Switzerland to try Assad’s uncle for alleged war crimes in Syria in 1982

Rifaat Assad charged at Swiss Federal Criminal Court with ‘ordering homicides, acts of torture, cruel treatments and illegal detentions’ when he led Syrian troops in Hama

This picture taken in November, 1984, in Damascus shows Rifaat Assad, the banished younger brother of former Syrian president Hafez Assad. (Philippe Bouchon/AFP)
This picture taken in November, 1984, in Damascus shows Rifaat Assad, the banished younger brother of former Syrian president Hafez Assad. (Philippe Bouchon/AFP)

GENEVA — Switzerland’s Attorney General’s Office said on Tuesday that it would put on trial Rifaat Assad, an uncle of Syrian President Bashar Assad, for war crimes and crimes against humanity dating back to his time as a commander in the Syrian military in 1982.

The office said in a statement that Assad was charged at the Swiss Federal Criminal Court with “ordering homicides, acts of torture, cruel treatments and illegal detentions” in February 1982 when he had charge of troops in the western city of Hama.

Known to critics as the “Butcher of Hama” for crushing an insurrection in the Syrian city, Assad, a former vice president of the country, commanded troops accused of killing thousands of people to quell a Muslim Brotherhood uprising. The nearly monthlong slaughter remains one of the bloodiest cases in history of an Arab government attacking its own people.

Assad, who was not immediately available for comment, has previously denied responsibility for the Hama deaths.

According to the Swiss prosecutors’ indictment, the conflict between the Syrian armed forces and their Islamist opponents caused between 3,000 and 60,000 deaths in Hama, mostly civilians.

Rifaat Assad, 86, lived in exile, mostly in France, from the mid-1980s, after being accused of trying to topple his brother, then-Syrian president Hafez Assad, Bashar’s father.

Late Syrian president Hafez Assad (R) with his youngest brother Rifaat (L) at a military ceremony in Damascus, January 1, 1984. (Handout/AFP)

He returned to Syria in 2021, escaping jail in France, where he was found guilty of acquiring millions of euros of property using funds diverted from the Syrian state.

The Swiss Attorney General’s Office initiated war crimes proceedings against Assad in December 2013 under the principle of universal jurisdiction and non-applicability of statutory limitations to war crimes.

Police established that Assad was present in Swiss territory when the investigation was initiated. Several victims filed civil complaints within the office’s criminal proceeding.

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.

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