{"id":1278,"date":"2013-06-24T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-06-24T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"-0001-11-30T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"-0001-11-30T00:00:00","slug":"syria-detention-and-abuse-of-female-activists-women-detail-torture-and-abuse-by-government-in-new-testimonies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/?p=1278","title":{"rendered":"Syria: Detention and Abuse of Female Activists, Women Detail Torture and Abuse by Government in New Testimonies"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>(New York, June 24, 2013) \u2013 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/middle-eastn-africa\/syria\" target=\"_blank\">Syrian<\/a> military and pro-government forces known as <em>shabiha<\/em> have arbitrarily  detained female opposition activists as well as female relatives and neighbors  of pro-opposition activists and fighters, and in a number of cases, subjected  them to torture and sexual abuse, Human Rights Watch said today. <\/p>\n<p>Human Rights Watch interviewed 10 Syrian women who were detained, either  due to their own engagement in activities related to government opposition, or  that of their family members. Eight were themselves activists who had been  detained, all of whom said that security forces and <em>shabiha<\/em> had abused or  tortured them in detention. The abuse included electric shocks, keeping them in  stress positions, and using metal rods, wires and nightsticks to beat and  torture them. The eight women had attended  peaceful demonstrations, created posters for opposition groups, provided  humanitarian aid and medical care to those affected by the conflict,  transported defectors from the Syrian military, and assisted displaced Syrians.  All said security forces detained them at checkpoints or during home raids, and  held them for periods lasting up to nearly 14 months between February 2012 and  April 2013. In two cases, the women said their captors raped them while they  were detained at the Military Intelligence Branch in Tartous, and the Air Force  Intelligence Branch in Mezze, Damascus.<strong><\/p>\n<p>  <\/strong>Human Rights Watch also interviewed two women who were detained, and five  who were physically abused, by government forces simply because of the  suspected association of their relatives or neighbors with pro-opposition  forces.&nbsp; <strong><\/p>\n<p>  <\/strong>Human Rights Watch has not received information about opposition forces  detaining and mistreating female government supporters or relatives of those  associated with government forces.&nbsp; <strong><\/p>\n<p>  <\/strong>&ldquo;Beyond the daily gun battles, women have been a powerful voice in the  opposition in villages and towns across Syria,&rdquo; said <a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/bios\/liesl-gerntholtz\" target=\"_blank\">Liesl  Gerntholtz<\/a>, women&rsquo;s rights director at Human Rights Watch. &ldquo;In response,  the Syrian government is punishing women for delivering humanitarian assistance,  participating in protests, and supporting the opposition by subjecting them to  detention, torture, and sexual assault.&rdquo;<strong><\/p>\n<p>  <\/strong>All 10 of the former detainees interviewed were arrested and detained  arbitrarily, Human Rights Watch said. Eight of the women were held solely for  activities related to their support of government opposition, including  participating in peaceful protests, providing humanitarian assistance, and  aiding Syrian army defectors and wounded opposition fighters. In two cases,  women were detained solely due to their relatives&rsquo; activities in opposition to  the government.&nbsp; Former detainees said that security forces conducting the  arrests did not identify themselves, provide legal justification for arrests,  inform the women of the charges against them, or tell them where they were  being taken. One former detainee was held for about three months in pretrial  detention, violating both international legal standards and legislation passed  by the Syrian government, in April 2011, that limits detention without judicial  review to 60 days.&nbsp; <strong><\/p>\n<p>  <\/strong>The women reported torture in the following detention facilities: the  Military Intelligence Branch in Tartous, the Military Intelligence Branch 215  in Damascus, the Military Intelligence Branch in Daraa, and Adra central prison  in Damascus. Human Rights Watch has previously <a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/reports\/2012\/07\/03\/torture-archipelago-0\" target=\"_blank\">documented<\/a> the government&rsquo;s use of torture in 27 detention  centers throughout Syria, including in these facilities.<strong><\/p>\n<p><\/strong>Fatmeh (all names have been changed to protect interviewees), a 35-year-old  activist who helped transport Syrian army defectors from Homs to Deraa, told  Human Rights Watch that she was tortured every day during a 15-day stretch in  detention at Military Intelligence Branch 215 in Damascus, in March 2012: <\/p>\n<p>One day it would be by electricity, the next by <em>shabeh <\/em>[being hung from the ceiling by one&rsquo;s wrists with feet dangling or barely  touch the ground]. The torture marks are still present. I would lose  consciousness with the electricity\u2026 [T]hey were hitting me on my lower legs  below my thighs and on my back. They tortured me until my body started bruising  \u2026 Two men took me and carried me to the toilet because I couldn&rsquo;t walk.