Syrian regime jails at risk of virus ‘catastrophe’: rights groups
BEIRUT: Human rights groups warned on Tuesday of a "catastrophe" if the novel coronavirus hits the Syrian regime’s overcrowded and squalid prisons, where inmates are routinely denied medical care.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have long documented abuses in the prisons of President Bashar-al-Assad’s government, including executions, torture and starvation. "If the novel coronavirus spreads in security branches or prisons... this will lead to a major humanitarian catastrophe," said Diana Semaan, Syria researcher at Amnesty International.
"Over the past nine years, we have found that security forces and the heads of the security branches do not provide any kind of medical care for even illnesses considered simple to treat compared to the coronavirus."
The tens of thousands of prisoners are routinely packed into small overcrowded cells in conditions especially ripe for the spread of disease and denied adequate food, medical care and ventilation, rights groups say.
While no outbreak in a Syrian prison has so far been reported, fears were compounded on Sunday after the government in Damascus announced the country’s first coronavirus case. "One case of coronavirus in detention facilities can and will be catastrophic," HRW’s Sara Kayyali told AFP.
"That’s not just because the virus is highly infectious and fatal in some cases, but also because the Syrian government has tortured, mistreated and abused detainees," leaving them highly vulnerable, she said. Rights groups have for years documented how prisoners have died not just from executions but also from illness and poor living conditions.
"If coronavirus hits the prisons we are likely to see an exponential increase" in such deaths, Kayyali said. Syrian activist groups on Monday pressed the government for action, calling for the release of political prisoners and halting of all new arrests. In a statement signed by 43 non-government groups, many of which are based outside of Syria, they also called on the government to open detention facilities to the World Health Organisation and the International Committee of the Red Cross. UN envoy to Syria Geir Pedersen on Tuesday made a similar call, urging a "large scale releases of detainees and abductees".
He also appealed for "immediate access for relevant humanitarian organisations to all detention facilities, and urgent steps to ensure adequate medical care and protective measures in all places of detention".
-
King Charles' Andrew Decision Labelled 'long Overdue' -
Timothee Chalamet 'forever Indebted' To Fan Over Kind Gesture -
Columbia University Sacks Staff Over Epstein Partner's ‘backdoor’ Admission -
Ozzy Osbourne's Family Struggles Behind Closed Doors -
Dua Lipa Claims Long-distance Relationship 'never Stops Being Hard' -
BTS Moments Of Taylor Swift's 'Opalite' Music Video Unvieled: See Photos -
Robin Windsor's Death: Kate Beckinsale Says It Was Preventable Tragedy -
Rachel Zoe Shares Update On Her Divorce From Rodger Berman -
Kim Kardashian Officially Takes Major Step In Romance With New Boyfriend Lewis Hamilton -
YouTube Tests Limiting ‘All’ Notifications For Inactive Channel Subscribers -
'Isolated And Humiliated' Andrew Sparks New Fears At Palace -
Google Tests Refreshed Live Updates UI Ahead Of Android 17 -
Ohio Daycare Worker 'stole $150k In Payroll Scam', Nearly Bankrupting Nursery -
Michelle Yeoh Gets Honest About 'struggle' Of Asian Representation In Hollywood -
Slovak Fugitive Caught At Milano-Cortina Olympics To Watch Hockey -
King Charles Receives Exciting News About Reunion With Archie, Lilibet