Every day, the bodies were delivered to
the hospital: battered beyond belief and hideously scarred from months
of the most horrific torture imaginable.
The corpses were shrivelled from dehydration and starvation, with ribs sticking out and limbs like sticks.
Most
were covered in purple bruises from beatings, and many were
criss-crossed with wounds from knives, or burns from acid, electricity
or cigarettes.
Distressing photographs of corpses
shrivelled from dehydration and starvation, with ribs sticking out and
limbs like sticks have been obtained by the Mail on Sunday.
One
was missing an eye, gouged out during frenzied beating. Another had no
head. A third showed signs of acid dripped along the victim’s back, the
vertebrae visible through terrible holes in flesh. Others were riddled
with disease.
These were the victims of
Syria’s slaughterhouses: the jails and prisons run by President Bashar
Assad’s regime, designed to terrorise the Syrian people into submission
after they dared rise up in revolt.
And
inside three Damascus hospitals, doctors were forced to cover up the
depravity by signing certificates saying the victims died from
conditions such as heart failure or breathing difficulties.
‘It
was like a scene from hell. We did not even have time to check if they
were dead,’ said one of the doctors known as Nemer Hassan. ‘I have seen
so many terrible things.’
Then the
corpses were whisked away to nearby mass graves, buried in their
thousands without families being informed, in an effort to hide evidence
from any war crime investigations. Such is the appalling banality of
evil: industrial-scale torture and murder, backed by a cold bureaucracy
to cover up the most revolting crimes of this century.
Little
wonder that UN experts asked to review the photographic evidence
compared such scenes with the horror of Nazi death camps.
Sir
Desmond de Silva, who co-authored a UN report into Assad’s atrocities,
said the photographs are ‘reminiscent of pictures of people who came out
of Belsen and Auschwitz’.
These are the victims of Syria’s
slaughterhouses: the jails and prisons run by President Bashar Assad’s
regime, designed to terrorise the Syrian people into submission after
they dared rise up in revolt.
His view was echoed by forensic
anthropologist Professor Sue Black, who said reviewing the evidence for
the UN had been like ‘going back in time and looking at concentration
camps’.
She added: ‘In this day and age, you really don’t expect to be able to witness these sort of things on this sort of scale.’
In
a barbaric twist, it was hospitals – designed as sanctuaries for the
sick – that were used to serve the sadistic inhumanity of a
blood-stained dictator, who trained in Britain as an eye doctor.
It
was here that Nemer – not his real name, to protect his family – was
forced to serve. Speaking to The Mail on Sunday last week in the German
city where he now lives, this affable man in his 30s told tales of
depravity and despair.
His evidence formed part of a
damning report last week by Amnesty International, which claimed up to
13,000 people have died in a ‘calculated campaign of extrajudicial
execution by mass hangings’ at one notorious jail alone.
It
was dismissed by Assad as ‘fake news’ – just as he dismissed thousands
of images of emaciated dead torture victims smuggled out by a security
forces photographer. These led last week to the launching of a landmark
human rights case in Spain against senior Syrian figures.
But
revelations from those such as Nemer – so chilling and resonant from
the worst chapters of recent European history – expose what has gone on
behind the closed doors of Assad’s torture chambers.
When
the uprising against Assad began in 2011, Nemer was training as a
surgeon in Tishreen, a huge hospital in Damascus built by the French and
run by Syria’s Military Medical Services.
As protests swelled, Syria’s four
rival intelligence bodies began dumping dozens of torture victims at
the hospital for treatment.
‘The
dream of every Syrian is to be a doctor since it is a respected, secure
and well-paid job,’ he said. ‘And I liked the idea of helping people.’
But
he soon found himself in a moral quagmire. One day in April two buses, a
truck and an ambulance pulled up. They were stuffed with Syrians who
had been shot taking part in unarmed protests.
‘It
was horrible to see them arrive. They had bullet wounds in their legs
and backs but the military police were kicking them on the injured areas
as they left the buses.’
He witnessed
one security goon switch off a ventilator keeping an old man alive in
the ambulance. ‘We were so surprised to see this – they would not even
give him a chance.’
The remainder were taken to an underground emergency room, handcuffed to each other and laid across 200 beds in four rows.
Some
beds held more than one injured protester. ‘I saw the military police
walk across the patients, jumping on them. It was designed to hurt as
much as possible,’ said Nemer.
The
young doctor began to sterilise his hands to treat a man whose thigh had
been shattered by a bullet. ‘Why do that for these animals?’ asked one
military colleague, a member of the Alawite sect like Assad. ‘These
people are polluted.’
Days later, a
video from inside the emergency room was leaked on to social media.
Security forces immediately placed armed guards on the doors and banned
non-Alawites – especially Sunni Muslims such as Nemer – from entering.
