Syrian detainees reveal 'torture centres' - Action News
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Syrian detainees reveal 'torture centres'

A new Human Rights Watch report identifies 27 facilities where former detainees say they were tortured and includes sketches by a Syrian artist depicting the abuse.

Rights group says interviews show evidence of crimes against humanity

The Syrian government is facing fresh allegations of systematic detainment and torture of itscitizens, in a report and multimedia presentation released Tuesday by the group Human Rights Watch.

The organizationsaid its researchers found evidence of at least 27 facilitiesacross the country where tens of thousands of people have faced government-sanctioned abuse.

Human Rights Watch released sketches of torture techniques described by former detainees.

Former detainees and defectorsidentified the locations ofthe centres,the methods of torture, and theagencies responsible. The rights organization releasedsketches by a Syrian artist depicting the abuse.

"The intelligence agencies are running an archipelago of torture centres scattered across the country," said Ole Solvang, emergencies researcher at Human Rights Watch. "By publishing their locations, describing the torture methods, and identifying those in charge we are putting those responsible on notice that they will have to answer for these horrific crimes."

Human Rights Watch said its81-page reportis based on more than 200 interviews with former detainees and defectors conductedsince March 2011, when anti-government protests began.

A young man named Wael said Syrian intelligence officers beat him after he was detainedin the central Syrian city of Homs.

"When we were detained in the Homs Military Intelligence Prison they hung us by our arms with our bodies suspended in the air," he said.

"They beat us and said, 'You want freedom? You want democracy? Here is your freedom. Here is your democracy'."

Others said they were subjected to mock executions and sexually assaulted.

A 13-year-old former detainee said interrogators jolted him with electrical currents until he passed out and pulled out his fingernails.

Some described enduring "dulab," in which torturers force the prisoner's legs and head into a car tire before beating them.

"People have definitely died as a result of the torture," said David Mepham with Human Rights Watch in London.

The organization said Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and some of his officials should be tried for crimes against humanity before the International Criminal Court and has asked theUN Security Council to refer the casesto the ICC.

"The systematic patterns of ill-treatment and torture that Human Rights Watch documented clearly point to a state policy of torture and ill-treatment and therefore constitute a crime against humanity," the group said.

"We hope that the material we provide will further galvanize international action to really put pressure to bear on the Syrians and that particularly means Russia and China that have blocked action against the Assad government," it said.