Berliner Boersenzeitung - Germany tries Syrian doctor for crimes against humanity

EUR -
AED 3.831008
AFN 72.9273
ALL 98.419365
AMD 410.272296
ANG 1.872217
AOA 957.497491
ARS 1061.69363
AUD 1.666436
AWG 1.877446
AZN 1.766157
BAM 1.955191
BBD 2.097547
BDT 124.141359
BGN 1.954564
BHD 0.391978
BIF 3071.343992
BMD 1.043025
BND 1.410861
BOB 7.178765
BRL 6.347867
BSD 1.038877
BTN 88.318509
BWP 14.358531
BYN 3.399742
BYR 20443.296678
BZD 2.08825
CAD 1.497941
CDF 2993.482519
CHF 0.932344
CLF 0.037343
CLP 1030.409268
CNY 7.610327
CNH 7.604124
COP 4547.284581
CRC 524.136854
CUC 1.043025
CUP 27.640172
CVE 110.230689
CZK 25.128878
DJF 184.992418
DKK 7.459296
DOP 63.260309
DZD 140.605234
EGP 53.07248
ERN 15.64538
ETB 129.499591
FJD 2.416742
FKP 0.826057
GBP 0.829268
GEL 2.930614
GGP 0.826057
GHS 15.271247
GIP 0.826057
GMD 75.098129
GNF 8975.206315
GTQ 8.004508
GYD 217.342349
HKD 8.11093
HNL 26.370792
HRK 7.481523
HTG 135.907696
HUF 413.964244
IDR 16867.075692
ILS 3.805968
IMP 0.826057
INR 88.607612
IQD 1360.876404
IRR 43898.321706
ISK 145.106091
JEP 0.826057
JMD 162.539407
JOD 0.739607
JPY 163.153207
KES 134.118253
KGS 90.743478
KHR 4174.700554
KMF 486.180213
KPW 938.722223
KRW 1508.652523
KWD 0.3212
KYD 0.865731
KZT 545.580179
LAK 22737.922437
LBP 93028.043448
LKR 305.005062
LRD 188.55131
LSL 19.125747
LTL 3.079783
LVL 0.630915
LYD 5.104411
MAD 10.455446
MDL 19.135044
MGA 4901.474333
MKD 61.515852
MMK 3387.705621
MNT 3544.199972
MOP 8.316611
MRU 41.31514
MUR 49.225715
MVR 16.064848
MWK 1801.339303
MXN 20.937863
MYR 4.702006
MZN 66.653209
NAD 19.125747
NGN 1616.209432
NIO 38.228101
NOK 11.812523
NPR 141.310015
NZD 1.84523
OMR 0.401355
PAB 1.038877
PEN 3.868396
PGK 4.212689
PHP 61.402621
PKR 289.160894
PLN 4.262349
PYG 8100.478589
QAR 3.787121
RON 4.976902
RSD 116.994099
RUB 107.216627
RWF 1448.149239
SAR 3.917924
SBD 8.74426
SCR 14.545033
SDG 627.378049
SEK 11.510661
SGD 1.414236
SHP 0.826057
SLE 23.850842
SLL 21871.723041
SOS 593.715196
SRD 36.642529
STD 21588.518693
SVC 9.090171
SYP 2620.632713
SZL 19.121048
THB 35.692277
TJS 11.364862
TMT 3.661019
TND 3.31027
TOP 2.442868
TRY 36.68318
TTD 7.050805
TWD 34.034928
TZS 2467.232032
UAH 43.568738
UGX 3810.81382
USD 1.043025
UYU 46.335577
UZS 13393.830944
VES 53.689991
VND 26550.210048
VUV 123.830057
WST 2.881657
XAF 655.752886
XAG 0.03535
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.818828
XDR 0.792453
XOF 655.752886
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.1475
ZAR 19.110344
ZMK 9388.488165
ZMW 28.750051
ZWL 335.853734
  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.56

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    45.47

    -0.68%

  • NGG

    0.8200

    58.5

    +1.4%

  • SCS

    -0.5800

    11.74

    -4.94%

  • RBGPF

    59.9600

    59.96

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.27

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    33.6

    +0.51%

  • RIO

    -0.0900

    58.64

    -0.15%

  • AZN

    0.9100

    65.35

    +1.39%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.86

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    122.75

    -0.21%

  • BTI

    0.1131

    36.24

    +0.31%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    8.39

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    23.16

    +0.22%

  • BP

    0.1900

    28.6

    +0.66%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.06

    +0.91%

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.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)