Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
How tens of thousands of Syrians have 'disappeared'
How tens of thousands of Syrians have 'disappeared'
Apr 6, 2026 8:29 PM

  Two years after her father, human rights lawyer Khalil Matouq, suffered the same fate, Raneem was kidnapped by Syrian authorities in 2014. She was released after two months in detention, while her father remains missing to this day.

  For Raneem, the worst part is knowing what conditions her father faces in Syria's prisons.

  "Our cell was in this corridor, and usually they take the men and children to ask them questions, and when they torture them, we would hear the screaming all the time," Raneem told Al Jazeera, noting she was beaten by guards and, through a window in her cell door, saw dead bodies in the corridors. In one of the most horrific methods of torture, Raneem said, prisoners were strapped to a chair, the back of which was pulled downwards, snapping the spine.

  When she was ultimately released under a presidential amnesty, Raneem said, it was cold comfort. Her father's continuing absence has left a hole in the family.

  "When we were in Syria, it was really hard because he was protecting us from everything in the war. We were trying to be like him in detention, not eating so much, feeling cold because we didn't know if he was cold or warm... It's not easy, because I have a picture of what's going on [in prison]," Raneem said.

  "Sometimes our imagination is infinite."

  The Syrian regime has forcibly disappeared more than 65,000 people since the war broke out in 2011, according to a new report from Amnesty International, which cites an "organized" and "systematic" campaign by the state security apparatus to silence dissent.

  An enforced disappearance occurs when someone is abducted by state agents, who then conceal the person's whereabouts, denying them legal protections. The scale and scope of this practice in Syria amounts to crimes against humanity, the Amnesty report concluded, mirroring previous findings from the United Nations.

  Amnesty's report, Between Prison and the Grave, found that enforced disappearances have been carried out by all four branches of the Syrian security forces, as well as by the armed forces and militias associated with the Syrian regime.

  The Syrian Network for Human Rights, a local monitoring group, has documented 65,116 cases of enforced disappearances - including 58,148 civilians - between March 2011 and August 2015. The actual number is believed to be even higher, as many Syrians are reluctant to publicly discuss the issue for fear they, too, could be targeted.

  "Since 2011, the Syrian regime has carried out an orchestrated campaign of enforced disappearances," the report stated. "At the beginning of the crisis it arrested and forcibly disappeared large numbers of peaceful opponents of the regime, including demonstrators, political activists, human rights defenders, media workers, doctors and humanitarian aid workers.

  "As the conflict evolved, so too did the regime's strategy," the report continued. "It forcibly disappeared those it considered to be disloyal, such as defectors, as well as regime employees or soldiers who were believed to be considering defection. The regime also began forcibly disappearing family members of individuals wanted by the security forces, usually in an effort to dissuade these wanted individuals from continuing their political activism or military activities."

  Those subjected to enforced disappearance face horrific conditions in prison, and are routinely tortured with electric shocks, beatings, burnings, and sexual violence, noted the report, which relied on testimony from dozens of friends and family members of disappeared Syrians, former prisoners, investigators, analysts and monitors.

  The practice has become so common that a black market has emerged, in which "brokers" with close ties to Syrian authorities offer to provide information to family members on their disappeared relatives in return for a fee, ranging from hundreds of dollars to tens of thousands. Sometimes, the only information available is that the person is dead.

  Nicolette Boehland, a Syria researcher at Amnesty International, told Al Jazeera that the Syrian public is paying a "huge price" for this campaign.

  "The social fabric in Syria has been destroyed by this campaign of enforced disappearance. Countless families have been left without their fathers, mothers, sons, daughters. The cumulative effect of this cannot be underestimated," Boehland said.

  "This campaign of disappearances has also terrorized the civilian population and silenced them, as many families fear that doing anything that could be interpreted as opposing the Syrian regime could lead to further harm to or the death of their disappeared relatives... The regime has, in effect, held large parts of the civilian population in Syria hostage."

  Amnesty's report identified three main profiles of people targeted for enforced disappearances, including peaceful opponents of the government, individuals considered disloyal to the government, and family members of people wanted by the state.

