told AFP.
“We were afraid for 55 years of speaking, even at home, we used to say the walls had ears,” Ramadan said, as people honked their car horns and rebels fired their guns into the air.
“We feel like we’re living a dream,” she added.
During the offensive launched on November 27, rebels wrested city after city from Assad’s control, opening the gates of prisons along the way and freeing thousands of people, many of them held on political charges.
Social media groups were alight with Syrians sharing images of detainees reportedly brought out from the dungeons, in a collective effort to reunite families with their loved ones, some of whom had been missing for years.
Others, like Fadwa Mahmoud, whose husband and son are missing, posted calls for help finding their missing relatives.
“Where are you, Maher and Abdel Aziz, it’s time for me to hear your news, oh God, please come back, let my joy become complete,” wrote Mahmoud, herself a former detainee.
US President Joe Biden said Assad should be “held accountable” as he called his downfall “a historic opportunity” for the people of Syria.
“The fall of the regime is a fundamental act of justice,” he said.
But he also cautioned that hard-line Islamist groups within the victorious rebel alliance would face scrutiny.
“Some of the rebel groups that took down Assad have their own grim record of terrorism and human right abuses,” Biden said.
The United States has taken note of recent statements by the rebels suggesting they were adopting a more moderate posture, but Biden said: “We will assess not just their words, but their actions.”
Amnesty International also called for perpetrators of rights violations to face justice, with its chief Agnes Callamard urging the forces that ousted Assad to “break free from the violence of the past.”
“Any political transition must ensure accountability for perpetrators of serious violations and guarantee that those responsible are held to account,” UN rights chief Volker Turk said on Monday.
How Assad might face justice remains unclear, especially after Russia refused on Monday to confirm reports by Russian news agencies that he had fled to Moscow.
The Syrian embassy in Moscow raised the flag of the opposition, and the Kremlin said it would discuss the status of its bases in Syria with the new authorities.
Russia played an instrumental role in keeping Assad in power, directly intervening in the war starting in 2015 and providing air cover to the army on the ground as it sought to crush the rebellion.
Iran, another key ally of Assad, said it expected its “friendly” ties with Syria to continue, with its foreign minister saying the ousted president “never asked” for Tehran’s help against the militant offensive.
Turkiye, historically a backer of the opposition, called for an “inclusive” new government in Syria, as the sheer unpredictability of the situation began to settle in.
“It is not just Assad’s regime falling, it is also the question of what comes in its place?” said Aron Lund, a specialist at the Century International think tank.
While Syria’s war began with a crackdown on grassroots democracy protests, it morphed over time and drew in jihadists and foreign powers backing opposing sides.
Israel, which borders Syria, sent troops into a buffer zone after Assad’s fall, in what Foreign Minister Gideon Saar described as a “limited and temporary step.”
Saar also said his country had struck “chemical weapons” in Syria, “in order that they will not fall in the hands of extremists.”
In northern Syria, a Turkish drone strike on a Kurdish-held area killed 11 civilians, six of them children, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor.


The Gaza twins whose whole lives have been war

The Gaza twins whose whole lives have been war
Updated 7 sec ago

The Gaza twins whose whole lives have been war

The Gaza twins whose whole lives have been war
GAZA: Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah have known nothing but war since they were born in Gaza, less than a month after the conflict began on October 7, 2023.
Their lives have been defined and encompassed by Israel’s devastating military offensive, launched in response to the deadly attack on southern Israel by the Palestinian militant group Hamas two years ago.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has embraced a plan by US President Donald Trump for Gaza and Hamas has partially accepted it, but there is no certainty over when or whether the plan will end the fighting.

MOTHER’S DREAMS OF A BETTER FUTURE
Since they were born on November 2, 2023, the twins have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street.
Their father was killed seeking aid, and two brothers were wounded.
They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment.
They now live in a crowded beach encampment to a background of almost constant crying by the people around them, the shouting of street vendors, the menacing buzz of warplanes and the crackle of gunfire in the distance.
Their mother Iman wants a different future for them: peace, food, a home and schooling.
The boys are already traumatized and slow to develop. She fears that if Israel’s assault goes on, they – and the new generation of Gazans – will be ever more scarred.
“We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end,” she said.

