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VDC: Razan was a finalist for Martin Ennals Award 2016

Yesterday in Geneva, Mr. Ilham Tohti awarded 2016 Martin Ellans Award for Human Rights Defenders for his work in China. In 2014 He was, unfortunately, sentenced to life imprisonment in China because of his work. The Syrian lawyer Razan Zaitouneh and the founder of the Violations Documentation Center in Syria was one of the three finalists alongside Mr. Tohti and Zone 9 Bloggers from Ethiopia.
At VDC, we are proud to see our colleague’s name nominated. Razan has dedicated her life to defending political prisoners, documenting violations, and helping others free themselves from oppression. She always stood with the oppressed.
We consider this nomination to be a reminder of a non-forgotten cause of our four forcibly disappeared colleague since 2013; Razan Zaitouneh, Samira Khalil, Nazem Hamadi, and Wael Hamada.
We will always be hoping for their return and committed to never let go of their cause and defending human rights.
أعلن في جنيف بعد ظهر الأمس 11 أكتوبر 2016 اسم الفائز بجائزة مارتن إينال للمدافعين عن حقوق الإنسان. والتي فاز بها إلهام توهيتي، والمحكوم بالسجن مدى الحياة في الصين بسبب نشاطه في الدفاع عن حقوق الإنسان.
وقد تم ترشيح المحامية السورية ومؤسسة مركز توثيق الانتهاكات في سوريا رزان زيتونة للائحة القصيرة للجائزة، التي ضمت إلى جانبها كل من الفائز بالجائزة إلهام توهيتي ومجموعة من المدونين الأثيوبيين.
إننا في مركز توثيق الانتهاكات في سوريا نفخر بأن تكون زميلتنا المغيبة رزان زيتونة أحد الأعلام العالمية ورمزاً دولياً للمدافعين عن حقوق الإنسان وضحايا الانتهاكات. وهي التي كرست الجزء الأكبر من حياتها ونشاطها لقضايا العدالة والدفاع عن المعتقلين السياسيين ومعتقلي الرأي والضمير في السجون السورية. ثم نذرت نفسها للتوثيق الدقيق والمركز لانتهاكات حقوق الإنسان وضحايا الاعتقال والقتل والعنف في سوريا وكان انحيازها المطلق دائماً إلى جانب الضحية بغض النظر عن انتماء الضحية سياسياً أو عن لونها أو عرقها أو قوميتها أو طائفتها.
إننا نعتبر هذا الترشيح تذكيراً بما لم ولن ينسى. هو تذكير بقضية مختطفي مركز توثيق الانتهاكات الأربعة، رزان زيتونة وسميرة الخليل ووائل حمادة وناظم حمادي. وهو إدانة جديدة لمرتكبي جرم اختطافهم وتغييبهم.
سوف نبقى دائماً منتظرين اليوم الذي يعود فيه مختطفونا الاربعة. ولن نتوقف أبداً عن متابعة قضيتهم التي هي قضية لكل المدافعين عن حقوق الإنسان في العالم أجمع.
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New York Times- Why I Go to Aleppo

CHICAGO — The hospital where I work in Aleppo, Syria, is in a basement. The building above has been bombarded so many times that the top floors are too dangerous to use. Barrels and sandbags line the entrance to fortify it as a bunker.

Aleppo is a long way from my home in Chicago. That city, too, has its share of human suffering. Any Chicago surgeon who takes emergency duty can attest to the gun violence that plagues local communities. But the hospital where I work has state-of-the-art resources and some of the best doctors and nurses in the world. Scalpels are sharp, operating rooms are sterile, and specialists are abundant.

Aleppo, too, has some of the best doctors and nurses in the world, but there are so few left. They are exhausted, endangered, and they need help. That is why I volunteer for medical work in Syria; even the few weeks a year that I can offer provide some respite for the handful of surgeons who serve a population of 300,000 in a war zone. It is a heavy responsibility, but I feel I cannot ask world leaders to risk their citizens’ lives to save people there if I myself am unwilling to take such risks.

