Feb. 20th, 2018
Welcome to Syria Deeply’s weekly summary of our coverage of the crisis in Syria.
Eastern Ghouta: After more than four years of siege, it’s hard to imagine that the situation in Eastern Ghouta could become even more dangerous and devastating. However, aerial bombardments have increased in the suburbs of Damascus, as the Syrian government allegedly prepares for a ground offensive on the besieged opposition-held enclave.
More than 100 people were killed in government attacks on the Eastern Ghouta on Monday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported. The monitoring group added that this number was expected to rise as many of those injured remain in critical condition, but that it was already the highest one-day death toll in Eastern Ghouta in three years.
“It’s indescribable. It reminded me of what we used to see in Aleppo – shelling day and night,” Khalid Abulabed, a field doctor in the Damascus suburb, told Al Jazeera. “Nothing is excluded from the shelling, not schools, not residential areas, not even markets, which has caused a significant increase in the number of people martyred and wounded.”
The SOHR claimed that the stepped-up attacks are a prelude to a government-led ground offensive in the Eastern Ghouta. Syria has been sending reinforcements to the area since February 5, Agence France-Presse reported on Sunday. “The reinforcements are complete; the attack is just waiting for a green light,” SOHR head Rami Abdulrahman told AFP.
The SOHR and pro-government media are reporting negotiations between rebels and the Syrian government over the evacuation of al-Qaida-linked militants from the Eastern Ghouta in a last-ditch effort to spare the region a full-out attack, AFP said. However, the main rebel groups in the area denied that these talks took place.
Panos Moumtzis, the U.N. regional coordinator for the Syria crisis, said in a statement released on Monday that “the humanitarian situation of civilians in East Ghouta is spiraling out of control. Many residents have little choice but to take shelter in basements and underground bunkers with their children.”
Afrin: The situation in Afrin is becoming even more complex, after reports on Tuesday that pro-government forces entered the northern Syrian city to help defend Kurdish forces battling Turkish-backed troops in Ankara’s “Operation Olive Branch” in the area.
Syrian state-run TV reportedly showed a convoy of pro-government forces entering Afrin on Tuesday, according to Reuters.
SANA reported on Monday that “popular forces” would enter Afrin “within hours.” Turkey’s foreign minister later responded to the report, threatening to confront pro-government forces if they enter the Kurdish enclave, the Associated Press reported.
“If the regime is entering to protect the YPG, then no one can stop us, stop Turkey or the Turkish soldiers,” Mevlut Cavusoglu said, according to AP.
On Friday, Kurdish forces accused Turkey of carrying out a chemical attack in a village in the northwest of Afrin, near the Turkish border, and a spokesman for the Kurdish YPG militia in Afrin told Reuters that six people suffered breathing problems after the attack. Turkey dismissed the accusations as “baseless,” but the SOHR and SANA news agency echoed the YPG’s claims.
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War Crimes Prosecution Watch: Volume 13, Issue 1- February 19, 2018
FREDERICK K. COX INTERNATIONAL LAW CENTER Founder/Advisor |
War Crimes Prosecution Watch
Volume 13 – Issue 1 |
Editor-in-Chief Taylor Frank Technical Editor-in-Chief Managing Editors |
War Crimes Prosecution Watch is a bi-weekly e-newsletter that compiles official documents and articles from major news sources detailing and analyzing salient issues pertaining to the investigation and prosecution of war crimes throughout the world. To subscribe, please email warcrimeswatch@pilpg.org and type “subscribe” in the subject line.
Opinions expressed in the articles herein represent the views of their authors and are not necessarily those of the War Crimes Prosecution Watch staff, the Case Western Reserve University School of Law or Public International Law & Policy Group.
