• Syrian NGO seeks a first before the ICC: Individual criminal liability for Greece’s abuses against refugees

    The #Syria_Justice_and_Accountability_Center (#SJAC) has called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor to investigate Greek authorities and European Border and Coast Guard Agency (#Frontex) agents for abuses against asylum-seekers that could amount to crimes against humanity.

    On January 28, the Syrian non-governmental organization based in Washington DC submitted a file documenting five years of violations against refugees at the Greek-Turkish border and reception and identification centers in Greece.

    Since this submission, Nessma Bashi, Legal Fellow at SJAC, said they have received “hundreds of notifications from victims, mainly Syrian saying: ‘We have witnesses, we have videos, we are willing to testify.’”

    Over one million people have journeyed from Turkey to Greece to seek asylum in Europe in the past five years. Greece currently hosts 120,000 asylum-seekers and migrants; 14% of asylum applicants in 2019 were Syrian.

    If the ICC’s Office of the Prosecutor decides to launch an investigation, “this will be the first major international criminal case pertaining to a European country,” Bashi said. It will be the first time the “individual criminal responsibility” of Greek and European officials “for crimes against humanity committed against asylum-seekers, refugees and migrants in a European country” is addressed, explained Alexandra Lily Kather, a legal consultant in the field of international justice.

    Previously, an ICC submission tried to seek accountability of EU member states for their complicity with human rights violations against migrants in Libya, but the case did not go forward.

    What crimes against humanity?

    SJAC’s submission has gathered documentation of abuses that could amount to five crimes against humanity under Article 7 of the Rome Statute, the founding treaty of the ICC:

    Deportation and forcible transfer of a population:

    Greek and Frontex agents have breached international law by expelling asylum seekers by land and sea without allowing them to apply for asylum.
    The Hellenic Coast Guard sped past refugee boats and towed them from Greek to Turkish waters, putting people at risk and violating international refugee law and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
    Deportation has been done via coercive measures like physical and psychological violence.

    Persecution:

    Refugees have been deprived of their fundamental rights in attempts to push them out of Greece. For instance, they have been subjected to inhuman treatment, arbitrary arrests and have been denied their right to a standard of living adequate for their health.

    Inhumane acts of the deprivation of humanitarian aid:

    Greece has criminalized humanitarian workers accusing them of human-smuggling charges. For instance, in September 2020, 33 NGOs workers were charged with facilitating the clandestine arrival of migrants to Greek territory.
    At reception and identification centers, inhuman conditions such as inadequate food, unsanitary conditions, or limited medical support or access to NGOs have been documented.
    Frontex and the Hellenic Coast Guard have ignored calls of refugee boats in life-threatening situations.

    Sexual violence:

    At reception and identification centers, some police officers have allegedly purchased minors sold into prostitution.
    At the border, organizations have documented inappropriate touching at searches, where some individuals were forced to strip naked.

    Torture:

    The accounts of physical mistreatment could amount to torture by conduct, and the deplorable living conditions in centers of carceral nature could amount to torture by treatment.

    Who might be liable?

    If an investigation is launched, the Prosecutor will have to define who can be liable for the abuses perpetrated. But how can individual criminal responsibility be established when the alleged violations stem from a broader national and European policy of sealing EU borders?

    Lower-level officials may argue that they are just following orders. However, Bashi pointed out that this “means that there is a chain of command and the higher-ups can be implicated,” adding that these actions are “part of a widespread and systematic attacks.”

    Although “Greece has made certain judicial, administrative and policy decisions that led to the situation in camps and the border violence, it should not be the only state held accountable,” Kather argued, “because the entire of the European continent and all the states are contributing to this decision making.” Nonetheless, Kather saw this as an opportunity to end the impunity gap on a “system of endless human rights violations against asylum-seekers, refugees and migrants.”

    Why to the ICC?

    The International Criminal Court, the world’s first permanent international criminal court, was created in 2002 by the Rome Statute.

    The court hears cases referred by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), a State Party or - as with this case - by organizations. Bashi hopes the ICC’s Prosecutor will answer during 2021. The ICC has territorial jurisdiction on this case because Greece is a State Party and the alleged crimes occurred in Greek territory.

    The ICC can prosecute individuals for crimes against humanity if national courts are unable or unwilling to investigate a crime. SJAC argues that neither Greek nor European courts are able to carry out a serious investigation since the alleged crimes are part of a national policy backed by the European Union.

    In addition, previous rulings against Greece’s unlawful migration practices by the European Court of Human Rights, the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, and the UNHCR, as well as complaints before the European Commission have been ignored. As such, SJAC considers the ICC as the court of last resort.