<\/p>\n<p>Fatmeh was released in March 2013, after nearly 14  months&rsquo; detention. <\/p>\n<p>  All eight women activists interviewed by Human  Rights Watch said that security forces detained them because of their  pro-opposition activities. They said that security forces interrogated them  about their own involvement with pro-opposition groups, and asked them for  names, locations, and activities of friends, relatives, and other suspected  opposition supporters. Nasrin, 25, was detained in Daraa in February  2012, while helping to transport a Syrian army defector. She told Human Rights Watch that her interrogators asked  about the identity of a Free Syrian Army leader in her village, and promised  her release in exchange for his name. <\/p>\n<p>  Six of the women said that the authorities  charged them with &ldquo;terrorism&rdquo; or &ldquo;terrorist activities,&rdquo; but released them  after months in detention without adequate due process \u2013 including judges who  refused to examine their case files based on instruction from security  divisions, and who remanded them to prison for extended periods of time without  instruction or ruling. <\/p>\n<p>  &ldquo;National Security has looked over your file and we can&rsquo;t do anything,&rdquo; a judge  in Damascus said to one of the women. &ldquo;No one is allowed to see your file. You  can&rsquo;t be released by a judge.&rdquo;&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>  A legal counselor in Damascus told Human Rights Watch that she is currently  assisting 15 female detainees held at Adra central prison, following their  transfer from security branches in governorates including Idlib, Daraa, and  Damascus: <\/p>\n<p>Most of the women have been arrested during the  revolution because of their own activities \u2013 demonstrating, providing  humanitarian assistance or medical assistance, even [for just] being active on  the Internet or Facebook &#8230; They are being charged with helping or working  with an armed group, as terrorists \u2013 but it is not true. <\/p>\n<p>She said that her clients have reported that some 150  women are currently held at Adra, a number corroborated by two former detainees  interviewed by Human Rights Watch. Based on her work with female detainees since  the start of the Syrian uprisings, the legal counselor believes that the  majority of these women are being detained for political participation and  activities in support of opposition groups. The Violations Documentation Center  in Syria <a href=\"\/english\/File\/SyriaInTheUN\/NGO_WI_Womens_rights_HRC23_EN.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">estimates<\/a> that the Syrian government detained more than  5,400 women between March 2011 and April 2013; they estimate that 766 women and  34 girls under age 18 remain in government detention facilities. According to the Syrian Network for Human Rights  (SNHR), 24 female detainees have been <a href=\"http:\/\/www.syrianhr.org\/reports\/syrian-network-for-human-rights-report-31-05-2013.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">tortured to death<\/a> since March 2011. Human Rights Watch is unable  to independently verify the number of female detainees or those who have died  in detention, because of denial of access to detention facilities in Syria. <\/p>\n<p>  Two of the former detainees reported to Human Rights Watch that security forces  and prison guards raped and sexually abused them while in detention. Amal, 19,  told Human Rights Watch that she was raped on two different occasions: first by  an investigator and two officers in October 2012, at the Military Intelligence  Branch in Tartous, and a second time by two officers in the Military  Intelligence Branch 235 (Palestine Branch) in Damascus, in November 2012.  Maysa, 30, told Human Rights Watch about being beaten, threatened with torture,  and raped on two separate occasions in June 2012, by a security officer while  she was detained in the Investigation Branch at Air Force Intelligence in  Mezze, Damascus. After the first rape, Maysa reported the attack to a commanding  officer who was interrogating her. The officer slapped the attacker in front of  Maysa after she identified him as the perpetrator of the rape, but did not  remove him from his post. Maysa told Human Rights Watch that the attacker raped  her again the following evening. On two other occasions, in July 2012, a prison  guard at the same branch forced Maysa to perform oral sex on him. Brigadier  General Abdul Salam Fajr Mahmoud is the director of the Investigation Branch at  this facility.<\/p>\n<p>  Human Rights Watch has previously identified the  locations, agencies responsible, torture methods, and, in many cases,  commanders who were in charge of the 27 detention facilities run by Syrian  intelligence agencies where the organization has documented torture. Human Rights  Watch has documented systematic patterns that point to a state policy of  torture and ill-treatment, and therefore constitute a crime against humanity. Human  Rights Watch has also <a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/news\/2012\/06\/15\/syria-sexual-assault-detention\" target=\"_blank\">previously documented<\/a> the use of sexual violence by Syrian  security forces against male and female detainees in more than 20 incidents.  