But
within weeks, as protests swelled on the streets, Syria’s four rival
intelligence bodies began dumping dozens of their torture victims at the
hospital for treatment.
I asked Nemer
why he thought they spared some people? ‘They wanted to deliver a
message to the wider community: this is what will happen if you fight
us,’ he replied.
Assad’s foes were not
safe, however, even in hospital. Medics would return to patients they
had treated hours earlier to find new burns on their bodies – or fouled
water from toilets poured on bandages covering freshly cleaned wounds.
‘There were days we felt so desperate. It was just disgusting,’ said Nemer.
A damning report by Amnesty
International claimed up to 13,000 people died in a ‘calculated campaign
of extrajudicial execution by mass hangings’ at one notorious jail
alone was dismissed as 'fake news' by President Assad (pictured)
‘I
would carry out an operation under anaesthetic, clean up wounds, use
antibiotics and then screw an external metal fixation on to the bones to
hold an arm or leg together. But when I went back, someone from
intelligence had pulled it out. Can you imagine the pain that must have
caused?’
The doctors complained about
the killings and torture, saying they were in a hospital ‘not a
slaughterhouse’, but security chiefs brushed aside concerns. Nemer would
try to find out names of those chained to the beds, passing on the
details to their families.
This is a hospital not a slaughterhouse
Security
officials sometimes casually stubbed out cigarettes on patients when he
walked into a room. Yet incredibly, below these atrocities on the
eighth-floor, was a regular hospital, which was even used as a showcase
for visiting dignitaries. Eventually, Nemer found it too traumatic –
especially since he was moonlighting in secret field hospitals to help
injured protesters.
When a mortar
exploded in one attack, he rushed outside and almost trod on the severed
head of a doctor friend who had taken a break.
He
was also routinely interrogated for days on end by intelligence
officials, who did not trust him since he was Sunni and his roommate was
under suspicion.
‘I asked to move to another hospital because I could not handle the situation any longer.’ His request was granted.
Yet
Nemer’s life did not improve when he went to Harasta hospital, on the
outskirts of Damascus – for the intelligence agencies began documenting
their dead and he was forced to collaborate with their activities.
‘Every
day they would bring corpses in a jeep or truck. The officials would
tell us to write death certificates and we had to ignore the obvious
signs of torture and starvation. They would not even let us take a pulse
or examine the pupils.’
UN experts asked to review the photographic evidence compared such scenes with the horror of Nazi death camps.
One
day after a big battle in Damascus, there were 1,300 bodies. More
typically, a flatbed truck would arrive with 20 or 30 destroyed corpses
on the back; once, he saw a body slip on to the pavement after a driver
took a hospital roundabout too fast.
‘The
first time I refused to sign the death certificate but an intelligence
person held his AK-47 to my head and said, “Do it or die.”
‘It
was such humiliation – inside you’re boiling with anger but you can’t
do anything. This hurt so much. I am a doctor. When I graduated I took
the Hippocratic Oath, which was about saving lives.’
Pictures of the battered, burned and starved bodies were captured by a military police photographer
known as Caesar, who smuggled out more than 53,000 images on memory sticks to provide evidence of Assad’s brutality.
The
corpses had codes scribbled on skin: the identity number; the unit that
killed them; the hospital case file number. It was just like the Nazis
documented their evil deeds – and, indeed, just as Islamic State
catalogue Yazidi women sold into sex slavery.
‘This
was when Assad started telling the international community that he was
fighting terrorists. He began documenting everything so he could say, if
challenged, that all these prisoners died from natural causes.’
Nemer
smiled ruefully before adding: ‘And if the certificates were signed by a
Sunni doctor, that gave them more protection to argue it was
legitimate.’
The UN agreed in December to start gathering evidence as a step towards prosecuting those behind Syria’s atrocities.
But
since Russia joined Iran in propping up Assad, it seems increasingly
likely he will cling on to power – no wonder he could say last week he
‘doesn’t care’ about war crimes.
‘Every day they would bring corpses in a jeep or truck
Nemer
stayed because, like other doctors, he was secretly undermining Assad
by signing sick notes for scores of military recruits, knowing they
would flee if allowed to return home.
Some
were so desperate to escape they even shot themselves. Then the surgeon
was warned by a friend that he was about to be arrested for anti-regime
activities.
Nemer fled instantly,
bribing his way into rebel-held areas before crossing the border to
Turkey.
Sadly, his elderly father ignored warnings not to return after
getting cancer several months later – and with dreadful irony, died in
Harasta hospital after being seized by security forces and beaten
savagely in a detention centre.
One more dead person in a war that destroyed a nation.
But
at least brave people such as Nemer are bearing witness to evil,
speaking out to remind us of the war crimes being committed on all sides
of this century’s most distressing conflict.
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