Syria arrests 3 men suspected of links to Tadamon massacre in which hundreds were executed

Imad Mohammed Al-Mahmoud, center left, and Somer Mohammed Al-Mahmoud,(R), alleged former operatives with military security before the fall of Assad, are arrested in Tadamon, a Damascus suburb, Syria, on Feb. 17, 2025. (AP)
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Imad Mohammed Al-Mahmoud, center left, and Somer Mohammed Al-Mahmoud,(R), alleged former operatives with military security before the fall of Assad, are arrested in Tadamon, a Damascus suburb, Syria, on Feb. 17, 2025. (AP)
Munther Al-Jazairi, an alleged former operative with the military security before the fall of Bashar Assad, is arrested by security forces in Tadamon, a suburb of Damascus, Syria, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP)
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Munther Al-Jazairi, an alleged former operative with the military security before the fall of Bashar Assad, is arrested by security forces in Tadamon, a suburb of Damascus, Syria, Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 17 February 2025
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Syria arrests 3 men suspected of links to Tadamon massacre in which hundreds were executed

Imad Mohammed Al-Mahmoud, center left, and Somer Mohammed Al-Mahmoud,(R).
  • Dozens of police and security trucks lined the streets of Tadamon where they carried out the arrests in the same streets that once bore witness to mass executions

TADAMON: Security forces in Syria said on Monday that they arrested three people involved in the execution of hundreds of civilians by government forces in Damascus in 2013, two years after the country’s 13-year civil war began.
Dozens of police and security trucks lined the streets of Tadamon, a Damascus suburb near the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp, where they carried out the arrests in the same streets that once bore witness to mass executions.

Masked, rifle-wielding men moved through hollowed-out buildings, remnants of a war that turned the district into a front line between government forces and opposition fighters.
In 2022, a leaked video dated April 16, 2013, appeared to contain harrowing footage of the executions. The near seven-minute clip showed members of Syria’s notorious Military Intelligence Branch 227 leading a line of about 40 blindfolded prisoners, their hands tied behind their backs, into an abandoned building in Tadamon. One by one, the gunmen pushed or kicked the prisoners into a trench filled with old tires, shooting them as they fell.
One of the three men arrested was Monzer Al-Jazairi, a resident of the Zahira neighborhood and a former operative with the military security that operated before the fall of Bashar Assad in December 2024.
“We used to bring detainees arrested at checkpoints, put them under the buildings here and execute them, and then after we’re done, explode the buildings over them,” Al-Jazairi told The Associated Press. It was unclear whether Al-Jazairi, flanked by security men as he spoke, was speaking under duress or voluntarily.
“Every batch constituted around 25 (people),” he said, adding that “around one week” passed between one batch and the next. He estimated that he and his colleagues killed “around 500” people.
Damascus Security Chief Lt. Col. Abdul Rahman Al-Dabbagh corroborated the number, citing additional confessions from those arrested.
“Many of those killed used to be collected at checkpoints and security (detention) centers, brought to Tadamon neighborhood, where they were executed,” Al-Dabbagh told the AP.
The two other arrested suspects were identified as Somer Mohammed Al-Mahmoud and Imad Mohammed Al-Mahmoud.
Years after the Syrian war’s worst massacres and mass disappearances, most alleged crimes have not been investigated and remain unpunished.
Since Assad’s ouster, Syrian security forces, under the new leadership led by the Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group, have been tracking down and arresting remnants of the former government and military across the country.
“The operation is ongoing to apprehend all those involved in violations and massacres against Syrians,” Al-Dabbagh said.


Syrian president hails Pope Francis for solidarity in ‘darkest moments’

Syrian president hails Pope Francis for solidarity in ‘darkest moments’
Updated 17 sec ago
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Syrian president hails Pope Francis for solidarity in ‘darkest moments’

Syrian president hails Pope Francis for solidarity in ‘darkest moments’
DAMASCUS: President of the Syrian Arab Republic Ahmed Al-Sharaa paid tribute to Pope Francis, saying he had supported the Syrian people in “their darkest moments.”
The Argentine pontiff, who died on Monday aged 88, “supported the Syrian people in their darkest moments, constantly raising his voice against the violence and injustice they faced,” Sharaa said in a statement on Wednesday.
Syria’s civil war began in 2011 with a crackdown by president Bashar Assad on a pro-democracy movement.
By the time Assad was ousted in an offensive led by Sharaa on December 8, more than 500,000 people had been killed and more than half the population displaced.
Syria is home to a majority Sunni Muslim population, but also a sizeable Christian minority from several denominations, as well as other religious minorities.
Extending condolences to Catholics, Sharaa said of Francis: “His calls transcended political boundaries, and his legacy of moral courage and solidarity will remain alive in the hearts of many people in our country.”
Syria’s Christian community has shrunk from around one million before the war to under 300,000 due to waves of displacement and emigration.
The capital Damascus is home to one of the oldest Christian communities in the world but its Christian population dwindled to only about two percent, the Vatican said last year.
While the war began as a crackdown on peaceful protests, religion and ethnicity swiftly came into focus as groups battling each other became increasingly radicalized.
Syria’s Christian community generally either supported the government or sought to be neutral in the war, with Assad, himself from the minority Alawite sect, portraying himself as a protector of minorities.
Critics of Assad, however, accused him of using minority communities to prop himself up, and of meting out especially brutal punishment for any detained members of minority communities who dared to voice dissent.
Sharaa and the new government are under pressure from Western countries to ensure they are inclusive in their exercise of power.
Sharaa, now the president of Syria, was the former head of the country’s Al-Qaeda offshoot, a radical Sunni Muslim group widely proscribed as a terrorist organization.
Since Assad’s ouster, the most serious violence to hit Syria was a massacre on the Mediterranean coast in March, which according to a war monitor saw more than 1,700 people killed.
The victims were mostly members of the Alawite minority of ousted president Assad.

