Germany charges ex-Syrian prison guard over Assad-era abuses

Former Syrian security official accused of torturing dozens of prisoners at a Damascus jail while former president Bashar al-Assad was in power and has been charged with crimes against humanity by German prosecutors.

The ex-prison guard, identified only as Fahad A, allegedly participated in more than 100 interrogations between 2011 and 2012 where prisoners were “subjected to severe physical abuse,” according to Germany’s Federal Public Prosecutor General’s office, which released the indictment on Monday.

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According to a statement from the prosecutor’s office, the abuse included electric shocks, cable beatings, forced stress positions, and ceiling suspensions.

At least 70 prisoners died as a result of such mistreatment and the deteriorating conditions in prison, according to the statement, which also mentions the former guard who is also accused of murder.

The official was detained on May 27 and formally charged on December 10.

According to the German prosecutor’s office, he is being held in pre-trial detention.

Syrians have demanded justice for crimes committed during al-Assad’s decades-long rule, which was abruptly overthrown by the rebels in December of that year.

After nearly 14 years of civil war, the Assad regime, which was accused of widespread human rights violations, including detainee torture and forced disappearances, was overthrown.

Jurisdiction that is universal

Prosecutors in Germany have used universal jurisdiction laws to prosecute those accused of crimes against humanity committed anywhere in the world.

According to these laws, several people who are suspected of crimes against humanity during the Syrian conflict have been detained in Germany, home to about one million Syrians, over the past few years.

A Syrian doctor who was found guilty of carrying out torture as part of al-Assad’s crackdown on dissent received a life sentence in Frankfurt in June.

Alaa Mousa, a doctor, was charged with torturing patients at Damascus and Homs military hospitals, where political prisoners were frequently taken for alleged treatment.

Witnesses described how Mousa sprayed flammable liquid onto a prisoner’s cuts before lighting them, slitting the man’s teeth, and breaking his teeth. Another incident involved a detainee who had allegedly refused to be beaten, and the doctor was accused of giving her a fatal substance.

One former prisoner referred to the “slaughterhouse” at his concentration camp in Damascus.

Trump’s Christmas gifts

If my memory serves me correctly, I learned that there wasn’t a Santa Claus on Christmas Eve 1992.

I had been holding onto Santa for the entire 10-year-old elementary school year in Austin, Texas, apparently unprepared to give up my youth, even though I had already debunked the existence of the Tooth Fairy and Easter Bunny.

I cried when I saw my parents delivering the allegedly North Pole gifts.

Many Americans are feeling deceived by another man wearing MAGA red this holiday season, after more than three decades.

In addition to manic deportations, which have helped turn the country into a holly, jolly police state, President Donald Trump has neglected to fulfill pretty much all of his key promises as the country nears the end of his first year in office.

Americans are struggling with skyrocketing living costs, including rising rents and rising electricity costs, according to a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll that found Trump’s approval rating at just 39 percent.

Millions of people in the federal government shutdown this year were faced with the distinct possibility of starvation, a situation that was largely incompatible with the government’s stated goal of “making America great again.”

The unemployment rate increased to 4.6%, the highest level in nearly five years, as a result of the shutdown’s job losses. Many economists believe that employers have resumed hiring as a result of what some have called the Trump tariffs on imports as shock.

Trump has obviously made a terrible mistake in his commitment to fixing the US economy. However, the president has given the current economy an “A+++++” rating in his own personal hyperbolic make-believe environment while calling the nation’s alleged “affordability” crisis a Democratic “hoax” to tarnish his reputation.

Although it’s true, the United States has never been particularly affordable. After all, that would ultimately undermine plutocracy’s foundation of human nature and its cutting-edge capitalism.

Republicans and Democrats may appear to be ideological opposites, but they are actually two sides of the same coin when it comes to perpetuating the racialized elite’s rule and making poverty the top cause of death in one of the richest nations on Earth.

In Louisville, Kentucky, where my mother and I are currently spending the holidays, are spending almost the same amount as the monthly rent on my beach house in southern Mexico. One meat product and no alcoholic beverages were included in our unfulfilled shopping cart.

In addition, Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old emergency room technician, was the subject of the notorious March 2020 police shooting in Louisville. A former police officer who was found guilty of Taylor’s shooting, which occurred during the first Trump administration, was given a one-day prison sentence earlier this year, according to the US Department of Justice.

In the end, the officer was given a 33-month sentence that was slightly longer.

Indeed, you’re only going to experience disappointment if your holiday wish list includes a stop to systemic racism or police brutality.

At least 16 files relating to the case of late financier and child sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein mysteriously disappeared from the department’s website shortly after they were published, according to other contemporary Justice Department misdeeds.

Trump’s photo, which he previously described as a “Democrat hoax,” was one of the items that went missing, along with other items.

According to survivor Marina Lacerda, other recently released documents have been heavily redacted or completely blacked out, making them “another slap in the face” to Epstein’s victims.

In other words, today’s domestic environment doesn’t offer much holiday cheer.

