Syrian Sentinels are daily risking their lives
Syrian Sentinels are daily risking their lives to save fellow citizens
Franklin Lamb
Marjeh Square,
Damascus
One of this observer’s favourite meeting spots in bustling central Damascus and which is located just outside the walls of Damascus’ Old City where I like to chat and learn from a range of interlocutors about recent developments, is Marjeh Square,
On May 6, 1916, the Ottoman governor Ahmed Djemal Pasha, (aka “the Blood Shedder”) publicly executed seven Syrian national activists near the centre of this intersection which became known as “Martyrs’ Square”. As a warning to others contemplating rebellion, the Ottomans left their bodies hanging alongside the same bronze and basalt columns that dominate the square today.
courtesy of Mahar
Jalloum Damascus University.
A decade later the French did the same to anyone who revolted against their League of Nations mandate. When the March 2011 revolt ignited down south in Daraa near the Jordanian border, Marjeh, Square became a predictable gathering point for anti-regime demonstrations. Later, as the largely peaceful student protests became a full-fledged rebellion, Marjeh became the site of car bomb attacks on the adjacent Interior Ministry building which houses one of the offices of Ali Mamlouk, the head of the Assad regimes National Security Bureau.
According to a Human Rights Watch report from 2012, Mamlouk heads an empire of torture including but not limited to six detention centers housing thousands of detainees, all of whom, including children, have been electrocuted, sexually abused, beaten, maimed, or, on many occasions, killed. Among the most notorious agencies, Mamluk oversees are the Department of Military Intelligence (Shu`bat al-Mukhabarat al-`Askariyya); the Political Security Directorate (Idarat al-Amn al-Siyasi); the General Intelligence Directorate (Idarat al-Mukhabarat al-`Amma); and the Air Force Intelligence Directorate (Idarat al-Mukhabarat al-Jawiyya). Each of these agencies maintains central branches in Damascus as well as regional, city, and local branches across the country. In virtually all these branches there are detention facilities of varying size. Consequently, Marjeh Square is regularly visited by Syrian trying to locate disappeared loved ones and remains crowded with homeless families
from across Syria who sleep very rough in the frigid temperatures as many of their children, appear at car windows begging the occupants for food or money to buy some. Sometimes, NGO volunteers appear with medicines for the youngsters such as polio shots.
Since
3/5/2018, a UN humanitarian aid convoy has not been able to
unload supplies to residents trapped inside Syria's Eastern
Ghouta, as government and Russian warplanes resumed
bombarding the enclave, killing at least 70 people,
according to a monitor. Described as the "bloodiest" day
since a Russian-sponsored truce failed to stop the onslaught
and since a UN Security Council resolution was unsuccessful
at implementing a 30-day ceasefire, Syrian government forces
resumed the shelling of the Damascus suburb for the 16th
consecutive day on 3/6/2018. The Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights (SOHR) has reported that the bombardment of the
enclave has killed more than 70 civilians in 24 hours,
bringing that day
s
total to more than
100.
Residents of Eastern Ghouta, east of Damascus, have
previously voiced their scepticism of a Russian-proposed
"five-hour daily humanitarian pause" that began last month.
The pauses were meant to create "humanitarian corridors" to
allow the evacuation of those seeking medical treatment and
the entry of aid convoys, but air raids have continued to
target civilians and residential areas while government
forces stripped the convoy of urgently needed
medicines.
Despite the danger, Syrian civilian Sentinels
now regularly appear and risk being killed by insisting that
the food and medicines convoys be allowed into Eastern
Ghouta. This courage is spreading among the Syrian
population to aid their neighbors and families as well as
total strangers. The Al-Assad regime, supported by Russia,
began an unprecedented aerial bombardment of Eastern Ghouta
on 2/18/2018. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights put the number of civilians killed since the assault
began at more than 780, including 170 children.
As most
would agree, the global community has failed the people of
Syria during their nearly seven years struggle for dignity,
freedom, empowerment, dismantlement of massive corruption,
forced disappearances and accountability for war crimes and
crimes against humanity, including but not limited to the
following:
· unlawful killing, including of
children (mostly boys), medical personnel and hospital
patients ("In some particularly grave instances, entire
families were executed in their homes");
·
torture, including of children (mostly boys, sometimes to
death) and hospital patients, and including sexual and
psychological torture;
· arbitrary arrest "on a
massive scale";
· deployment of tanks and
helicopter gunships in densely populated areas;
·
heavy and indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas;
·
collective punishment;
· enforced
disappearances;
· widescale and systematic
destruction and looting of property;
· the
systematic denial, in some areas, of food and water;
and
· the prevention of medical treatment,
including to children - in the period since 15 March
2011
The United Nations Security Council, the EU, Arab
League and the rest of us among others have been an abject
failure in Syria as demonstrated by the 14 vetoes Russia has
used to block humanitarian help and to end the carnage. What
is left of UN Chapter 7 obligations? Can the UN recover?
Will it be allowed to?
Visitors to Syria over the past
seven years have observed first-hand, countless examples of
Syrian Sentinels risking their lives to help their fellow
citizens. One recalls that shortly after the uprising broke
out in March of 2011, amateur video pictures taken on
4/28/2011 showed Syrian soldiers in Daraa refusing to shoot
civilian demonstrators. Many soldiers defected, and others
were wounded or killed by pro-regime assassins on rooftops
from behind. Between 25 and 28 April 2011, more than 50
people were killed in Daraa by security forces. Daraa
residents reported, according to the Los Angeles Times, an entire army
division or brigade had broken off and was hiding among the
people.
