Rights groups call on Germany to probe Syria chemical weapons atrocities

Rights groups call on Germany to probe Syria chemical weapons atrocities
Human rights groups have filed a criminal complaint in Germany calling for the investigation of two deadly regime chemical weapons attacks in Syria, which killed over 1,400 people.
3 min read
Syrian human rights groups have been calling for justice for the Assad regime's victims [AFP]

Human rights groups said on Tuesday they have filed a criminal complaint in Germany asking prosecutors to investigate two chemical weapons attacks in Syria that stand out as among the worst atrocities in the country's long-running conflict.

Three groups, including Syrian human rights organizations and international legal campaigners, want Germany's attorney-general to probe the deadly sarin attacks on the Eastern Ghouta area near Damascus and the town of Khan Sheikhoun that occurred in 2013 and 2017 respectively. They argue there is plentiful evidence to blame the Syrian regime for the attacks, including President Bashar Al-Assad.

The New York-based Open Society Justice Initiative, the Syrian Centre for Media and Freedom of Expression and the Syrian Archive group chose to file their suit in Germany because the country applies the principle of “universal jurisdiction” that allows it to try crimes committed elsewhere.

In April, two former members of Syria’s secret police went on trial in Germany accused of crimes against humanity over the torture of thousands of pro-democracy protesters.

Read more: A Syrian gravedigger recounts a genocide, but is anyone listening?

The groups say a dossier they submitted to German prosecutors this week contains new information about the chemical weapons attacks, including some gleaned from former Syrian government officials who have since defected.

The two attacks are estimated to have killed more than 1,400 people, including children. The use of chemical weapons and the targeting of civilians constitute war crimes.

Efforts to bring the Syrian regime before the International Criminal Court have been stymied by Russia and China, though the Netherlands recently made a renewed push to bring a case before the United Nations’ highest court.

“Now is the time for competent European prosecutors to jointly investigate Syria’s chemical weapons program and issue arrest warrants for the Syrian officials responsible," Hadi al Khatib, the founder and director of Syrian Archive, said in a statement.

Mazen Darwish, director-general and founder of the Syrian Centre for Media and Freedom of Expression, said the complaint being filed in Germany is part of an effort to prevent those responsible for gross human rights violations from evading justice as part of a peace deal.

“We are afraid that if we go to a political agreement without justice and accountability, this means that we will return our country to a second round of war,” Darwish told The Associated Press. "And this time, we will have a new war built on revenge."

“And speaking as a Syrian refugee, there is no way I will accept to go back to Syria if there is no accountability,” he said.

Even if German prosecutors add the chemical attacks to their existing investigation into crimes in Syria, it is unlikely that a case would ever go to trial unless the accused were to be brought to Germany, as the country does not try people in absentia.

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