The Prague Post - Ex-prisoners back in Syria's cells 'of despair'

EUR -
AED 4.27364
AFN 80.859868
ALL 98.204251
AMD 446.389709
ANG 2.082377
AOA 1066.960758
ARS 1543.164028
AUD 1.789241
AWG 2.097271
AZN 1.976172
BAM 1.952326
BBD 2.352214
BDT 141.548105
BGN 1.95554
BHD 0.438456
BIF 3430.681192
BMD 1.163534
BND 1.495426
BOB 8.04964
BRL 6.352786
BSD 1.164917
BTN 101.902781
BWP 15.661994
BYN 3.845623
BYR 22805.274333
BZD 2.340115
CAD 1.600017
CDF 3362.614505
CHF 0.939665
CLF 0.028832
CLP 1131.059726
CNY 8.357842
CNH 8.359186
COP 4707.252964
CRC 589.745436
CUC 1.163534
CUP 30.833662
CVE 110.826535
CZK 24.457725
DJF 206.783382
DKK 7.463596
DOP 70.975706
DZD 151.014689
EGP 56.484009
ERN 17.453016
ETB 160.771394
FJD 2.62482
FKP 0.871044
GBP 0.866955
GEL 3.143186
GGP 0.871044
GHS 12.274995
GIP 0.871044
GMD 84.354841
GNF 10093.660896
GTQ 8.938017
GYD 243.734162
HKD 9.133559
HNL 30.659259
HRK 7.533186
HTG 152.876631
HUF 396.961292
IDR 18982.889283
ILS 3.991144
IMP 0.871044
INR 101.753469
IQD 1524.23007
IRR 49013.887029
ISK 142.823998
JEP 0.871044
JMD 186.524859
JOD 0.824936
JPY 171.525334
KES 150.676214
KGS 101.75141
KHR 4665.772939
KMF 491.60397
KPW 1047.253903
KRW 1612.669947
KWD 0.354733
KYD 0.970864
KZT 627.677607
LAK 25132.343791
LBP 104194.505758
LKR 350.243705
LRD 233.870355
LSL 20.676285
LTL 3.435615
LVL 0.703811
LYD 6.323779
MAD 10.543924
MDL 19.623909
MGA 5160.27473
MKD 61.494927
MMK 2442.893483
MNT 4179.944664
MOP 9.419257
MRU 46.436175
MUR 52.742472
MVR 17.914231
MWK 2020.480315
MXN 21.699277
MYR 4.926367
MZN 74.419426
NAD 20.67585
NGN 1780.824525
NIO 42.760051
NOK 11.925855
NPR 163.044449
NZD 1.956671
OMR 0.447377
PAB 1.165017
PEN 4.138113
PGK 4.817616
PHP 66.476195
PKR 328.756433
PLN 4.253619
PYG 8725.322665
QAR 4.235848
RON 5.071608
RSD 117.198149
RUB 92.211681
RWF 1677.234844
SAR 4.366522
SBD 9.560838
SCR 17.016383
SDG 698.704811
SEK 11.160605
SGD 1.495252
SHP 0.914355
SLE 26.877598
SLL 24398.739292
SOS 664.957288
SRD 43.189986
STD 24082.813011
STN 24.725106
SVC 10.193684
SYP 15128.125694
SZL 20.67614
THB 37.62403
TJS 10.892423
TMT 4.084006
TND 3.351557
TOP 2.725112
TRY 47.245972
TTD 7.894883
TWD 34.701825
TZS 2891.382874
UAH 48.281649
UGX 4158.599466
USD 1.163534
UYU 46.766775
UZS 14573.268274
VES 149.802437
VND 30502.05442
VUV 140.017661
WST 3.22578
XAF 654.786132
XAG 0.030501
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.14451
XCG 2.099564
XDR 0.814588
XOF 657.988284
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.772344
ZAR 20.641031
ZMK 10473.208695
ZMW 27.003713
ZWL 374.657604
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • AZN