Contents
AFRICA
CENTRAL AFRICA
- ReliefWeb: GIEWS Country Brief: Central African Republic 06-February-2018
- VOA News: Central African Republic Violence Leaves at Least 5 Dead
- Global Risk Insights: The Security Briefing: Peace prospects for the Central African Republic
- The Guardian: Unicef admits failings with child victims of alleged sex abuse by peacekeepers
- New York Times: U.S. Imposes Arms Ban on South Sudan as Civil War Grinds On
- Sudan Tribune: South Sudanese groups renew clashes in Unity region
- ABC News: Child abductions rise amid South Sudan’s grinding civil war
- ABC News: More than 300 child soldiers released in South Sudan
- Eyewitness News: South Sudan Sentences Rebel Leader’s Spokesman To Death
- Premium Times: South African aide to South Sudan rebels could face death penalty
Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Reuters: Congo rebel leader extradited from Tanzania to face trial
- Reuters: U.S. blacklists four for rights abuses, attacks in Congo
- News24: SANDF members alleged to have committed torture and assault in DRC
WEST AFRICA
Lake Chad Region — Chad, Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon
- Voice of America: UN: Forgotten Victims of Boko Haram in Desperate Need of Aid
- BBC: Boko Haram releases 13 hostages to Nigerian government
- Voice of America: Rising Temperatures, Terrorism Threaten Cameroon’s Food Security
- Thomson Reuters Foundation News: Mali’s mounting crisis shows insecurity and fear
- The Economist: Why UN forces are finding it hard to bring peace to Mali
- News 24: Mali ordered to pay $48m to military supplier
- Reuters: Mine explosion kills five civilians, wounds 18 in Mali
- News 24: French forces kill at least 10 jihadists in Mali: military sources
EAST AFRICA
- Reliefweb: Armed conflict, sexual violence, torched homes and extrajudicial killings trigger more than 14,000 refugees to flee
- Human Rights Watch: Human Rights Group Targeted in Violent Break-In
- Daily Nation: Ugandan officials suspended over ‘inflating refugee figures’
- LA Times: Kenyan court suspends government shutdown of radio and TV stations, as journalists complain of harassment
- NPR: Despite Court Order, Kenyan Government Keeps TV Stations Closed
- AllAfrica: Government Crackdown Threatens Rights
- NPR: Inside A Kenyan Courtroom, A Deepening Political Crisis Is On Display
Rwanda (International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda)
- The New Times: Court reduces sentence for Genocide convict Kabilima
- ABC News: Rwanda, Uganda trade claims over treatment of refugees
- The New Times: Government Upbeat on Achieving UN Rights Recommendations
- VOA News: Program to Verify Identities of Refugees in Rwanda
- CNN: Funding al-Shabaab: How aid money ends up in terror group’s hands
- Relief Web: Bomb Kills 2 Children in Central Somali Village
NORTH AFRICA
- The Libya Observer: ISIS is seeking new home in the far south of Libya, UN report indicates
- Reuters: Bombing at mosque in Libya’s Benghazi kills two, wounds 75: medics
EUROPE
Court of Bosnia & Herzegovina, War Crimes Chamber
- Balkan Insight: Bosniak Fighters Indicted for Deadly Village Attack on Serbs
- Balkan Insight: Bosnian Croat Ex-Policeman Cleared of Leading Village Attack
- Balkan Insight: Bosnian Croat Ex-Fighters Charged over Mostar Detention Camps
- Balkan Insight: Bosnian Serb Minister Denies Recognising Srebrenica Genocide
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
- Balkan Insight: Milosevic ‘Didn’t Fully Back Bosnian Serb War Goals’
- Open Democracy: International Criminal Justice: from past to future
Domestic Prosecutions In The Former Yugoslavia
- Human Rights Watch: EU needs commitment to rights in West Balkans
- Balkan Insight: Kosovo Arrests Two Police Over Ivanovic Investigation
MIDDLE EAST AND ASIA
- Al-Jazeera: Iraqi tribesmen warn ISIL fighters’ families
- The New Arab: His darkest hours: IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi ‘injured, ill and depressed’
- Iraqi News: PMFs leader: Islamic State’s Baghdadi no longer endangers Iraq’s security
- Iraqi News: Two civilians wounded in bomb blast near Baghdad markets
