The Prague Post - Germany tries Syrian doctor for crimes against humanity

EUR -
AED 4.240541
AFN 72.158911
ALL 95.304313
AMD 425.375704
ANG 2.067088
AOA 1059.832402
ARS 1664.7973
AUD 1.642717
AWG 2.080988
AZN 1.968207
BAM 1.951635
BBD 2.324459
BDT 141.868459
BGN 1.927924
BHD 0.435358
BIF 3447.340318
BMD 1.154501
BND 1.483846
BOB 7.975049
BRL 5.990591
BSD 1.154047
BTN 110.049091
BWP 15.610819
BYN 3.187625
BYR 22628.22178
BZD 2.321166
CAD 1.610587
CDF 2627.644264
CHF 0.922104
CLF 0.026893
CLP 1058.44555
CNY 7.819148
CNH 7.825976
COP 4129.396485
CRC 532.568028
CUC 1.154501
CUP 30.594279
CVE 110.428292
CZK 24.162903
DJF 205.178601
DKK 7.47405
DOP 67.249929
DZD 154.325617
EGP 59.710727
ERN 17.317517
ETB 182.670883
FJD 2.562185
FKP 0.864939
GBP 0.863393
GEL 3.059266
GGP 0.864939
GHS 13.519288
GIP 0.864939
GMD 84.278477
GNF 10133.634936
GTQ 8.797301
GYD 241.456784
HKD 9.048229
HNL 30.779149
HRK 7.535079
HTG 150.899264
HUF 355.955357
IDR 20641.325367
ILS 3.400652
IMP 0.864939
INR 110.353013
IQD 1512.396456
IRR 1587641.065839
ISK 143.386226
JEP 0.864939
JMD 182.241069
JOD 0.81854
JPY 185.130057
KES 149.346122
KGS 100.960771
KHR 4632.44326
KMF 492.972321
KPW 1038.883885
KRW 1761.179684
KWD 0.357075
KYD 0.961756
KZT 563.56215
LAK 25401.919878
LBP 103385.574505
LKR 389.512093
LRD 210.696249
LSL 19.072203
LTL 3.408941
LVL 0.698346
LYD 7.354046
MAD 10.687152
MDL 20.069343
MGA 4854.677272
MKD 61.653871
MMK 2423.497754
MNT 4131.587691
MOP 9.3153
MRU 46.324395
MUR 55.289178
MVR 17.848318
MWK 2004.213693
MXN 20.132826
MYR 4.689349
MZN 73.781799
NAD 19.060809
NGN 1570.121855
NIO 42.289462
NOK 10.982196
NPR 176.078745
NZD 1.984702
OMR 0.443931
PAB 1.154147
PEN 3.960805
PGK 5.056427
PHP 70.994889
PKR 321.35543
PLN 4.242272
PYG 7107.692102
QAR 4.208732
RON 5.236822
RSD 117.37702
RUB 83.09944
RWF 1687.880625
SAR 4.335034
SBD 9.288623
SCR 15.537236
SDG 693.28319
SEK 10.930009
SGD 1.485197
SHP 0.861952
SLE 28.458136
SLL 24209.313482
SOS 659.789127
SRD 43.263757
STD 23895.842073
STN 24.764049
SVC 10.098536
SYP 127.60943
SZL 19.072648
THB 37.971985
TJS 10.767713
TMT 4.052299
TND 3.358155
TOP 2.779761
TRY 53.210032
TTD 7.828361
TWD 36.458909
TZS 3013.245575
UAH 51.845054
UGX 4353.746125
USD 1.154501
UYU 46.720695
UZS 13882.875494
VES 654.571184
VND 30398.014258
VUV 137.714246
WST 3.170667
XAF 654.565722
XAG 0.017661
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.120097
XCG 2.079979
XDR 0.817855
XOF 657.484903
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.521999
ZAR 19.130665
ZMK 10391.889075
ZMW 20.497433
ZWL 371.748887
  • RBGPF