My weeks in Aleppo are intense. In Chicago, where I specialize in surgical oncology, I see one patient at a time. In Aleppo, I see 20 at once. You live your life one massacre to the next: of children at school, or of families sleeping at home or shopping at a market. We hear the jets screech by, the helicopters whirring in the sky, the mortars launching, then the bombs exploding. Followed by sirens and screaming.

The screaming seems never to end, some days. So many people pushing through the entrance. There are never enough beds, so patients have to share gurneys or lie on the floor. Sometimes, there is no place to step, with patients lying on floors smeared with blood and strewn with body parts. There are few field hospitals left in Aleppo, so patients who are stuck outside and can’t make it in sometimes die on our doorstep.

Then, abruptly, it ends. I walk away from all those patients. I am driven through sniper alleys, under airstrikes, and past checkpoints to cross the border into Turkey. From there, I fly home.

It crushes me every time. One moment, I’m in an underground hospital shaking from the blasts of missiles, saving whom we can, watching those we can’t bleed to death. The next moment, I am at the airport coffee shop watching a man in a sharp suit cut the line or a woman berate the barista for putting too much ice in her tea.

Nothing makes sense, and you feel like a ghost. Once you’ve been there, you never really leave Aleppo.

Back in Chicago, it’s my patients who help me stay focused. I had a patient I’ll call Sarah who had a sarcoma of the leg when she was 8. She endured a year of chemotherapy and had a portion of her fibula removed to excise the cancer, followed by radiation. The treatment stunted her leg’s growth and deformed her ankle, but she wanted to be able to run track and play soccer.

On a ski trip to Colorado, she saw people skiing on prosthetics, and that’s what she wanted. When she turned 11, she looked me in the eye and asked me to amputate her left leg. She showed such strength. She reminded me of Ahmad, a Syrian boy who had lost both legs, as well as his mother, when a bomb destroyed their home. He hoped one day to get robotic prostheses so he could walk again. His resilience was inspiring.

Each time I go back to Aleppo, though, conditions are worse. The pockets of life have become more tenuous with each visit. The markets, the children in the streets, the bustle of day-to-day living is replaced with rubble: apocalyptic wastelands of gutted buildings with collapsed roofs, exposed rebar and twisted staircases.

But people still live amid the ruins. You see them hanging laundry from a room on the third floor of a building cut in half. You see kids climbing over a 10-foot mound of rubble on their way home with some bread and water. Life has to go on, and people find ways to cope. They would rather face death at home than suffer in a refugee camp or risk drowning in a sinking boat.

For a surgeon in this setting, triage decisions mean the difference between life and death. A mother pleads with me to attend to her son; his skull is blown open, his brain exposed. He’s gone. There’s nothing we can do.

I move on to a girl with a lacerated artery in her amputated leg. She could bleed to death in minutes, but with pressure and a tourniquet we buy some time. Next to her is another young girl. Her right hand is obliterated: frayed tendons, twisted fingers, crushed bones. Her mother grips my shoulder, begging me to take her daughter to surgery first. But the girl is alive and she can wait.

This can last for hours. I lose all track of time. Eventually, the chaos dissipates. The floors are mopped clean. The dead are wrapped in white shrouds and laid in the street to make room for the next incoming tide of the wounded and dying.

You feel powerless. You can’t stop it. There aren’t enough hands to help, and you can’t save everyone. Should we give all of our blood supplies to save one life? Or ration them to save five who all need some? The choices are impossible, yet we make them.

The Syrian medics and rescue workers in Aleppo have sacrificed everything, some even their lives. They show up to work every day despite all the horrifying brutality. Those of us who go to volunteer cannot stop the bombs, but we can serve in solidarity with Syria’s full-time lifesavers. Who would I be if I could not support them and follow their lead for a few weeks a year?

They are among the most heroic, courageous and selfless people I have ever met — much like the New York firefighters I met on Sept. 11, 2001. A medical student at the time, I squeezed into an ambulance with nurses and medics and we drove toward the smoke and ashes to help. I saw firefighters, paramedics, police officers and citizens rushing to the World Trade Center. That was the side I wanted to be on.

We wrote our names on the back of our scrubs with black markers in case our bodies needed to be identified. I was scared, but I was surrounded by good people doing the right thing.

