Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies (DCHRS)

Syria must release all prisoners of conscience under amnesty

Syria must release all prisoners of conscience under
amnesty

The Syrian government’s crackdown on protesters has sparked
global outcry

2 June 2011

Amnesty International has called on Syria’s President to
fully implement a “general amnesty” by immediately freeing all prisoners of
conscience, including those detained because of their participation in peaceful
protests.

The call came amid reports that several hundred prisoners,
including about nine prisoners of conscience, have already been released. But
Syrian human rights activists told Amnesty International the releases appear to
be at random with many hundreds of people still detained, many of them
incommunicado.

“The announced amnesty, even if it proves substantive, does
not go far enough,” said Malcolm Smart.

“If President al-Assad’s announcement is to have any
credibility, all the prisoners of conscience who have languished in Syria’s
jails for years must be released and he must take concrete steps to stop the
security forces from committing gross human rights abuses.”

President Bashar al-Assad announced on Tuesday that he was
issuing a general amnesty for those imprisoned for offences committed before 31
May 2011, including members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood and other
“politically affiliated” prisoners.

Most of those released following the amnesty announcement
had been arrested in connection with the current popular protests and held in
detention centres run by Syrian security forces.

Amnesty International has also learned of the release of
nine prisoners of conscience who had been in prison before the current protests
began.

The amnesty announcement came ahead of a key UN Security
Council debate on the growing crisis in Syria.

“The UN Security Council must not be hoodwinked by the
amnesty releases into letting up pressure on the Syrian leadership, whose
promises to allow greater freedoms have proved so hollow," said Malcolm
Smart.

“The Security Council must refer Syria to the ICC Prosecutor
as soon as possible and make clear to President al-Assad and those around him
that they will be held internationally accountable for the crimes that are
being committed by their forces against the people of Syria. The victims of
those crimes demand no less.”

Since street protests demanding reform began in mid-March,
Syrian security forces have waged a campaign of violence against the
protesters, killing at least 750 people.

Thousands have been arrested, with many being held
incommunicado and tortured. At least 12 detainees appear to have died as a
direct result of torture in custody, among them two brothers, So’dat and Majd
al-Kurdy, from the western town of Tel Kelakh. When their bodies were returned
to their family at the end of May, witnesses said both corpses had knife cuts
on the chest and legs and Majd’s penis had been cut off.

The government has said it is under attack from “armed
terrorist gangs” as justification for the crackdown, which has seen army tanks
shell residential areas of Dera’a and other cities. Independent reporting of
the protests and the security forces’ brutal response has been blocked and
international media have not been allowed inside the country.

http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/syria-must-release-all-prisoners-conscience-under-amnesty-2011-06-02