  Amnesty has called on the Syrian regime to end enforced disappearances, to grant international monitors access to detention facilities, to provide legal assistance for all prisoners and to enact protections for the families of victims of enforced disappearance - but so far, those calls have gone unheeded. Amnesty is also urging the UN Security Council to impose targeted sanctions against the Syrian officials who are responsible for enforced disappearances.

  "Anticipating that the Syrian regime will continue to commit these crimes against humanity with impunity, we are calling on states that support Syria, such as Russia and Iran, to press the regime to end its brutal campaign of enforced disappearance," Boehland said.

  Meanwhile, Raneem's family will continue to wait, and to hope that one day Khalil will be freed.

  "It's crazy, but sometimes we try to contact [my father] with dreams... Sometimes he speaks to us," she said.

  "Sometimes he tells us how he's doing and how he's feeling, [and] in some dreams, he seems strong," she added. "We always have this hope."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A pro-regime Syrian carries a picture of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, during a rally in front of the Russian Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, 18 October 2015.

  Al-Jazeera

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
UN says 2016 ‘worst year’ for Syrian children
  Child deaths increased 20 percent in civil war-torn Syria in 2016, making it the “worst year” since 2014, according to the United Nation’s children agency Monday.   UNICEF said in a statement that at least 652 children were killed in Syria in 2016 -- 255 of them in or near schools....
Syria's Tabqa Dam: a strategic prize
  Syria's vital Tabqa Dam, the country's biggest, has become a major part of a Kurdish-Arab assault to cut off ISIL stronghold of Raqa.   Located in Raqa province, the dam is built on the 2,800-kilometre-long (more than 1,700-mile-long) Euphrates River, which flows from Turkey through northern Syria and east into Iraq....
Israel's false narrative on land swaps
  When Israeli opposition leader and Labour Party chairman Isaac Herzog published a plan for kick-starting the peace process last month, one of his stated goals was to "save the settlement blocs" - areas of the West Bank where Israel has built clusters of settlements, including larger towns.   Settlement blocs are...
Afghan refugees return home amid Pakistan crackdown
  Torkham is a maze of chain-link fences and razor wire. Stern-faced Pakistani guards, their rifles loaded and at the ready, watch on as Afghan visitors quietly circumnavigate the multiple checks of their papers at the main border crossing between the two South Asian countries.   Nearby, a group of about two...
How Israel denies rights to Palestinian prisoners
  In a photograph widely shared on social media this month, Kifah Quzmar, a final-year business student at Birzeit University near Ramallah, wears a red-and-white keffiyeh and a somewhat defiant look.   The difference between the 28-year-old and tens of other Palestinian students and youth arrested in recent weeks is perhaps that...
Gaza: Israel's war drums are getting louder
  On Friday, a senior member of Hamas's military wing, Mazen Faqha, was assassinated in the Gaza Strip by armed gunmen. It was an assassination tactic not seen in Gaza for at least a decade.   Faqha was a leading member of Hamas' al-Qassam Brigades in the West Bank. In 2003, he...
Syria gas attack: 'We found bodies all over the floor'
  Survivors of a suspected chemical attack in Syria's Idlib province and aid workers on the scene say they are still in shock and struggling to recover from the distressing event of the attack.   "It's just indescribable," Othman al-Khani, local activist and witness said. "We saw people suffocating while their lungs...
How the US destroyed Iraq: On Mosul's civilian deaths
  In October 2016, ISIL strategists and commanders were fully aware of the sheer number of Iraqi armed forces that were moving in to encircle Mosul.   The operation to retake Iraq's second-largest city was officially launched last October, and in January its eastern half was declared "fully liberated". Mosul is ISIL's...
Gaza doctor seeks justice in Israeli court
  The walls of Izzeldin Abuelaish's office at the University of Toronto are covered in photographs, but one, in particular, stands out.   Three of his daughters, Bessan, Mayar and Aya, sit on a beach in the Gaza Strip. The tide is out, and the girls - aged 13, 15 and 20...
Turkey plans to repair dozens of mosques in Syria
  Turkey’s Diyanet Foundation plans to repair dozens of mosques in Syria that were heavily damaged in the ongoing war, according to the head of foundation on Sunday.   Mustafa Tutkun told Anadolu Agency the state-run foundation was planning to construct and repair 66 mosques in cooperation with the Prime Ministry.   Tutkun...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved