Syrian security forces, soldiers and pro-regime militias used
sexual violence to torture people in detention and sexually abused women and
girls as young as 12 in raids, a new report said Friday.
The Human Rights Watch report,
based on interviews with victims of sexual abuse, tells of shocking accounts of
rape, penetration with objects, sexual groping, prolonged forced nudity, and
electroshock and beatings to genitalia.
"Syrian security forces
have used sexual violence to humiliate and degrade detainees with complete
impunity," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director of the human
rights organization.
"The assaults are not
limited to detention facilities -- government forces and pro-government shabiha
militia members have also sexually assaulted women and girls during home raids
and residential sweeps."
The details emerged, the report said, despite a stigma surrounding
sexual violence and a reluctance to talk publicly because of fear and shame. It
is the latest report of abuses in the turbulent country, in the throes of a
15-month-old nationwide uprising after the government launched a crackdown
against protesters.
Male and female detainees --
many of whom were political activists or simply attended protests -- reported
"sexual torture" at Military Intelligence Branch 248 and Branch 235
(known as "Palestine Branch") in Damascus; the military intelligence
facilities in Jisr al-Shughur, Idlib, and Homs; the political security branch
in Latakia; the air force intelligence branches in Mezze, Latakia, and Homs;
and the Idlib Central Prison.
Using pseudonyms, Human Rights
Watch recounted the victims' stories.
Khalil, who had been detained
in Idlib province, described extensive torture over a three-day period.
"They forced me to
undress. Then they started squeezing my fingers with pliers. They used a
stapler to put nails in my fingers, chest, and ears. I was only allowed to take
them out if I spoke. The nails in the ears were the most painful. They used two
wires hooked up to a car battery to give me electric shocks. They used electric
stun-guns on my genitals twice. I thought I would never see my family
again."
Nour, detained at the
"Palestine Branch," said she and three other women "were
repeatedly raped."
"They would take turns
with us. More than one man would rape you. It wasn't every day, but it was
regular ... "
Amer, imprisoned in Latakia,
said, "They undressed me, tied my hands behind my back, and hit me on my
private parts."
Samih, a man detained in
Latakia, described beatings and "rape for the boys."
"We would see them when
the guards brought them back to the cell. It's indescribable. You can't talk
about it. One boy came into the cell bleeding from behind. He couldn't walk. It
was something they just did to the boys. We would cry for them."
Toufiq, a military defector,
said a friend in his unit admitted to having participated in a gang rape of two
women during a home raid in Homs. He said saw video on his friend's cell phone
that confirmed the gang rape.
Suha said Shabiha members raped
her 28-year-old neighbor in Homs province. Selma, also in Homs province, heard
her neighbors being raped. Yousef said he watched soldiers from security forces
rape his wife in Daraa.
Women in Syria and those who've
fled to neighboring countries have had a tough time getting help. Emergency
responders know about the abuse because they have worked with sexual abuse
survivors.
A women's rights activist,
called Leila, said Syrians have limited access to medical and psychological
treatment and have worked to provide abortions and safe houses. She said her
group worked to help two teenage girls raped by Shabiha members during a house
raid.
Human Rights Watch lacks
evidence that high-ranking officers commanded their troops to commit sexual
violence during home searches, ground operations or in detention. But
commanders in many of the cases "knew or should have known" about the
crimes, the group said.
"Information received by
Human Rights Watch, including from army and security force defectors, indicates
that no action has been taken to investigate or punish government forces and
shabiha who commit acts of sexual violence or to prevent them from committing
such acts in the future," the report said.
"The international
community urgently needs to address the human rights violations going on in
Syria," Human Rights Watch's Whitson said. "The Security Council
should send a strong signal to the Assad government that they will be held
accountable for sexual violence and other human rights violations -- by
referring the situation to the ICC," the International Criminal Court.
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