More than 50 Syrian and pro-Syrian NGO’s,
including The Alliance for Syrian NGO’s this week are
rising up in defense of their fellow citizens and in support
of Human Rights demands for civilian access to aid for areas
such as East Ghouta and condemning the current war crimes
including the stripping of medical supplies from the only
convoy allowed into this besieged area for nearly four
years. According to Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) and UN
Agencies working in Syria, the blocking of medical supplies
and aid to civilians is a gross violation of humanitarian
law and a war crime which is resulting in the preventable
illness and death of countless men, women, and
children.
Among the Syrian Sentinels who foreigners
observe across this great country laboring daily to preserve
their countries existence and confront attacks on their
neighbors, include but are not limited to the
following:
Syrian Army Conscripts. The draftees are those
most visible to foreigners and the local population. Paid
barely $ 60 per month with eight days off every two months
often wearing tennis shoes and without much by way of
uniforms or equipment, they appear to be the most prevalent
sentinels across Syria looking out for their neighbors at
checkpoints and when approached for urgent help. Days after
the fall of East Aleppo in December of 2015, this observer
took a large tourist bus half-filled with Syrian army guys
and the other half with women and children fleeing to find
relatives in Damascus and en route. The normal 7-hour trip
Aleppo-Damascus trip took 13 hours given plenty of rebel
blocked roads heading south.
Witnessing how the army
conscripts treated their fellow Syrians and their children
were heartwarming. For example, at the start of our long
trip, the “rebel” women and children eyed the government
army guys with a degree of fear. No more than four hours
into the trip the kids were sitting on the laps of the
soldiers and many slumped in the arms of the exhausted
soldiers fast asleep.
More than 1,000 children have been
killed or injured this year across Syria, a United Nations
Children's Fund official advised this observer this week.
The grim statistic, from UNICEF regional communications
office comes as violence rips through the rebel-held enclave
of Eastern Ghouta, where about a third of the nearly 400,000
besieged civilians are children, according to the agency. In
all, 342 children were killed and 803 were injured in Syria
in the first two months of 2018, Touma said, citing multiple
sources. About 100 people were killed Monday 3/3/2018, in
Eastern Ghouta, making it the deadliest day there since the
United Nations Security Council passed a nationwide
ceasefire resolution a week earlier according to the Syrian
American Medical Society (SAMS) in a 3/4/2018
statement.
Syria’s Educators. Working hard under
difficult conditions to salvage what they can of some
education for what remains of Syrian children, their former
schools, without much in the way of teaching materials,
something to eat at lunchtime, and constant fear of attack
by those who consider them “terrorists.” To add to the
pressure, the Government of Syria last month announced that
is cannot invest in the education sector for the foreseeable
future due to economic pressures in another part of Syrian
society.
Syrian refugee girls are only half as likely as
their male peers to attend secondary school, according to a
3/7/2018 released report by the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR)
and the consequences will plaque Syria and the region for
generations.
In a report published last year, the agency
warned that half of the world's some 3.5 million refugee
children do not attend school, with attendance particularly
lacklustre
in secondary school and higher.
While some
84 percent of children worldwide are in secondary school,
fewer than 15% of Syrian percent Syrian refugee girls are,
the report found. The UN study, "Her Turn”, indicates that
girls make up most of the clear majority of Syrian refugee
children missing out on school.
Despite this bleak
picture, every day, Syrian teachers who remain in what is
left of their country are volunteer trying to cover the cost
of books, lunches, and sometimes uniforms, menstrual
supplies and to protect the students from fears of sexual
assault.
This observer has been honored to visit more
than a dozen Syrian primary and secondary schools since 2015
and is always deeply impressed by the teachers commitment to
instructing their students and also the keen awareness of
the students that they are luckly for the opportunity to
attend one of the two-shifting now being widely employed by
Syria’s Department of Education, given the raging
maelstrom still engulfing their country. The students are
attentive, orderly and eager to learn.
Key Syrian
Sentinels also include hundreds of Medical volunteers who
usually work without Doctors, medicines or equipment to save
lives in their neighborhoods.
Neighborhood volunteers who
risk and often lose their lives, volunteering with Civil
Defense First Responders including the ICRC, Syrian Arab Red
Crescent Society, the White Helmets, Medicine Sans
Frontiers, Syrian American Medical Society, Physicians for
Human Rights and a dozen others.
Private Syrian Citizens
inside and outside of Syria continue gathering food to feed
their besieged fellow citizens.
Syrian citizens
Sentinels also are risking their lives to document countless
thousands of war crimes and crimes against humanity being
committed daily against their fellow citizens. One reason is
that they want all foreign proxies out of their country and
they want eventual independent international tribunal
accountability of all war crimes and crimes against humanity
committed against their families and neighborhoods starting
in March of 2011 and still raging today.
And so it is
dear reader the case that today across this great
civilization, largely neglected by the global community,
the Syrian people, guardians of our more than ten millennia
cradle of civilization in Syria and custodians of our shared
cultural heritage, while enduring nearly seven years of
barbarism not witnessed since World War II, are nobly
fulfilling existential roles as sentinels and risking their
lives to save their and our, sisters and
brothers.
Hopefully each of us in the global community
who have abjectly failed the Syria people will unite and
bring to justice the criminals who have slaughtered half a
million Syrians and destroyed their country. To help
achieve some belated justice for these noble people, we must
investigate the times, places, locations and participants in
these massive crimes and organize an International
Independent Tribunal, presumably based in The Hague, to
impartially apply the principles, standards and black letter
law of culpability to the accused and given each one the
impartial opportunity to defend against their involvement in
the alleged massive heinous crimes the world has witnessed
these past horrendous seven years with years more of a dozen
or more wars across various parts of Syria.
Oxford University Email:
franklin.lamb@hmc.ox.ac.uk
Please
visit:
http://mealsforsyrianrefugeechildrenlebanon.com
www.Syrian-heritage.com
ends