Former Syrian prisoners return to ‘death dormitory’ in Assad’s notorious jail

Freed inmates describe systematic torture at prisons; ‘one to three people would die inside every day,’ says one released man

An arial view shows the infamous Sednaya prison, just north of Damascus, Syria, Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, as crowds gather to enter (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed)
An arial view shows the infamous Sednaya prison, just north of Damascus, Syria, Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, as crowds gather to enter (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed)

DAMASCUS, Syria (Reuters) — Basim Faiz Mawat stood in the Damascus cell that his fellow prisoners used to call the “death dormitory,” struggling to believe that the system that abused him for so long had been overthrown and his suffering had ended.

“I came here today only to see that truly nothing lasts forever,” the 48-year-old said as he and another freed prisoner, Mohammed Hanania, visited the detention center where their guards never showed mercy.

They were among thousands who spilled out of Syria’s prison system on Sunday after a lightning rebel advance overthrew President Bashar al-Assad and ended five decades of his family’s rule. Many detainees were met by tearful relatives who thought they had been executed years earlier.

“Every day in this room, which used to be called ‘Steel 1 — the death dormitory,’ one to three people would die inside,” Hanania, 35, told Reuters.

“The sergeant was — when he didn’t lose someone, when someone didn’t die from weakness, he would kill him. He took them to the toilets and hit them with the heel of his shoe on their heads.”

Hanania walked on past long rows of empty cells. Names of prisoners — Mohammed al-Masry, Ahmed and others — were scratched on walls with dates.

A picture shows writing on the walls of a prison cell in the basement of the Syrian General Intelligence Directorate (GID) Branch 251, also known as Al-Khatib branch, in the capital Damascus on December 14, 2024. (Louai Beshara/AFP)

The floors were littered with rubble and discarded clothes. A row of blankets was still set out in one cell where prisoners had slept.

Both men looked up at an image on a wall of Assad, who is accused of torturing and killing thousands, abuses that were also rampant during his father Hafez’s reign of terror.

“No one could have believed this would happen,” Mawat said.

Mass executions

In another room, he stood beside a rusty blue ladder and described how he was blindfolded and forced to climb up the steps. His torturer would then kick away the ladder, and he would be suspended by his arms from the ceiling in agony.

“My shoulders were torn, and I couldn’t say a single word. No one could bear more than five or 10 minutes,” he said.

Rights groups have reported mass executions in Syria’s prisons. In 2017, the United States said it had identified a new crematorium at the Sednaya military prison on the outskirts of Damascus, to dispose of hanged prisoners.

A blood-stained rope lies on the floor in the infamous Sednaya military prison, just north of Damascus, Syria, Dec. 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Syrians have flocked to the prisons looking for their loved ones. Some have been released alive, others have been identified among the dead, and thousands more have not yet been found.

Syrian rebel leader Ahmad al-Sharaa — better known as Abu Mohammed al-Julani — the main commander of the rebels who toppled Assad, has said he will close the prisons and hunt down anyone involved in the torture or killing of detainees.

The leader of Syria’s Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) group that headed a lightning rebel offensive snatching Damascus from government control, Abu Mohammed al-Golani, address a crowd at the capital’s landmark Umayyad Mosque on December 8, 2024. (Aref TAMMAWI / AFP)

Assad fled to his ally Russia, where he was granted asylum.

“At this stage, if everyone thinks about taking revenge, we have no solution other than to forgive,” Hanania said.

“But the criminal who has blood [on their hands] should be held accountable. I will leave my rights to be granted by God.”

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