JOY AND SORROW
The family fled their home near front lines at the start of the war and sought shelter in a crowded school. There was little fuel, and when Iman went into labor she had to walk to the hospital. The maternity wing was crammed with the wounded.
Gunfire, funeral processions and wailing from the nearby morgue mingled with the cries of newborn babies, recalled Mohammed Salem, a Reuters photographer working there that day.
“The feeling among the doctors and the patients in the ward was strange, an emotional mix of joy and sorrow,” he said.
Iman gave birth soon after arriving, her twins each weighing 3 kg (6.6 lb).
Israel had cut off all supplies into Gaza at the start of the war, and there were shortages of baby formula and other necessities such as diapers. It allowed some aid to start flowing into Gaza again weeks into the war, but aid agencies said only a fraction of what was needed came in.
“I’d go around the maternity ward to the women lying there and I’d say ‘Which of you girls has extra milk?’,” Iman said, hoping to find breastfeeding women who could donate some milk powder.
With few beds available, she had to walk back to the shelter — nearly a kilometer away — with her babies the same day, she said.

GAZA HAS BEEN DEVASTATED DURING THE WAR
The war, the latest and bloodiest episode in decades of conflict, began when Hamas gunmen burst through defenses on October 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and seizing about 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
By the day of the twins’ birth on November 2, 2023, more than 9,000 people had already been killed in Gaza, local health authorities said that day.
Israel’s military response, with the declared goal of destroying Hamas, has now lasted two years, and killed more than 67,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities.
Nearly all residents of Gaza, a narrow, densely populated strip of land on the Mediterranean Sea, have been driven from their homes and cities have been levelled in what critics of Israel call indiscriminate attacks.
Israel says it tries to avoid killing civilians, but that Hamas hides among the civilian population and the military strikes the group wherever it emerges. Hamas denies hiding among civilians.

TWINS’ FLIGHT TO SAFETY DURING A BOMBARDMENT
During the twins’ first winter, Israeli military operations focused on Nasser Hospital near the school where the family was sheltering.
The area was surrounded, and they fled through a heavy bombardment, ending up at Mawasi, a beach area that was declared a safe zone.
Winter was hard in a tent, with temperatures dropping to a few degrees above freezing at night. There was no sewage system and little clean water nearby, and the children suffered from diarrhea.
With no diapers available, Iman cut strips of cloth that could be cleaned and reused, and attached them to plastic bags. Even so, the babies developed sores and rashes.
As 2024 progressed, it became harder to find food. The twins’ father, Ayman, was killed by Israeli forces while out buying vegetables on July 27 of that year, Iman said.
“We were hungry. There was nothing at all. When he went outside, shrapnel hit his neck and he was martyred immediately. What was his fault? He was going to get food for his children,” she said.

POOR HEALTH, SLOW DEVELOPMENT
When a truce was declared in January, Iman and the children returned to the damaged family home. Their respite was short-lived, and Israel imposed a total blockade and resumed military operations in March.
They had to flee again. Without a tent, they lived on the street next to Nasser Hospital for several weeks before they moved back to Mawasi to discover that their home had been destroyed.
Iman was not eating enough to sustain the twins with her own breastmilk and could find no formula. She made tea from herbs and dunked bread in it to feed them. Hungry and frightened, they mumbled in their sleep or woke at night, crying, she said.
Uday and Hamza were expected to start walking by May, when they turned 18 months, but while Uday started taking a few steps, Hamza was still only crawling. A doctor told Iman they had calcium deficiency, which was delaying their development.
In August, the world hunger monitor, the IPC, determined there was famine in Gaza. Israel rejected its findings.

LIFE IN THE CAMP
Now nearly two, the twins still barely walk and can speak only a few words including “mama” and the names of their siblings, Iman said.
Their eldest sister Hala, 20, spends most of the time with them — playing, helping them walk, feeding them and putting them to bed. When Iman bathes them, she uses the same bucket that she washes clothes in, the water brought across the camp in heavy plastic containers.
There is constant noise in the camp. There is also the odour of the sewage pit each family digs next to its tent and the smell of smoke from clay ovens as women bake small loaves of flat bread.
Those loaves, sometimes with a pan of vegetables, rice, pasta or lentils, are all the family has to eat.
The boys love going to the beach with their mother or siblings and sitting in the waves.
“I wish for the twins... I wish for them a happy life during this war. God willing, God will stop the war and our life will become better,” she said.