    1.4900

    61.5

    +2.42%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.31

    -0.22%

  • JRI

    0.2600

    12.72

    +2.04%

  • BCC

    2.0400

    70.01

    +2.91%

  • VOD

    -0.1400

    14.67

    -0.95%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    16.37

    -0.92%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    24.58

    +1.63%

  • RELX

    0.4200

    34.94

    +1.2%

  • RIO

    0.4900

    101.42

    +0.48%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    22.28

    -0.58%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    59.95

    +0.43%

  • AZN

    1.8800

    183.43

    +1.02%

  • BP

    -1.0500

    42.67

    -2.46%

  • NGG

    0.9100

    81.08

    +1.12%

  • GSK

    0.6100

    51.25

    +1.19%

Germany tries Syrian doctor for crimes against humanity
Germany tries Syrian doctor for crimes against humanity

Germany tries Syrian doctor for crimes against humanity

German prosecutors accused a Syrian doctor Wednesday of torturing detainees and killing one of them while working in military hospitals in his war-torn homeland, on the first day of a landmark crimes against humanity trial in Frankfurt.

Text size:

The accused, 36-year-old Alaa Mousa, arrived in Germany in 2015 where he continued to practise medicine until his arrest.

The trial at Frankfurt's higher regional court is the second of its kind in Germany, and adds to other European efforts to hold loyalists of President Bashar al-Assad's regime to account for alleged war-era atrocities.

Mousa faces 18 counts of torturing detainees at military hospitals in Homs and Damascus in 2011-12, including setting fire to a teenage boy's genitals.

He also faces one count of murder, for having allegedly administered a lethal injection to a prisoner who resisted being beaten.

The accused helped to perpetrate "a systematic attack on the civilian population," said federal prosecutor Anna Zabeck as she read out the charge sheet.

He "tortured detainees by inflicting substantial bodily harm on them", she told the court.

The defendant, who wore a blue suit and an FFP2 face mask in court, kept his head down while the charges were being read out.

He has denied the allegations.

His trial comes after another German court last week sentenced a former Syrian colonel to life in jail for overseeing the murder of 27 people and the torture of 4,000 others at a Damascus detention centre a decade ago.

That verdict, hailed by victims as "historic", marked the culmination of the first trial globally over state-sponsored torture in Syria.

- Universal jurisdiction -

The proceedings in Germany are made possible by the legal principle of "universal jurisdiction" -- which allows countries to try people for crimes of exceptional gravity, including war crimes and genocide, even if they were committed in a different country.

Other cases involving the Syrian conflict have also sprung up in France, Norway, Sweden and Austria.

"Over the past decade, a large amount of evidence about atrocities in Syria has been collected, and now... those efforts are starting to bear fruit," said Balkees Jarrah of Human Rights Watch.

Mousa, a married father of two, addressed the court in fairly fluent German during the opening hearing, providing details about his education and employment history.

He said he had worked "in several military hospitals" in Syria.

He also told judges he belonged to Syria's Christian minority.

Mousa is expected to address the accusations against him in later hearings.

- 'Absolute power' -

Mousa left Syria for Germany in mid-2015, arriving not as a refugee but on a visa for skilled workers.

He worked in several places as an orthopaedic doctor, including the central spa town of Bad Wildungen, before being arrested in June 2020 after Syrian witnesses came forward.

Federal prosecutors say Mousa worked in military hospital 608 in the Syrian city of Homs and military hospital 601 in the capital Damascus, where injured detainees were brought after being arrested for opposing Assad's regime.

But instead of being treated, many were tortured "and not infrequently killed" in such hospitals, as part of Assad's brutal repression of the opposition, prosecutors allege.

In one case, Mousa is accused of having poured flammable liquid on a prisoner's wounds before setting them on fire and kicking him in the face so hard that three of his teeth had to be replaced.

Mousa is also alleged to have given a fatal injection to an inmate who was trying to fend off a beating, which prosecutors say was to demonstrate his "absolute power" over the prisoners.

- 'Sexualised violence' -

Rene Bahns, a lawyer for the civil parties in the case, representing victims' rights, told AFP the examples highlighted "the use of sexualised violence" in the Syrian torture system.

On another occasion, Mousa was called to a prison in Homs where an inmate was suffering an epileptic attack. Prosecutors say the accused punched him in the face, hit him with a plastic pipe and kicked him in the head.

The man died a few days later, shortly after taking a tablet given to him by Mousa, though the cause of death is unclear.

Other inmates were kicked and beaten, sometimes with medical tools, according to prosecutors.

The war in Syria has killed close to half a million people since it broke out in 2011.

Germany has taken in some 800,000 Syrian refugees.

B.Hornik--TPP