    0.9700

    74.57

    +1.3%

  • RIO

    0.6800

    60.77

    +1.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.96

    +0.04%

  • SCS

    0.0100

    16

    +0.06%

  • GSK

    0.8300

    37.58

    +2.21%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    56.69

    +0.51%

  • BP

    0.3100

    34.19

    +0.91%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    23.52

    -0.09%

  • RBGPF

    1.0800

    76

    +1.42%

  • NGG

    -0.2200

    72.08

    -0.31%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    14.45

    -0.21%

  • RELX

    0.5100

    49.32

    +1.03%

  • BCC

    0.2700

    83.19

    +0.32%

  • BCE

    0.5300

    23.78

    +2.23%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.41

    +0.52%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    11.26

    -0.36%

Ex-prisoners back in Syria's cells 'of despair'
Ex-prisoners back in Syria's cells 'of despair' / Photo: LOUAI BESHARA - AFP

Ex-prisoners back in Syria's cells 'of despair'

This time he was there by choice. Mohammed Darwish was back in a jail that was run by Syria's feared intelligence services -- and Bashar al-Assad was no longer president.

Text size:

Cell number nine reeks of putrefaction. It is an underground windowless room with blackened dripping walls where the 34-year-old journalist was held with around 100 others.

Darwish was detained for months by one of the most feared branches of the former government's many-tentacled intelligence services.

It was to the so-called Palestine Branch in Damascus, also known as Branch 235, that he was taken for interrogation, suspected by the authorities of supplying information to "terrorist" groups.

Many people who ended up there never saw the light of day again.

"I was one of those they interrogated the most," Darwish told AFP of his ordeal in 2018. "Every day, morning and night" for the 120 days he was detained.

He said people were held after "arbitrary arrests and with no charges ever laid" against them.

Darwish recalled being kept in the cell which held some 50 prisoners with tuberculosis. He also remembered a young Turkish inmate he said was driven mad by the lashes that rained down upon him.

"When the door closed behind us, we were plunged into the depths of despair. This cell was witness to so much tragedy," he said.

- Abandoned ID cards -

When Damascus was taken last Sunday by an Islamist coalition led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which was formerly linked to Al-Qaeda, those who worked at Assad's Palestine Branch simply melted away.

In one dark room, AFP saw a woman whose face was covered with a grey scarf rummage desperately through a pile of abandoned ID cards.

Thousands like her have swarmed the country's notorious houses of detention over the past week, looking for evidence that might lead them to loved ones who had disappeared under Assad's rule.

And some former prisoners, like Darwish, are also returning as free men to where they were once incarcerated, trying to find closure.

Adham Bajbouj, 32, is another former prisoner.

"They told us our stay at the Palestine Branch was just for a question and answer session," he said.

"But I was in there for 35 days. Or maybe it was 32, I no longer remember very well," Bajbouj said.

His brother, who was accompanying him, did remember one key detail.

"He weighed 85 kilos (187 pounds) when he arrived, and was just 50 when he got out," he said.

- Constant humiliation -

As well as being questioned, prisoners were subject to constant humiliation.

"We had to scrub clean the torture areas and toilets, and drag the dead from the cells," said Bajbouj, who is still frail and said that this was his first time near the building since his release.

What the former detainees call the "torture rooms" are on the top floor. The smell of smoke still lingered from the offices of some of those who had been in charge.

Before these officials left, they burned thousands of documents on the shelves of one room, many of which were presumably stamped "Secret".

One letter dating to 2022 that escaped the flames was addressed by the army's high command to those "charged with dealing with terrorism affairs".

It described the arrest of a soldier who was accused of maintaining relations with "armed terrorist organisations".

Another former inmate of cell number nine seemed unable to come to terms with the new reality in Syria.

"They charged me with terrorism," 42-year-old Wael Saleh said. "I'm still charged with terrorism.

"I will never forget what I went through here. I remember there were 103 of us crammed into this cell. We stayed standing up so the older ones could lie down."

H.Dolezal--TPP