Swiss Gaza flotilla activists allege ‘inhumane detention conditions’ in Israel

Swiss Gaza flotilla activists allege ‘inhumane detention conditions’ in Israel
Updated 06 October 2025

Swiss Gaza flotilla activists allege ‘inhumane detention conditions’ in Israel

Swiss Gaza flotilla activists allege ‘inhumane detention conditions’ in Israel
  • Detainees described conditions of sleep deprivation, lack of water and food, as well as some being beaten, kicked, and locked in a cage

GENEVA: Nine members of the Gaza aid flotilla arrived home in Switzerland on Sunday after being deported by Israel, with some alleging they had been subject to inhumane conditions whilst in detention there, the group representing them said.
An Israeli foreign ministry spokesperson rejected the allegations. The foreign ministry has previously said that claims of mistreatment against detainees are “complete lies.” Nineteen Swiss nationals, including the former mayor of Geneva Remy Pagani, were aboard boats in the flotilla of dozens of vessels that tried to deliver aid to Israeli-blockaded Gaza.
They were taken into custody on Wednesday by Israeli forces who intercepted the flotilla at sea and taken to Israel’s Ktzi’ot prison, according to the Waves of Freedom flotilla group.
Nine of the group returned to Geneva on Sunday afternoon.
“The participants condemned the inhumane detention conditions and the humiliating and degrading treatment they suffered upon their arrest and incarceration,” a statement by the group said. Israel said on Sunday that the legal rights of the activists were being “fully upheld,” that no physical force was used and all detainees were given access to water, food, and restrooms.
Detainees described conditions of sleep deprivation, lack of water and food, as well as some being beaten, kicked, and locked in a cage, the statement added.
Waves of Freedom said it is “deeply concerned” about the ten Swiss nationals who remain detained by Israel.
On Sunday, the Swiss Embassy in Tel Aviv visited the ten Swiss nationals in prison to provide consular protection.
“All are in relatively good health, given the circumstances,” it said in a statement, adding it is doing everything possible to ensure their prompt return.
The Waves of Freedom said some have gone on hunger strike and appear weakened.
Hundreds of other activists including Swedish campaigner Greta Thunberg were also detained in what was the latest attempt by activists to challenge Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza.


Freed hostage recounts captivity as Israel faces mounting pressure over Gaza

Freed hostage recounts captivity as Israel faces mounting pressure over Gaza
Updated 06 October 2025

Freed hostage recounts captivity as Israel faces mounting pressure over Gaza

Freed hostage recounts captivity as Israel faces mounting pressure over Gaza
  • Inside Israel, pressure has been building on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to end the war and secure the release of those still held captive

HERZLIYA: Two years after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack that triggered the war in Gaza, Israel has yet to recover 48 of the hostages taken that day, around 20 of whom are believed to be alive. A new US-supported peace initiative has renewed hopes of securing their release.

Among those freed earlier this year is Eli Sharabi, 53, who said he was held for 16 months in tunnels under Gaza. He was released in February as part of a ceasefire agreement.

Only after his release did Sharabi learn that his wife and two teenage daughters had been killed during the Oct. 7 assault on Kibbutz Be’eri. “There can be no closure,” he said, “until all the hostages return.”

According to Israeli officials, Hamas-led militants killed about 1,200 people and abducted 251 others during the Oct. 7 attack. Most hostages have since been freed through ceasefires or negotiated exchanges.

Israeli Police and military inquiries have confirmed that some Israeli civilians were unintentionally killed by Israeli forces during the initial fighting, as troops attempted to repel the Hamas-led attackers and prevent abductions during the Oct. 7 attack. Officials have said the deaths occurred amid crossfire and confusion during the surprise assault.

Inside Israel, pressure has been building on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to end the war and secure the release of those still held captive. Tens of thousands of Israelis have joined mass demonstrations in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and other cities, calling for a ceasefire and hostage exchange deal. Protesters say continued military operations in Gaza endanger the hostages’ lives and deepen Israel’s international isolation.

The Israel Defense Forces have also admitted to mistakenly killing three Israeli hostages - Yotam Haim, Samer Talalka, and Alon Shamriz - in December 2023 in Gaza’s Sheijaiyah neighborhood. Troops misidentified the men as a threat amid heavy fighting. The military called the incident a “tragic mistake” and launched an internal investigation.