- Iraqi News: Iraqi official: tribal reconciliation should precede IS families repatriation
- CBS News: Syria may be making new types of chemical weapons, U.S. says
- BBC: Syria war: ‘Chlorine attack’ on rebel-held Idlib town
- The National: The capture of The Isil Beatles brings more questions than answers
- Reuters: Syria suffering some of worst fighting of war, U.N. warns
- VOA News: Syrian Civilian Rescue Force Urges More Action From US, Europe in Securing Cease-fire
- PBS: Terrorist attacks in Afghanistan put Kabul residents on edge
- Channel News Asia: Afghans seeking justice pin hopes on Hague court investigation
- Al-Jazeera: Saudi-led coalition killed 68 children in Yemen: UN
- U.S. Department of Defense: Centcom Updates Counterterrorism Strikes in Yemen
- UNHCR: 85,000 people displaced in 10 weeks as hostilities rage across Yemen
Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
- The Daily Star: Prosecution wraps up case on Hariri assassination at STL
- Asharq Al-awsat: Hariri Tribunal: Prosecution Completes Presentation of Evidence
Bangladesh International Crimes Tribunal
- Dhaka Tribune: ICT verdict in case against 4 ‘Noakhali Razakars’ any day
- Dhaka Tribune: RAB arrests two JMB militants, thwarts plan to kill converted Christians
War Crimes Investigations in Burma
- Irish Examiner: Five new mass graves discovered in Burma
- Atrocity Alert: Mass graves and mounting evidence of genocide in Myanmar (Burma)
- Reuters: How Myanmar forces burned, looted and killed in a remote village
- Aljazeera: Israel kills Palestinian after month-long manhunt
- Ma’an News Agency: Rights group says Israel currently holding 19 bodies of slain Palestinians
- IMEMC News: Report: Over 60% of Palestinian Child Detainees Tortured
- Ma’an News Agency: Israeli forces detain 13 Palestinians, 4 former prisoners, in West Bank raids
AMERICAS
- TeleSUR: Peru: Families of Fujimori Victims Address Human Rights Court
- The Washington Post: The international community wakes up to torture in Venezuela
- The New York Times: Colombia Rebels Suspend Election Campaign, Putting Peace Into Limbo
- Reuters: Colombia war tribunals hope to heal wounds, punish atrocities
TOPICS
Truth and Reconciliation Commission
- VOA: 2 US Lawmakers Nominate Serbian Activist for Nobel Prize
- Africa News: Gambian president appoints head of truth and reconciliation commission
- Human Rights Watch: Nepal: Transitional Justice Proving Elusive
- Mirror: ISIS ‘Beatles’ terrorists could face same supermax jail as hate preacher Abu Hamza
- Nigeria News NG: Court Convicts Chibok Girls Abductor, To Spend 15 Years Behind Bars
- Human Rights Watch: Ensure Fair Trials of Syria ISIS Suspects
- ColomboPage: Sri Lanka to make a request to establish the maritime operations secretariat for suppression of sea piracy off Somalia coast in the country
- CNN: Pirates release crew of oil tanker hijacked off West Africa
- Open Democracy: Prosecuting ISIS crimes against women and LGBTIQ people would set a crucial precedent
- Spectator: ATO Discovers War Is Bad for Women
- International Justice Monitor: Civil Society in Uganda Outraged by Controversial Newspaper Article Clearing Ugandan Army of Committing War Crimes
- ABS CBN: ICC move is step towards justice for drug war victims, lawyer says
- Al Jazeera: War doesn’t have to be nuclear to kill indiscriminately
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Syria Justice and Accountability Centre: Syria and the Collapse of the International System
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Detained Migrants Face Forced Repatriation to China
By: Katherine Hewitt
News Reporter, Asia
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – A group of 11 migrants are detained in Malaysian custody. It is probable that these 11 are a part of a group that escaped from a Thailand immigration detention center back in November of 2017. Originally, a group of 200 were found in Thailand’s Sonskhla province. They were detained while authorities verified their nationality. A group of 20 escaped and 11 of them are these migrants now detained in Malaysia.

