We are 42 Syrian and international feminist and human rights organisations and 38 individuals and we welcome the filing of the first criminal complaint in Germany pertaining to sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) in Syrian government-run detention facilities. Alongside seven Syrian survivors, the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) filed the complaint to the German Federal Prosecutor jointly with the Syrian Women’s Network (SWN) and Urnammu on 17 June. We would like to express our support to all survivors of SGBV and our full solidarity with the Syrian women and men who took this legal step.
As Syrian feminist organisations working in Syria can attest, SGBV is a common occurrence, yet incidents are often under-reported, individualized, and hidden. Moreover, according to the Human Rights Council’s report, “I Lost My Dignity”, SGBV against women, girls, men, and boys has been a persistent issue in Syria since the civil uprising in 2011. The Syrian state authorities and allied militias have perpetrated rape and sexual abuse of women and girls and men during ground operations, house raids, and at checkpoints, and in official and unofficial detention facilities.
Given the documented systematic occurrence of SGBV during the ongoing conflict in Syria, this legal action is a critical step in achieving justice for victims of SGBV, and we urge the German judicial authorities, already utilising the principle of Universal Jurisdiction, to broaden their investigation and prosecute such crimes as crimes against humanity.
However, a comprehensive investigation into SGBV crimes will require staff with sufficient gender expertise and experience to support survivors of SGBV. Without the right questions and expertise, survivors are not able to report their experiences in a safe and supportive way. Without this, investigations will miss the structural and endemic abuses being committed systematically across Syria. Investigations currently risk portraying sexual and gender-based crimes as isolated acts against individuals rather than as part of widespread attacks against a civilian population, and thus as crimes against humanity.
Survivors of SGBV, and particularly female survivors, are discriminated against in multiple ways, within social, economic, and political spheres to public and private life. They often face a lifetime of trauma, social discrimination (stigma), and gender-based violence (such as ‘honour’ crimes). Some experience violence and abuse as a result of their actual or perceived attack. As a result of this discrimination, many female survivors of SGBV choose to keep their stories to themselves and do not participate in the pursuit of justice, out of fear of a societal backlash. Moreover, due to insufficient specialised support and protection services for individuals pursuing justice avenues, many SGBV survivors refrain from taking legal action out of fear of reliving or exacerbating trauma.
In order to combat these barriers and enhance legal access to justice for survivors of SGBV, we address European member states, international justice mechanisms, and the Syria community at large with the following demands:
- Legal accountability for all international crimes that took place during the Syrian conflict, including sexual and gender-based Crimes, and regardless of the perpetrators’ political affiliations.
- Gender-sensitive analysis for all international crimes committed in Syria from the beginning of investigations. This entails increasing female practitioners with gender expertise at every step of the litigation process in order to help survivors speak up for justice: More female police officers, criminal investigators, lawyers, judges, etc.
- Increased support and specialist services for SGBV survivors to ensure they are able to seek justice and hold the perpetrators of abuse to account.
- Awareness-raising and community-mobilising initiatives to tackle social discrimination (stigma) which causes greater suffering for SGBV survivors and prevents them from seeking justice.
As feminist and human rights organisations, we believe that transformative justice* for SGBV survivors will not only mean their perpetrators are held to account. Their fight for their rights extends beyond the courtroom to every home and street in Syria and beyond. Until survivors are given the care, respect, and support they need, international crimes will continue to go unpunished and basic humanity will fall short. For it is only through a transformative justice and accountability process that a lasting peace in Syria can be achieved.
Organisations:
- Amals Healing and Advocacy Center
- Badael
- Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies
- Center for Intersectional Justice
- Civil Rights Defenders
- Dawlaty
- EuroMed Rights
- Families For Freedom
- Freedom Jasmine
- Garden Court Chambers
- Guernica 37
- Global Fund for Women
- Humans of Syria
- Impunity Watch
- Jana Watan
- Madre
- Mazaya Women’s Center
- Mwatana for Human Rights
- Open Society Justice Initiative
- Release Me
- Saneat Al-Taghyeer
- Souryana Al Amal
- Strategic Advocacy for Human Rights
- Syrian Female Journalists Network
- Syrian League for Citizenship
- Syrian Women’s International Initiative
- Syrian Women’s Network
- Syrians for Truth and Justice
- Urgent Action Fund for Women’s Human Rights
- The Syria Campaign
- Urnammu
- Women’s Centre for Legal Aid and Counseling
- Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
- Women Now for Development
- Women Survivors
- Zomoroda Women’s Center
- Zenobia Association for Syrian Women
- Musawa
- The Syrian Women Detainees
- Rousl Group
- Ogarit of Droit
- Leben Frieden
Individuals:
- Ahmad Malas- Actor
- Alissar Hasan- Journalist
- Amani Al-Ali
- Bayan Rehan- Human Rights Defender
- Diala Brisly- Artist
- Dima Nachawi- Artist
- Jihad (Jay) Abdo- Actor
- Fadia Afashe- Artist
- Khawla Dunia- Writer
- Edward Watts- Film Director
- Hamza Al-Khateab- Physician
- Joey Ayoub — Human Rights Activist and Writer
- Joumana Seif- Human Rights Lawyer
- Laila Al Shami- Writer and Activist
- Laila Awad- Actress
- Lama Kannout- Writer and Researcher
- M-Sami AlKayial -Writer and Journalist
- Mariana Karkoutly- Human Rights Defender
- Maya El Ammar- Freelance Feminist Journalist
- Milad Amin- Filmmaker
- Najlaa Khamri- Actress
- Naser Danan- Physician
- Racha Rizk- Musician
- Rasha Abbas- Journalist
- Soumaia Talo Alolabi- Freelance Journalist
- Wafa Mustafa- Campaigner
- Waad Al-Khateab- Film Director
- Leila Al-Shami- writer & activist
- Sarah Khayat — Artist
- Eyad Aljarod — Director
- Mosab Al Nomire — Writer and Journalist
- Rachael Chadwick — Action For Sama
- Saeed Al Batal — Director
- Heaven Jackaly — Writer and Journalist
- Bu Naser Taffar — Writer and Musician
- Wael Kays -Writer and Journalist
- Wael Kadlo — Filmmaker
- Malath Alzoubi -Journalist
*Identifies harm, allows for healing, demands accountability and transforms behavior