But there I go, spreading “hoaxes” once more.

Trump’s continued wanton bombing of boats in the Venezuelan area and the subsequent extrajudicial killing of seafarers, allegedly in the name of “narcoterrorism,” have also occurred during the holiday season.

The US’s anti-Venezuelan arsenal has now grown to allow for the hijacking of oil tankers&nbsp, as well. Trump’s claim on social media that the South American nation had previously stolen “Oil, Land, and other Assets” from the United States has been amplification of the list of fabricated casus belli. The president did not declare war on Venezuela in an interview with NBC on Thursday.

Israel’s genocide of Palestinians continues apace in the Gaza Strip under the guise of a Trump-brokered ceasefire. Trump has poured billions of dollars into the US taxpayers in response to the genocidal state, just like his Democratic foe Joe Biden.

Consider it a massive stocking stuffer.

And as Christmastime approaches this year, it’s not all jovial.

Voices of Gaza: The Great Omari Mosque’s 2,000‑year history lies in ruins

NewsFeed

One of Gaza City’s most significant landmarks, the Great Omari Mosque, dates back more than 2000 years. In December of this year, an Israeli attack destroyed it. The mosque’s administrator, Hatem Haniya, considers its history and its profound significance for Gaza’s citizens.

Syria’s government curbing once-booming Captagon industry: UN report

According to a report from the United Nations, Syria’s government has cracked down on the Captagon industry, which was flourishing under former longtime leader Bashar al-Assad.

A network of factories and storage facilities have been destroyed by Syria’s new authorities since al-Assad’s ouster a year ago, according to a research brief the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) published on Monday.

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The majority of the world’s Captagon, an amphetamine-like drug, has been produced in Syria for more than ten years, earning al-Assad’s government billions of dollars.

However, interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa has imposed a clampdown on his government in an effort to legitimize it and strengthen international relations.

According to the UNODC report, 13 storage facilities and 15 industrial-level laboratories have been shut down overall. The Captagon market has “drastically changed” thanks to the action, according to the agency.

Saudi Arabia, among the Gulf states, had previously been criticized for its role in the drug trade. Additionally, it aided in enforcing sanctions against Western countries.

Political will and cooperation with other countries

According to Caroline Rose, a New Lines Institute think tank expert on Syrian drug trafficking, the Captagon trade has provided billions of dollars in profit to networks and individuals affiliated with the former government, “either within the leadership of the regime’s security apparatus, Syria’s commercial sector and business elite, or/or family members of Bashar al-Assad.”

Maher al-Assad, Bashar’s brother and former leader of the army’s elite Fourth Division, was identified as a key player who profited from Latakia’s defense of shipments.

Large seizures of the drug across the region indicate that significant stocks of the pills originating from Syria are still in circulation, the report noted.

According to the UNODC, smaller-scale production is likely to continue in Syria and neighboring nations, with Gulf nations still being the main drug buyers.

According to the UN agency, the destabilization of the Middle East’s Captagon industry is evidence that even highly complex drug markets can be destabilized in relatively short time thanks to political will and international cooperation.

However, it warned that the shift could sway local consumers away from more potent, recently popular synthetic substances like methamphetamine.

Denmark to summon US ambassador following Greenland envoy appointment

Following President Donald Trump’s appointment of a special envoy to Greenland, Denmark has summoned the US ambassador.

Lars Lokke Rasmussen, the foreign minister of Denmark, expressed his “deep resentment” over the appointment of Louisiana governor Jeff Landry as the governor of the autonomous Danish territory, which Trump has repeatedly threatened to annex.

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Rasmussen expressed concern over Landry’s comments regarding the appointment, which praised plans to “make Greenland a part of the US.”

He pleaded with Washington to respect Danish sovereignty and said the US ambassador would soon be summoned for “an explanation” in response to the statement, which he described as “totally unacceptable.”

Trump has repeatedly stoked the Nordic state by promising to overthrow Greenland, which is largely self-governing but incorporated into Denmark, despite that country’s alliance with NATO.

Trump has argued for security reasons why the island’s abundance of resources is necessary. He noted in March that the US would “go as far as we have to” and has not ruled out the use of military force to seize control.

The enormous Arctic island is not for sale, according to Danish and Greenland’s leaders, who have stated on numerous occasions that they will decide the country’s future.

The majority of Greenland’s 57, 000 people, according to a poll conducted in January, want to secede from Denmark but do not want to join the US.

On Sunday night, Trump appointed Landry as the country’s ambassador and stated in a statement on his Truth Social platform that the governor of Louisiana “understands how crucial Greenland is to our national security and will strongly advance our country’s interests.”

In a post on X, Landry directly addressed Trump and said, “It’s an honor to serve you in this volunteer position.”

Landry’s appointment, according to Greenland’s Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen, “does nothing for us here at home,” adds to the US-Denmark simmering tension.

Following media reports of a US covert influence campaign in Greenland, Denmark summoned the US charge of affairs in August.