Israel military issues evacuation order for residents of two north Gaza areas

Israel military issues evacuation order for residents of two north Gaza areas
Updated 2 min 46 sec ago
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Israel military issues evacuation order for residents of two north Gaza areas

Israel military issues evacuation order for residents of two north Gaza areas
Civilians in Beit Hanoun and Sheikh Zayed were ordered to move west Adraee said

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military issued an evacuation order on Thursday for Palestinians residing in two north Gaza areas ahead of a planned attack.
“To all of the civilians of the Gaza Strip staying in the areas of Beit Hanoun and Sheikh Zayed. This is a preliminary and a final warning... move west immediately toward Gaza City,” the military’s Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee said on X.

Israel army says initial probe shows Israeli tank fire killed UN worker in Gaza last month

Israel army says initial probe shows Israeli tank fire killed UN worker in Gaza last month
Updated 31 min 5 sec ago
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Israel army says initial probe shows Israeli tank fire killed UN worker in Gaza last month

Israel army says initial probe shows Israeli tank fire killed UN worker in Gaza last month
  • “The examination indicates that the fatality was caused by tank fire from IDF,” the military said

JERUSALEM: Israel’s military said Thursday that the initial findings from an investigation into the death of a UN worker in the central Gaza Strip last month showed he was killed by Israeli tank fire.
“According to the findings collected so far, the examination indicates that the fatality was caused by tank fire from IDF (Israeli military) troops operating in the area. The building was struck due to assessed enemy presence and was not identified by the forces as a UN facility,” the military statement said, referring to the incident on March 19.


Lebanese PM, speaker of UAE advisory parliament discuss regional issues

Lebanese PM, speaker of UAE advisory parliament discuss regional issues
Updated 24 April 2025
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Lebanese PM, speaker of UAE advisory parliament discuss regional issues

Lebanese PM, speaker of UAE advisory parliament discuss regional issues
  • Saqr Ghobash congratulated Nawaf Salam on forming a Lebanese government in February
  • Salam praised the UAE for promoting regional stability, development 

LONDON: Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam discussed the strong fraternal relations between Abu Dhabi and Beirut with Saqr Ghobash, speaker of the UAE Federal National Council, on Thursday.

Ghobash made an official visit to Lebanon, where he extended the wishes of the Emirati leadership to Lebanon and its people for continued progress, prosperity and development, the Emirates News Agency reported.

Salam and Ghobash discussed ways to strengthen and expand cooperation in various cultural, economic and humanitarian fields, and exchanged views on several regional and international issues of mutual interest, WAM added.

Ghobash congratulated Salam on forming a Lebanese government in February and reaffirmed the UAE’s strong support for Lebanon’s sovereignty, stability and development. He said that the UAE is committed to providing unwavering support to the Lebanese people.

Salam praised the UAE for promoting stability and development across the region, and expressed appreciation for its continuous support of Lebanon during recent challenging times, WAM reported.


France says Tunisian political dissidents did not receive fair trial

France says Tunisian political dissidents did not receive fair trial
Updated 24 April 2025
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France says Tunisian political dissidents did not receive fair trial

France says Tunisian political dissidents did not receive fair trial
  • The comments by France came amid growing criticism of the government of President Kais Saied over its crackdown on dissent
  • The French Foreign Ministry said: “We regret the failure to respect fair trial conditions“

TUNIS: France on Wednesday criticized the lengthy sentences handed down by a Tunisian court against opposition leaders and businessmen on conspiracy charges on the weekend, saying the conditions for a fair trial were not met.
The comments by France, the first country to speak out on the trial, came amid growing criticism of the government of President Kais Saied over its crackdown on dissent.
Rights groups said the mass conviction of dissidents is a disturbing indication of the authorities’ willingness to go ahead with its crackdown on peaceful dissent.
Tunisia’s opposition has said the trial was fabricated and aimed at silencing critical voices and consolidating the authoritarian rule.
“We learned with concern of the harsh sentences...against several individuals accused of conspiring against state security, including French nationals,” the French Foreign Ministry said.
“We regret the failure to respect fair trial conditions,” it added. Journalists, diplomats, and civil society were barred from attending the trial.
The trial highlights Saied’s full control over the judiciary since he dissolved parliament in 2021 and began ruling by decree. He also dissolved the independent Supreme Judicial Council and sacked dozens of judges in 2022.
Forty people were prosecuted in the trial, which started in March. More than 20 have fled abroad since being charged.
Lawyers said the maximum sentence was 66 years for businessman Kamel Ltaif, while opposition politician Khyam Turki received a 48-year sentence.
The court also sentenced prominent opposition figures including Ghazi Chaouachi, Issam Chebbi, Jawahar Ben Mbrak and Ridha BelHajj to 18 years in prison. They have been in custody since being detained in 2023.
Saied said in 2023 that the politicians were “traitors and terrorists” and that judges who would acquit them were their accomplices.
The opposition leaders involved in the case rejected the charges and said they were preparing an initiative aimed at uniting the fragmented opposition to face the democratic setback in the cradle of the Arab Spring uprisings.