The degree to which sexual violence is used in detention remains unclear, due  to lack of access to detention facilities by human rights monitors and the  reticence of many victims to come forward for fear of stigma or reprisals. <\/p>\n<p>  Human Rights Watch does not have evidence that  high-ranking officers commanded their troops to commit sexual violence in  detention, or that sexual violence is widespread and systematic in  government detention facilities. However,  information received by Human Rights Watch indicates that commanding officers  in most cases took no action to investigate or punish those committing acts of  sexual violence, or to prevent them from committing such acts. This was despite  the assaults taking place in circumstances in which commanding officers knew or  should have known the crimes were occurring. In the one case documented by  Human Rights Watch where officers appeared to punish a perpetrator through  physical violence \u2013 the case of Maysa \u2013 these actions were inadequate in  protecting the detainee from abuse. In no case is there evidence to suggest  that perpetrators were prosecuted for their crimes.<\/p>\n<p>  Human Rights Watch calls for the immediate  release of all nonviolent activists and detainees held arbitrarily, including  those detained for opposition activity or suspected activity of relatives. Human  Rights Watch has repeatedly called on the United Nations Security Council to  demand that Syrian authorities grant unrestricted access to all detention  facilities for international monitors, including the Commission of Inquiry  mandated by the UN Human Rights Council. Internationally recognized, trained human  rights monitors must be permitted and equipped to investigate arbitrary  detention, torture, and sexual abuse of both men and women. Human Rights Watch reiterates its call to the UN  Security Council to refer Syria to the International Criminal Court (ICC), and  urges other countries to join the calls for accountability by supporting a  referral to the ICC as the forum most capable of effectively investigating and  prosecuting those bearing the greatest responsibility for abuses in Syria. <\/p>\n<p>  Human Rights Watch continues to call on  international nongovernmental organizations, humanitarian assistance providers,  the United Nations, and local organizations to develop, expand, and improve  access to medical, psychological, social, and legal assistance to Syrian female  victims of torture, including sexual assault, inside and outside of the  country. <\/p>\n<p>  &ldquo;Torture and attacks against female activists have gone on for more than two  years, and the Syrian authorities continue to turn a blind eye,&rdquo; Gerntholtz  said. &ldquo;The Syrian government must immediately stop abusing female activists and  put in measures to protect them. Those who have committed these crimes must be  held accountable.&rdquo; <\/p>\n<p>  <strong>For more details:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>  <strong>Arbitrary Detention, Torture, Physical Abuse of Female Activists and Other Detainees:  Interviews and Testimonies<br \/>\n  <\/strong>Human Rights Watch spoke to eight female  activists who reported torture or physical abuse during detention in the  Military Intelligence Branch in Tartous, the Military Intelligence Branch in  Daraa, the Military Intelligence Branch 215 in Damascus, the Air Force  Intelligence (AFI) Branch in Mezze, Damascus, and Adra central prison. <\/p>\n<p>  <em>Shabiha<\/em> detained Amal, 19, from her home in Tartous governorate in  October 2012, after she participated in peaceful demonstrations, and held her  for about three months in facilities in Tartous, Homs, and Damascus  governorates. She was questioned extensively about her knowledge of opposition  supporters and ultimately accused of terrorism. She told Human Rights Watch  that at the Military Intelligence Branch in Tartous, she was hung from the  ceiling by her wrists with her feet barely touching the ground (a form of  torture known as <em>shabah<\/em>). She said she was forced to remain like this  for six hours, during which time two security officers would periodically hit  her with sticks or wires. She also said that one of her interrogators used  electricity to torture her:<\/p>\n<p>[He] took me into my room, put me on a chair and tied me  to it. He brought a blade and started cutting me on my wrist, to make the  electric shock with blood. He took the sheath off the wire and put it on my  wounded wrist [where he had cut my wrist]. He cut my hand, there was a little  bit of blood, and he put the wire in there. He turned on the electricity for  two or three minutes &#8230; He did three shocks. When he sees someone under  torture he is laughing, happy.<\/p>\n<p>Fatmeh, 35, who was detained in Damascus for assisting  the transport of army defectors and encouraging protests, told Human Rights  Watch about torture by electric shock in Military  Intelligence Branch 215 in Damascus:<\/p>\n<p>I would sit in the chair with my hands tied up, my legs  tied at the bottom. They would put electricity on the chair I&rsquo;m sitting on.  