Sharabi’s account appears in Hostage, a memoir published in Hebrew earlier this year and released in English on Tuesday. In the book, he describes confinement in underground tunnels with limited access to washing and food, and occasional beatings by guards. He said meals consisted mainly of bread and that he weighed 44 kilograms (97 pounds) upon his release.

The war has drawn extensive international criticism. The United Nations and several human rights organizations have accused Israel of committing acts of genocide in Gaza, citing the scale of civilian deaths, destruction, and humanitarian collapse.

Israel’s military response has killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza, according to health authorities in the Hamas-run territory. Large parts of the enclave have been destroyed, and international organizations report that most residents have been displaced and face severe shortages of food, water, and medicine. The United Nations has warned that ongoing blockades and destruction of infrastructure have created conditions of famine in parts of Gaza, with millions at risk of severe food insecurity.

Sharabi said he was initially held in an apartment before being moved underground, where he was detained with three other hostages, including 24-year-old Alon Ohel. The group, he said, developed routines to maintain morale and physical activity.

Sharabi now advocates for the release of remaining hostages and has met with international officials, including former US President Donald Trump, to raise awareness. His efforts, he said, are motivated by concern for Ohel, who appeared in a recent video released by Hamas.

“I hope those in positions of power will act to end the war and bring the captives home,” Sharabi said.

(With AP)


Hamas readies for Gaza talks that US hopes will halt war, free hostages

Hamas readies for Gaza talks that US hopes will halt war, free hostages
Updated 06 October 2025

Hamas readies for Gaza talks that US hopes will halt war, free hostages

Hamas readies for Gaza talks that US hopes will halt war, free hostages
  • Netanyahu is caught between growing pressure to end the war from hostage families and a war-weary public

CAIRO/JERUSALEM/WASHINGTON: Hamas officials were in Egypt on Monday ahead of talks with Israel that the US hopes will lead to a halt in fighting and the freeing of hostages in Gaza.
Israeli negotiators were also due to travel to Egypt’s Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh later in the day for talks about freeing hostages, part of US President Donald Trump’s plan to end the war.
However, Israel’s chief negotiator, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, himself was only expected to join later this week, pending developments in the negotiations, according to three Israeli officials. Spokespeople for Dermer and the prime minister did not immediately comment. “We will know very quickly whether Hamas is serious or not by how these technical talks go in terms of the logistics,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told NBC News’ “Meet the Press” on Sunday.
Trump was optimistic. “I am told that the first phase should be completed this week, and I am asking everyone to MOVE FAST,” he said in a social media post.
The first phase deals with the release of hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. There are 48 remaining hostages in Gaza, 20 of whom are alive. A Hamas delegation, led by the group’s exiled Gaza chief, Khalil Al-Hayya, landed in Egypt late on Sunday to join representatives of the US and Qatar for talks over the implementation of the most advanced effort yet to halt the conflict.
It was the first visit by Hayya to Egypt since he survived an Israeli strike in Doha, the Qatari capital, last month. Trump has promoted a 20-point plan aimed at ending the fighting in Gaza, securing the release of remaining hostages, and defining the territory’s future. Israel and Hamas have agreed to parts of the plan.
Hamas on Friday accepted the hostage release and several other elements but sidestepped contentious points, including calls for its disarmament — which it has long rejected.
Trump welcomed Hamas’ response and told Israel to stop bombing Gaza, but its attacks have continued.
Avoiding a phased approach
An official briefed on the talks in Egypt said negotiators would focus on hammering out a comprehensive deal before a ceasefire can be implemented.
“This differs from earlier rounds of negotiations which followed a phased approach, where the first phase was agreed and then required more negotiations to reach subsequent phases in the ceasefire,” the official told Reuters.
“These subsequent rounds of negotiations is where things broke down previously and there is a conscious effort among mediators to avoid that approach this time around.”
Strikes continue
The plan has stirred hopes for peace among Palestinians, but there was no let-up of Israeli attacks on Gaza on Sunday. Planes and tanks pounded areas across the enclave, killing at least 19 people, local health authorities said.
Four of those killed were seeking aid in the south of the strip, and five were killed in an airstrike in Gaza City in the early afternoon, they said.
Ahmed Assad, a displaced Palestinian man in central Gaza, said he had been hopeful when news broke of Trump’s plan, but said nothing had changed on the ground.
“We do not see any change to the situation; on the contrary, we don’t know what action to take, what shall we do? Shall we remain in the streets? Shall we leave?” he asked.
Some in Israel optimistic for end to war
In a sign of Israeli optimism over the Trump plan, the shekel currency hit a three-year high against the dollar and Tel Aviv stocks reached an all-time high.
Some people in Tel Aviv shared that sentiment. “It’s the first time in months that I’m actually hopeful. Trump has really instilled a lot of hope into us,” said resident Gil Shelly. Domestically, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is caught between growing pressure to end the war — from hostage families and a war-weary public — and demands from hard-line members of his coalition who insist there must be no let-up in Israel’s campaign in Gaza.
Far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said on X that halting attacks on Gaza would be a “grave mistake.” He and Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir have threatened to bring down Netanyahu’s government if the Gaza war ends.
But opposition leader Yair Lapid of the centrist Yesh Atid party has said political cover will be provided so the Trump initiative can succeed and “we won’t let them torpedo the deal.”
Israel began attacking Gaza after the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel in which some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed and 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. Israel’s campaign, which has killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities, has led to its international isolation.


