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Tuesday, March 12, 2024

Islamic Insanity > Assad's Uncle - The Butcher of Hama, to be tried in Switzerland; Italian Terrorists arrested; Palestinians protest at Holocaust Museum

 

Syrian president's uncle to stand trial in

Switzerland for crimes against humanity


Rifaat al-Assad, an uncle of the Syrian president, will stand trial in Switzerland for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity that decades ago earned him the nickname "The Butcher of Hama".

This file photograph taken in 1986 shows then Syrian President Hafez al-Assad (R) with youngest brother Rifaat (L) attending a reception in London. © AFP

By: NEWS WIRES


The office of Switzerland's Attorney General (OAG) said it was charging the former Syrian vice president and former Syrian army officer with a long list of crimes committed in February 1982, during a notorious clash between the Syrian military and Islamist opposition in the town of Hama in western Syria.

There was no immediate official reaction from Syria nor from Rifaat al-Assad, who is believed to be in Syria.

The uncle of Syria's current president Bashar al-Assad was being "charged with ordering homicides, acts of torture, cruel treatments and illegal detentions", the OAG said in a statement.

His alleged "war crimes and crimes against humanity", it said, were committed "in his capacity as commander of the defence brigades ... and commander of operations in Hama", in central Syria.

They took place "within the context of the armed conflict and the widespread and systematic attack launched against the population of the city of Hama", it said.


Executions, torture

Syrian security forces deployed to Hama in early February 1982 to suppress an insurrection by the Islamist opposition, and the operation allegedly ended at the end of the same month.

The OAG highlighted that the defence brigades "were purportedly the main forces in charge of the suppression".

"In this context, several thousands of civilians were allegedly victims of different abuses, ranging from immediate execution to detention and torture in specifically-created centres," it said.

According to the indictment, the armed conflict in question is estimated to have caused between 3,000 and 60,000 deaths in Hama, most of them civilians.

The criminal proceedings in Switzerland were initiated under so-called international jurisdiction, which allows countries to prosecute alleged crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide regardless of where they were committed.

The initial Swiss complaint against Rifaat al-Assad was filed in 2013 by TRIAL International, a rights group that works with victims and pushes Switzerland to prosecute alleged international criminals.

"It's another step for justice for the Syrian people!" TRIAL chief Philip Grant said in a statement celebrating the indictment.

Along with several other past and ongoing proceedings in France and Germany, the new trial, he said, would help examine "the responsibility of the highest Syrian officials" and shed "light on the crimes committed by the al-Assad's clan against its own people during the past decades".

The organisation also quoted one of three victims who will serve as civil plaintiffs in the case hailing the proof "that such powerful persons can be brought to justice".

Exile

The attorney-general's office had already in 2021 requested permission to issue an international arrest warrant for the now 86-year-old, but the justice ministry initially balked, arguing Switzerland did not have jurisdiction to pursue him.

But a year later, a Swiss court overruled the justice ministry position, highlighting that Rifaat al-Assad had been staying at a Geneva hotel when Swiss prosecutors first launched their investigation in 2013.

This provided a path to pursuing him over alleged war crimes, it said, allowing the OAG to issue an international arrest warrant in 2022.

It remains unlikely that the defendant, who recently returned to Syria after 37 years in exile, will show up in person for the trial, for which a date has yet to be set.

But his presence may not be necessary: Swiss law allows for trials in absentia under certain conditions.

Rifaat al-Assad, long a pillar of the regime in Damascus, was forced into exile in 1984 after a failed attempt to overthrow his brother, late president Hafez al-Assad.

He travelled to Switzerland and later France, working in opposition to the Syrian regime, before finally returning home in 2021.

He has made no public appearance since then, but last April, he appeared in a picture alongside the current president and the first lady, along with other family members.

(AFP) 




Italy: Three ‘Palestinian’ Muslims accused of plotting jihad massacres against civilian and military targets

A glimpse into the future of the West.

“3 Palestinians arrested in Italy on terrorist plot suspicion,” i24News, March 11, 2024 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):

Italian police arrested three Palestinians suspected in plotting terrorist attacks, including a suicide attack, against civilian and military targets “on a foreign soil.”


The suspects are believed to be a part of ‘Rapid response group – Tulkarem Brigades’ of al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, designated a terrorist organization by the European Union.

The operation was carried out in L’Aquila in central Italy at the request of the Public Prosecutor’s Office of L’Aquila – District Anti-Mafia and Anti-Terrorism Directorate, in coordination with the National Anti-Mafia and Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor’s Office….






Palestinian protesters gather as Amsterdam 

opens Holocaust museum

Euronews, March 10, 2024:


The protest leaders emphasized they were against the Israeli president’s presence, not the museum.

The Netherlands opened the National Holocaust Museum on Sunday with a ceremony presided over by the Dutch king as well as Israeli President Isaac Herzog, whose presence prompted protest because of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

The museum in Amsterdam tells the stories of some of the 102,000 Jews who were deported from the Netherlands and murdered in Nazi camps, as well as the history of their structural persecution under German World War II occupation before the deportations began.

The museum “gives a face and a voice to the Jewish victims of persecution in the Netherlands,” the Dutch King Willem-Alexander said in the address at the inaugural ceremony on Sunday. It also “shows us the devastating consequences that antisemitism can have,” he added.

“That is why we must continue to be aware of how things began and how they went from bad to worse,” the king said. Earlier, the king and the Israeli president visited Amsterdam’s famous Portuguese Synagogue….

Thousands of pro-Palestinian protesters gathered amid tightened security at the Waterloo Square in central Amsterdam, near the museum and the synagogue, waving Palestinian flags, chanting “Never again is now,” and demanding an end of Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories and an immediate cease-fire in Gaza….


 

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