They put a charge on the chair so it was shaking. I would pass out. It was a  metal chair and the electricity would come through the chair.<\/p>\n<p>Additionally, Fatmeh said that when she did not respond  to demands for information about Free Syrian Army members, their weapons  supplies, and their strategy, her interrogators beat her until she passed out.<\/p>\n<p>  Suraya, a 31-year-old detained in Daraa in February 2012 for assisting Syrian  army defectors and encouraging protests, had broken her leg in an accident  before the protests began. She told Human Rights Watch that a lieutenant at the  Military Intelligence Branch in Daraa used her injury to torture her: &ldquo;[He]  knew it was not healed yet. If I answered a question in a way he didn&rsquo;t like,  he would kick me there in my leg \u2026 My leg needs surgery. The doctor here [in  Jordan] said they broke the bone and made it into small pieces.&rdquo; Suraya walks  with a visible limp. <\/p>\n<p>  Nasrin, 25, experienced similar abuse during 11 months of detention at Adra  central prison between April 2012 and March 2013. Nasrin had been detained in  Deraa after participating in protests and helping to transport wounded  opposition fighters and defectors. She told Human Rights Watch that an Adra  prison lieutenant would deny the detainees access to the semi-outdoor area just  outside their cell, in which they were permitted to go for fresh air:<\/p>\n<p>When we asked to go out he beat us. He beat me on my  foot. A nurse told me there was something broken inside my leg [from the  beating]. He used his army boots and would kick me with the heels of his boots.<\/p>\n<p>Six women interviewed by Human Rights Watch said they had  witnessed or heard security forces torturing other prisoners, both male and  female, while they were detained. One former detainee said that security forces  at Military Intelligence Branch 215  removed her blindfold and forced her to watch them shoot and kill two male  friends and fellow detainees. She told Human Rights Watch that the two men were  non-Syrians who had worked with her at protests during the early days of the  uprisings. <\/p>\n<p>  Female detainees said that they had witnessed security forces using electric  shock, car tires, chairs, leather ropes, and strip-searches to abuse other  detainees. Such abuses were reported in the Military  Intelligence Branch 215 in Damascus, Military Intelligence Branch 235  (Palestine Branch) in Damascus, the Political Security Branch in Salamiyah, the  Military Security Branch in Hama, and the Military Intelligence Branch in  Daraa. <\/p>\n<p>  Nisreen, 25, told Human Rights Watch that she was arrested in Daraa in February  2012, and held for more than a year. She said that at the beginning of the  revolution, the security forces would not shoot at women; she became part of a  &ldquo;front line&rdquo; of women who served as protection for male protesters. In  addition, she later assisted in transporting injured opposition fighters and  Syrian military defectors. Nisreen saw and heard the torture of male detainees  while she was held at Military Intelligence  Branch 215 in Damascus: <\/p>\n<p>[O]ur room was next door to the room where they were  questioning men. All night I would hear them torturing and questioning them,  from 12 noon until morning. When a man&rsquo;s blood was all over the floor, the same  one who was tortured had to clean the floor. We could hear the voices saying,  &ldquo;Clean the floor, dog. Wash this, dog.&rdquo; There was a small space in our door and  we could see them cleaning the ground outside our room. They would torture them  with electricity and throw water on them \u2013 we could hear it all.&nbsp; The  place was very small and you could hear all around you.<\/p>\n<p>Four former detainees said that judges repeatedly refused  to review their cases when they were brought before the court. Fatmeh, 30, was  brought before the terrorism court in Damascus, which was established after the  start of the Syrian uprisings, three times during more than five months of  detention at Adra prison. She told Human Rights Watch about her second  appearance before in the court:<\/p>\n<p>The judge saw the file and said, &ldquo;National Security has  looked over your file and we can&rsquo;t do anything. No one is allowed to see your  file. You can&rsquo;t be released by a judge.&rdquo;&nbsp; He said my sentence would be  execution. My lawyer said, &ldquo;I cannot do anything. There is nothing I can do  except keep checking on you.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>When Fatmeh and other women detained at Adra prison for  opposition activity later demanded that their case files be reviewed by a  judge, she said that they were put in solitary confinement and denied food and  visitation rights.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>  Three former detainees never appeared before a judge, nor had any formal  charges brought against them. All of the former detainees told Human Rights  Watch that they were released only in exchange for bribes, the surrender of a  family member, or the relinquishing of prisoners held by the opposition.<\/p>\n<p>  <strong>Sexual Abuse and Harassment in Detention<\/strong><br \/>\n  Two female activists told Human Rights Watch that they were raped in detention.  Amal, 19, said that one of her interrogators and two security officers raped  her when she was detained at the Military Intelligence Branch in Tartous: <\/p>\n<p>[The interrogator] came in in shorts, an undershirt and  brought two others \u2026 He came closer to me and that&rsquo;s when the whole thing  started. [The rape] lasted for maybe a half hour or more. He dressed and went  out. I was on the floor. The next person came. It was a half hour more. The  second one said to everyone outside, &ldquo;Come and see.&rdquo; [With] the third one, the  door was open. It was in front of whoever was in the corridor \u2026 I could try to  resist the first one and the second one, but not the third one. I looked down  and saw a lot of blood. I felt dizzy. I was crawling to my pants and blouse. A  doctor showed up in the room \u2026 He took me to the bathroom and said, &ldquo;Clean  yourself.&rdquo; <\/p>\n<p>Information received by Human Rights Watch indicates that  no action was taken to investigate the incident or penalize the perpetrators.<\/p>\n<p>  Air Force Intelligence (AFI) officers detained Maysa, 30, in June 2012 at her  home and took her to the AFI Branch in Mezze, Damascus. She had been providing  humanitarian assistance to internally displaced Syrians while studying at  university. She told Human Rights Watch that she was raped by an AFI security  officer during her 140 days of detention: <\/p>\n<p>When he came in he told me, &ldquo;If the FSA had detained you  they would have raped you, but here I will be the only one who will have sex  with you.&rdquo; He took off his clothes. I screamed \u2026 Then he approached me and  turned me around facing the wall. He took off his underwear and raped me from  behind. After he finished he threatened me and said, &ldquo;If you say something  don&rsquo;t blame [it] on anyone but yourself.&rdquo;\u2026 I did not know if I wanted to scream  or cry or both.<\/p>\n<p>Maysa reported the rape and identified her attacker to an  interrogator in the prison, who slapped the security officer as punishment, and  told Maysa to alert him if the officer approached her again. The next day,  however, she said that the officer came to her cell and raped her a second  time. After this, Maysa told Human Rights Watch that she suffered a nervous  breakdown and beat her head on the steel bars of her cell until she fainted.  When she came to, a second interrogator again asked her to identify her  attacker again, which she did. The perpetrator denied the assault and, to  incite anger towards him, Maysa accused him of being a Free Syrian Army  officer. When she did this, the interrogator beat the offending officer. <\/p>\n<p>  Later in her detention, another security officer sexually assaulted Maysa while  she was in solitary confinement in July 2012. She told Human Rights Watch that  he took care to bring her to a bathroom that was not monitored by security  cameras, so that he could assault her: <\/p>\n<p>I was washing my hands when he approached me and said  that he can help me get out [of detention] and that he has very good  connections \u2026 He started touching me everywhere. Then he pushed me downwards \u2026  He removed his pants but not all the way. Then he put his penis in my mouth. He  was not afraid. He was doing it with confidence. I was afraid to scream because  he threatened to torture me. He ejaculated on my face. He made me do this twice  during the 24 days [that I was in solitary confinement] \u2026 After that day, he  passed every day by my cell to see me. He repeatedly told me, &ldquo;If you talk you  will regret it, you don&rsquo;t know who you are dealing with.&rdquo; <\/p>\n<p>Three former detainees  told Human Rights Watch that security forces and prison guards sexually  harassed them during detention, ranging from groping to verbal abuse. The abuse reportedly took place in the Military  Intelligence Branch in Daraa, the General Intelligence Directorate Al-Khattib  Branch in Damascus, and Military Intelligence Branch 215 in Damascus. <\/p>\n<p>  Hadiya, 20, was detained for approximately two months in June 2012,  because of her activism and that of her family members. She had been providing  aid to war-affected families, and was arrested while participating in a  demonstration in Damascus. She told Human Rights Watch that she was sexually  harassed by police officers while in solitary confinement in the Al-Khattib  Branch in Damascus. &ldquo;Two of them tried to touch me through the hole in the  door. They told me to get naked because it is very hot and [so] they can watch  \u2026 The jailer said, &lsquo;If you let me sleep with you I&#8217;ll let you out.&rsquo;&rdquo; Human  Rights Watch has previously documented the use of torture in the Al-Khattib  Branch, including beatings, beatings with objects, electrocution, beatings on  the soles of the feet (<em>falaqa<\/em>)<em>, <\/em>and placing detainees in stress  positions.<\/p>\n<p>  Fatmeh, 35, said she was sexually assaulted in Military Intelligence Branch 215 in Damascus by her interrogators  and guards: &ldquo;I was blindfolded, sitting on the ground. They used to come and  put their hand on me and say foul language. They would put their hands on my  breasts.&rdquo; Human Rights Watch has also previously documented the use of torture  in Military Intelligence Branch 215 through the use of beatings, beatings with  objects, and <em>shabeh. <\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <strong>Arbitrary Detention and Abuse of Non-Activist Women During Search  Operations <\/strong><br \/>\n  Rasha, 31, was arrested during a household search in Hama in August  2011, by men she identified as military police. She suffers from kidney disease  and underwent a kidney transplant in 2007; she became ill while in detention in  Hama as she was not permitted access to her daily regimen of medications. Rasha  told Human Rights Watch that she was tortured by government forces during her  18-day detention in the Hama Military Security Branch: <\/p>\n<p>They took me alone. It was because of my husband \u2013 they  were searching for him. He was wanted for demonstrating \u2026 They were hitting me  with a stick, with metal, with wood. I told them about my kidney medications  that I needed. They hit me more. They said they would stop if I said where my  husband was. They burned me with a hot iron. They were hitting me everywhere,  especially on my kidney area. <\/p>\n<p>She was released only after military police located and  detained her husband in Hama. As Rasha attested, &ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t targeted anymore  after I got out of prison because my husband was in prison.&rdquo; While in  detention, Rasha said she was held in a small room with 30 to 35 other young  women who had all been detained because a family member was wanted for support  of the opposition. <\/p>\n<p>  Halima, a 20-year-old pregnant mother of two from Homs, told Human Rights Watch  that government forces targeted her because of her cousins, who she said are  members of the Free Syrian Army. Five men in military uniform, whom she  identified as <em>shabiha<\/em>, came to her house in March 2012 after visiting  her uncle&rsquo;s home nearby:<\/p>\n<p>They came to my house at the  same time because my name is the same as my cousins&rsquo;\u2026 They took me and put me  in a big room for two days. I don&rsquo;t know where it was. They blindfolded me and  took me in a car \u2026 They asked questions about my cousins \u2013 where did they go? I  told them I didn&#8217;t know.<\/p>\n<p>After three days of questioning, Halima said that a  female <em>shabiha<\/em> member working with her captors took pity on her and  helped her to escape. Fearing further persecution, she and her family left  immediately for Damascus and then Jordan.<\/p>\n<p>  Human Rights Watch also documented five cases of abuse of women by military  forces during targeted searches or attempted arrests of male relatives who  government forces had identified as opposition supporters. Interviewees said  that these abuses occurred in Damascus, Daraa, Homs, and Idlib governorates  between September 2011 and August 2012.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>  Shayma, 20, told Human Rights Watch that she suffered a head injury when  government forces raided her home in Daraa in August 2012. She said that they  were looking for her husband and brothers, whom she identified as Free Syrian  Army supporters: <\/p>\n<p>I was sitting at home alone. Security forces came in \u2026  They wanted my husband but he had already left. They wanted my brothers and  wanted me to tell them where they were. I said I didn&rsquo;t know. They started  beating me. I kept telling them I didn&rsquo;t know. They brought metal rods and were  hitting me on the head, then on the back. They started whipping me \u2026 After the  first hit on my head I started to lose my balance and I couldn&rsquo;t see clearly. I  passed out \u2026 The next thing I remember I woke up surrounded by neighbors. <\/p>\n<p>Shayma and her mother told Human Rights Watch that she  experiences ongoing effects of the injury, including memory loss, confusion,  and fatigue.<\/p>\n<p>  Men and children have also been targeted by government forces for abuse and  arrest due to alleged opposition support by their relatives or associates.  However, women are at particularly high risk of abuse during searches for male  opposition combatants and supporters, as women&rsquo;s social and familial roles  often tie them to the home when men have fled to avoid persecution or left to  join armed groups.&nbsp; <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>(New York, June 24, 2013) \u2013 Syrian military and pro-government forces known as shabiha have arbitrarily detained female opposition activists as well as female relatives and neighbors of pro-opposition activists and fighters, and in a number of cases, subjected them to torture and sexual abuse, Human Rights Watch said today. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":10,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1278","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-thematic_reports"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1278","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/10"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1278"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1278\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1278"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1278"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1278"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}