I had never felt that way again until I went back to Aleppo in August 2013. I had visited Syria several times growing up, and knew Aleppo, but that was my first trip since the conflict started. The overwhelming sadness and dread I felt on Sept. 11, I feel every day in Aleppo.

One night, we treated a child caught in an explosion who had the bone shards of obliterated bystanders embedded in his skin. An airstrike hit his school during a charity event to donate clothes to the poor. The last thing he remembered was seeing his best friend disintegrate in front of him.

The boy’s father saw me and asked who I was, and why I was speaking in a strange language. A nurse explained to him that I was an American doctor. He told me that he had never met an American. He never thought he would. He never believed the day would come when an American doctor — one with Syrian blood but born and raised with the freedoms and luxuries of the United States — would come to Aleppo to help in a time of war.

That gave my work a new dimension of meaning: a palpable connection to alleviate the suffering of a people long abandoned. It lets them know that they’re not alone. It has made me only more grateful for my life in America. It’s also why I go back.

Syrian Network for Human Rights: The Syrian Regime Uses Chemical Weapons again in Hama Governorate

On Saturday 1 October 2016 at approximately 19:30, a government forces helicopter dropped two barrel bombs loaded with cylinders containing a poison gas on the agricultural lands in northern Kafr Zita city in Hama governorate. What further verified the incident was the toll of injuries that mounted to 20 people who exhibited symptoms of suffocation and breathing difficulties.
SNHR contacted a number of residents, civil defense members, and local media activists who witnessed the incident and told the Network of the symptoms they saw on the injured such as sever coughing, breathing difficulties, burning eyes, and vomiting which was also confirmed by the pictures and videos we received and have a copies of in addition to pictures that show the remnants of the bombardment and the cylinders loaded with the gas which were found in the incident location.
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Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect: Syria: Five Years, Five Vetoes, 280,000 Dead

8 October 2016

Syria: Five Years, Five Vetoes, 280,000 Dead

For the fifth time since the conflict began in 2011, a veto by Russia has blocked efforts to protect civilians in Syria. The decision by Russia to veto an attempt by the UN Security Council to reinstate the cessation of hostilities, establish a military no-fly zone over Aleppo, provide unhindered humanitarian access, and hold perpetrators of atrocities accountable, is a vote in favor of continued bloodshed.

Russia’s subsequent attempt to put forward a second resolution was unfortunate and unhelpful. Despite some positive aspects to the text, by excluding a military no-fly zone in Aleppo, the Russian draft resolution appeared to be more about saving face than a genuine effort to end the violence and advance the protection of civilians. For that reason, it was only supported by four members of the Security Council and was not adopted.

Throughout the course of Syria’s civil war, every major principle of international law has been violated with impunity. All parties to the conflict have conducted indiscriminate attacks on civilians, perpetrated sexual violence, deliberately blocked humanitarian aid, and used food as a weapon to starve besieged communities. However, the Syrian government has far greater military capacity to inflict suffering on civilians and bears a greater burden of responsibility for war crimes and crimes against humanity. For five years the Syrian government has systematically waged war against its own people, and has utterly failed to uphold its Responsibility to Protect.

With over 280,000 people already dead, today’s veto condemns countless more Syrians to unnecessary suffering.

The Syrian government and its allies, including Russia, continue to conduct airstrikes on civilian areas of Aleppo with barrel bombs, illegal cluster munitions, chemical weapons, and “bunker-buster” bombs. Since the collapse of the cessation of hostilities on 19 September and the subsequent announcement by the Syrian government of a renewed offensive on rebel-held east Aleppo, at least 376 people have been killed, including over 100 children, in a sustained attempt to obliterate East Aleppo from the skies. The use of indiscriminate weapons and the deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.

While the Syrian government is manifestly unwilling to uphold its Responsibility to Protect, the Security Council has also failed the Syrian people. Despite political divisions within the Council, the five permanent members have a special responsibility not to veto when civilians are threatened by mass atrocity crimes. Today’s votes clearly demonstrate the need for all Security Council members to adhere to the ACT Code of Conduct in mass atrocity situations, which has been signed by 112 states.