UNESCO is choosing a new director who will face a big funding shortage after US exit

UNESCO is choosing a new director who will face a big funding shortage after US exit
Updated 06 October 2025

UNESCO is choosing a new director who will face a big funding shortage after US exit

UNESCO is choosing a new director who will face a big funding shortage after US exit
  • UNESCO’s executive board starts voting Monday to recommend either Khaled el-Anany or Firmin Édouard Matoko for the position
  • El-Enany is supported by the African Union and Arab League, is expected to focus on cultural programs

PARIS: An Egyptian antiquities professor and ex-tourism minister is facing off against a Congolese economist who promoted schooling in refugee camps in a race to become the new director of UNESCO.
Whoever wins will inherit a world body reeling from the Trump administration’s recent decision to pull the United States out of UNESCO, portending a big budget shortfall at the agency best known for its World Heritage sites around the globe.
UNESCO’s executive board begins voting Monday to recommend either Khaled el-Enany or Firmin Édouard Matoko for the position of director-general. The decision by the board, which represents 58 of the agency’s 194 member states, is expected to be finalized by UNESCO’s general assembly next month.
Noble ambitions and persistent problems
In addition to choosing and protecting World Heritage sites and traditions, the Paris-based United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization works to ensure education for girls, promotes Holocaust awareness and funds scientific research in developing countries, among other activities. Outgoing UNESCO chief Audrey Azoulay notably led a high-profile effort to rebuild the ancient Iraqi city of Mosul after it was devastated under the Daesh group.
UNESCO has also long been plagued by accusations of mismanagement and waste.
Trump argues that the agency, which voted in 2011 to admit Palestine as a member, is too politicized and anti-Israel. US supporters of UNESCO, meanwhile, say withdrawing Washington’s support allows China to play an outsized role in the world body.
Meanwhile the vote comes at a time when the whole 80-year-old UN system is facing financial challenges and deepening divisions over the wars in Gaza and Ukraine.
Frontrunner wants to be UNESCO’s first Arab leader
El-Enany worked as a tour guide through ancient Egyptian sites, earned a doctorate in France and served as Egypt’s tourism minister and antiquities minister.
Arab countries have long wanted to lead UNESCO, and el-Enany is seen as having a good chance of making that happen. The African Union and Arab League are among those that have expressed support for his bid.
He would be expected to focus on UNESCO’s cultural programs if chosen, and has pledged to continue UNESCO’s work to fight antisemitism and religious intolerance. Israel left UNESCO at the end of 2018.
While he has no UN experience, his backers say that could help him make tough reform decisions.
Challenger wants to calm tensions
Republic of Congo’s candidate Firmin Matoko, 69, spent most of his career working for UNESCO, including stints in Rwanda soon after the genocide, during peace negotiations in El Salvador and beyond.
He says he wants UNESCO to move away from political tensions and focus on technical solutions. He described helping train teachers at a refugee camp in Somalia in the 1990s, and meeting one of them years later after she became education minister. That, he says, is one reason UNESCO matters.
He says he is ready to cut jobs or programs if needed, and pledges “budgetary rigor.”
Like el-Enany, he wants to tap more private sector money to make up for the loss of US and other funding, notably from BRICS countries.
At the same time, he said, “I will do everything so that the United States comes back, while taking into account what they reproach UNESCO for.”