The group identifies themselves as Turkish citizens. However, China claims them as members of an ethnic group called Uyghurs who are a Muslim Turkish minority living in Western China. While China demands them back, the migrants have asked to be sent to Turkey.
Many Uyghurs have fled China as a result of the authoritarian governance in the region. The Chinese government conducts house aids and restricts islamic practices, culture, and language. Through the years several Uyghurs have been forcibly deported back to China. Upon their returns, they face threats of imprisonment and torture. China rationalizes this state behavior by blaming the group for ‘terrorist’ attacks.
Malaysia and China have tightened their relationship over the past years. China has been pushing Malaysia to return the migrants.
International Customary Law holds Malaysia accountable to not send those in custody to a place where persecution, torture, and other human rights violations are a risk.
Human Rights activists like Brad Adams of Human Rights Watch want Malaysia to “allow these individuals access to a fair process to determine their refugee claims, not ship them to China based on Beijing’s demands.”
For more information, please see:
Human Rights Watch – Malaysia: Don’t Send 11 Detainees to China – 9 February 2018
Polish Prime Minister Blasted for ‘Jewish Perpetrators’ Remark
By: Jenilyn Brhel
Impunity Watch Reporter, Europe
WARSAW, Poland – Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki is being blasted for a remark he made at the Munich Security Conference on February 17th.

The comment was made by Morawiecki in reference to an inquiry from an Israeli journalist regarding a new law passed in Poland making it illegal to make comments purporting that Poland was complicit in the Holocaust.
The law was signed by President Andrzej Duda despite a strong push against its passage.
The legislation has been condemned internationally, with critics saying the law is intended to whitewash the role that some Poles played in the Holocaust. Many believe it is an attempt by Poland to rewrite history.
The law states that “whoever accuses, publicly and against the facts, the Polish nation, or the Polish state, of being responsible or complicit in the Nazi crimes committed by the Third German Reich… shall be subject to a fine or a penalty of imprisonment of up to three years”.
An Israeli journalist asked Morawiecki if it would be considered a crime in the country for him to share a story about his parents being reported to the Nazis by their Polish neighbors.
“Of course it’s not going to be punishable, not going to be seen as criminal, to say that there were Polish perpetrators, as there were Jewish perpetrators, as there were Russian perpetrators, as there were Ukrainian, not only German perpetrators,” Morawiecki said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was also in attendance at the conference, called the statement “outrageous. There is a problem here of an inability to understand history and a lack of sensitivity to the tragedy of our people.”
In response to the outrage sparked by Morawiecki’s comment, Joanna Kopcinska, a government spokeswoman from Poland, issued a statement indicating that his comments “were by no means intended to deny the Holocaust, or charge the Jewish victims of the Holocaust with responsibility for what was a Nazi German perpetrated genocide,” and that Morawiecki “has repeatedly and categorically opposed denial of the Holocaust — the murder of European Jewry — as well as anti-Semitism in all its forms.”
Netanyahu and Morawiecki spoke on the phone after the remarks, with Netanyahu indicating to Morawiecki that his comments were unacceptable.
Both Morawiecki and Netanyahu believe that the dialogue should continue.
Kopcinska stated that Morawiecki’s comments “should be interpreted as a sincere call for open discussion of crimes committed against Jews during the Holocaust, regardless of the nationality of those involved in each crime.”
For more information, please see:
BBC News – Israel Rebukes Poland PM for ‘Jewish Perpetrators’ Remark – 18 February 2018
Bloomberg – Poland Stokes Holocaust law Storm as Israeli Leader Lashes Out – 17 February 2018
Boston Herald – Poland Tries to Frame PM’s Holocaust Remarks as Frank Debate – 18 February 2018
Los Angeles Times – Israelis Slam Polish Prime Minister’s Remarks About ‘Jewish Perpetrators’ – 17 February 2018
Newsweek – Polish Prime Minister’s Jewish Holocaust ‘Perpetrators’ Comments Spark Outrage in Israel – 18 February 2018