After five years and today’s votes, the Security Council has shown that it is unable to uphold its UN Charter mandate to maintain international peace and security with regard to Syria. Utilizing the “Uniting for Peace” mechanism, the UN General Assembly should now be allowed take up the issue. The long-suffering people of Syria cannot wait any longer for the Security Council to live up to its responsibilities.

Syria Deeply: Weekly Update: ISIS Steps Up Attacks As Ground Battle For Aleppo Rages


WEEKLY UPDATE
October 7, 2016

Dear Readers,Welcome to the weekly Syria Deeply newsletter. We’ve rounded up the most important stories and developments about Syria and the Syrians in order to bring you valuable news and analysis. But first here is a brief overview of what happened this week:Hundreds have been killed in increasing violence in Aleppo, prompting a United Nations warning that Syria’s largest city could be “totally destroyed” by the end of year. Elsewhere in the country, the so-called Islamic State stepped up its bombing campaign, hitting rebel, government and Kurdish areas.On Wednesday, the Syrian army said it would cut back attacks on the rebel-held eastern side of Aleppo for humanitarian reasons. But few believe the government will allow those living in rebel-held Aleppo to leave safely. U.N. envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura reportedly pledged to personally escort up to 1,000 rebel fighters out of Aleppo in an attempt to quell the devastating air attacks by Syrian and Russian forces.Airstrikes have decreased, but ground clashes between rebels and pro-government forces increased as the regime continued one of the biggest operations in Aleppo since 2013, according to the U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.The Syrian army’s announcement came just after Russia said it would send more warplanes to Syria, in addition to an S-300 air defense missile system Moscow had already sent to its naval base in the government-held province of Tartus.The United States has officially suspended talks with Russia on Syria. U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby said Moscow had “failed to live up to its own commitments … and was also either unwilling or unable to ensure Syrian regime adherence to the arrangements to which Moscow agreed.”As much of the international community focused its attention on the battle for Aleppo, Islamic State carried out several bombings across Syria. The Islamic State claimed responsibility for a bomb that killed at least 21 people near the Syria-Turkey border Thursday. The attack targeted Syrian rebels supported by Turkey, many of them from the Failaq al-Sham group, near the Atmeh border crossing west of Aleppo.It came after an Islamic State suicide bomber killed at least 30 people at a Kurdish wedding in northeastern Syria. Earlier in the week, Islamic State carried out two suicide attacks on government buildings in the center of Hama, killing at least two people. This is the first time the group has claimed an attack inside the city.

Weekly Highlights:

Besieged in Eastern Aleppo but Happy to Be Here: Diary Entry

Wissam lives with his wife in rebel-held eastern Aleppo, which has been under government siege since July. Violence is escalating in his neighborhood, but the teacher and activist wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.

A meal shared by Wissam Zarqa and his wife before the siege began in eastern Aleppo. Wissam Zarqa

Analysis: Why Assad’s Propaganda Is Not as Crazy as It Seems

The Syrian government’s recent tourism videos of beautiful scenery and nightlife may look ludicrous to Westerners who know the brutal truth about Aleppo – but the West is not the intended audience of this publicity blitz.

Syrian regime forces gather at the Kindi Hospital in Aleppo on October 2, 2016.
Rebels had held the Kindi hospital since 2013, and capturing it allows government forces to threaten the opposition-held Heluk and Haydariyeh neighborhoods. AFP/George Ourfalian

What Syrians Can Expect in a Post-War Landscape

The U.S. objective in Syria is a political solution to the conflict. But for this to be successful, it will have to account for the complex governance structures and dynamics already established across the country, write Daniel Serwer, Rose Youhana and Katherine Preston.

Syrian regime forces gather at the Kindi Hospital as smoke billows following aistrikes on Aleppo on October 2, 2016. AFP/George Ourfalian

Additional Reading:

Top image: Syrian civil defense volunteers, known as the White Helmets, search for victims amid the rubble of destroyed buildings following a government forces airstrike on the rebel-held neighborhood of Bustan al-Basha in Aleppo on October 4, 2016. AFP/Thaer Mohammed