Today completes seven years since the disappearance of the four activists. On December 9, 2013, the joint office of the Violations Documentation Center (VDC) in Syria, the office of the Local Development and Small-Projects Support (LDSPS), and that of the Rising for Freedom magazine in the city of Douma in the countryside of Damascus were attacked by an armed group that kidnapped activists Razan ZAITOUNEH, Wael HAMADA, Samira ALKHALIL, and Nazim HAMMADI. Despite the fact that all the military factions left the area after the forces of the Syrian regime took control of it, the fate of our colleagues remains unknown to this day.
At a time when the fruits of their labor are being revealed through the documentation of violations and crimes committed, the collection of testimonies, pictures, and data about the chemical attack in Eastern Ghouta in 2013, and the filing of judicial complaints against the perpetrators of these crimes, in addition to the ongoing work in supporting local communities and free civil work in areas outside the control of the Syrian regime, the fate of these activists remains unknown. This is true despite all efforts made by families and friends of the kidnapped to reveal their fate, including communication with many parties and a legal complaint against ‘Jaysh al-Islam’, the main suspect in the kidnapping incident.
Over the past seven years, no real efforts have been made by the countries concerned in the Syrian issue to reveal their fate. Some of them have a kind of guardianship over the military factions and in turn have the ability to put great pressure on them. However, the efforts of politicians, diplomats and representatives of these countries were limited to statements and condemnations that did not help in revealing the fate of the kidnapped.
The case of the four kidnapped activists represents a practical example of the condition that the Syrian revolution has reached. The latter has aspired to establish a civil democratic state based on freedom, justice and citizenship, respecting human rights and dignity, but it was left alone under the mercy of a criminal dictatorial regime and opportunistic groups that take religion as a cover for their non-national interests.
In defense of the moral and national values on which the Syrian revolution was based, and for their sake and for the sake of thousands of disappeared and detained in Syria, we renew today our commitment to work via all possible means to reveal their fate, defend their rights and the rights of all Syrians to justice and accountability, and to fight impunity as a basic guarantor and condition to build a democratic state based on the separation of powers, the protection of human rights and citizenship, and the rule of law in Syria.
Signatory Organizations:
- Adel Center For Human Rights
- Amals Healing and Advocacy Center
- Basamat for Development
- Baytna
- Caesar Families Association (CFA)
- Dawlaty
- Democratic Republic Studies Center (DRSC)
- Families for Freedom (FfF)
- Hawwa | Woman Empowerment Association
- Hurras Network
- Kesh Malek Organization
- Kurdish Organisation for Human rights in Syria (DAD)
- Lamar Academy
- Local Administration Councils Unit (LACU)
- Local Development and Small Projects Support (LDSPS)
- Maan “Together” for Supporting Women’s Issues
- Musawa
- Pro-justice
- Qatra for Humanity
- Safa Development Association
- SEWAR
- SHAML Syrian CSOs Coalition
- Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression (SCM)
- Syrian Lawyers Aggregation (SLA)
- Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR)
- Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR)
- Syrian Organization for Women Detainees
- Syrian Woman’s Network (SWN)
- Syrian Women Committee Org.
- Syrian Women’s Political movement (SWPM)
- Syrians for Truth and Justice – STJ
- Tala’ana Alhurriah Magazine
- The Day After (TDA)
- The Syria Campaign
- Urnammu
- Woman Support Association (WSA)
- Women Now for Development