    “The fact that this happened on European soil, the continent that claims to be a bastion of human rights, is really unjust,” Bashi said. Kather labeled it “a bold strategy” to go after a European country. Still, it is “a necessary development to uphold the credibility of the ICC, that from a Eurocentric perspective, it is often argued that crimes are always happening elsewhere, but never on the European territory,” she said. It is noteworthy that nine of the ten ICC cases relate to African countries.

    Where can this lead?

    If this case goes ahead, it will “send a very clear sign” to European countries that fail to protect the refugee population from violations that there is “no impunity” and “similar actions could follow,” Kather explained. “Greece is just the first one, but we are hoping that Italy and Spain will learn that these crimes are indeed crimes,” Bashi added.

    Traditionally, violations against asylum-seekers have been framed under international human rights law, but Kather points out that there is a shift towards “the realm of international criminal law” due to the “ever mounting violence at the border.”

    Last week, members of the European Parliament launched a probe against Frontex for allegations of harassment and unlawful operations to stop people from reaching European borders. Last month, the UN Human Rights Committee found that Italy had failed to protect the right to life for not assisting a vessel in distress in 2013. This decision responds to a complaint by three Syrians and a Palestinian who lost a combined 13 relatives in the sinking that cost 200 lives total.

    All these developments “send a broader sign that violence, at the sea or land border, is being monitored and legal actions are being filed,” Kather said.

    The ball is in the ICC’s court.

    https://syriadirect.org/news/syrian-ngo-seeks-a-first-before-the-icc-individual-criminal-liability-f
    #Grèce #réfugiés #justice #ICC #Cour_pénale_internationale #CPI #crimes_contre_l'humanité #droits_humains #asile #migrations

    ping @isskein @karine4

  • A New Wave of Syrian Films Exposes the Failure of Images

    In an increasingly appalling atmosphere of political stagnation, failed negotiations, and yet another ceasefire that won’t last, there is at least some good news coming out from Syria these days. A new wave of talented filmmakers is silently but powerfully emerging in the midst of a social media-driven compulsion to upload images nonstop and share them in real time.
    The endless visual production has taken life away from the art of image-making. Yet an emerging wave of Syrian directors is finally revitalizing it, as they bring life back to film. In particular, three cinematic gems have surfaced from Syria in the past five years: Ammar al-Beik‘s “#Syria_Trilogy” (The Sun’s Incubator (2011); La Dolce Siria (2014); Kaleidoscope (2015)), Sara Fattahi‘s #Coma (2015), and Avo Kaprealian‘s #Houses_Without_Doors (2016). Far from being a mere documentation of Syrian everydayness in wartime, these documentary films start from deep inside the home and the well of family memories.


    http://hyperallergic.com/323265/a-new-wave-of-syrian-films-exposes-the-failure-of-images
    #films #syrie

  • None of the resettled refugees have left Estonia so far
    None of the asylum seekers that were resettled in Estonia as part of the programme to reduce the migration crisis in the EU has left the country so far. The same cannot be said of Latvia, however.
    Estonia’s Social Affairs Ministry’s international protection policy department’s manager Trina Raga told BNS on Tuesday that none of the people who arrived in Estonia as part of the resettlement programme have left the country so far.
    http://bnn-news.com/none-of-the-resettled-refugees-have-left-estonia-so-far-150579

    #Estonia #Baltics #Syria_refugee_crisis #Asylum_seekers

  • Almost all asylum seekers relocated to Latvia have left the country; state institutions have no information, continue to pay benefits

    Of 23 asylum seekers that have been relocated to Latvia as part of the European Union’s refugee relocation program, 21 persons are already in Germany, as Latvian Television has found out.
    For instance, a Syrian mother of three, who at the end of July said she was planning to settle in Latvia and had already learned some Latvian, told the television that she had left Latvia as the mentor provided by the state was unable to help her family solve various practical day-to-day problems. Eventually she decided to ask money for apartment rent from her brother who lives in Germany, but at the end of August, the family packed and left for Germany.
    http://leta.lv/eng/home/important/9CE19B0D-4320-47F7-91E7-8B4F9A1BAC62

    #Asylum_in_Latvia #EU_plan #Syria_crisis #Relocation #Latvia

  • Mortar slams into #Damascus kills 14, wounds 86: state media
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/19585

    Mortar shells slammed into central Damascus on Tuesday, hitting an educational institute in a barrage that killed at least 14 people and wounded 86, state media reported. “Fourteen citizens were killed and 86 others wounded by terrorists who targeted the Shaghur neighborhood in Damascus with four mortar shells,” the SANA news agency said, adding that two shells hit the Badr al-Din al-Hussein institute. The Syrian government and media use the term “terrorists” for all those seeking to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad’s government. read more

    #mortal_attacks #Syria_war #Top_News

  • UN Security Council to vote on Syria aid resolution Saturday
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/18722

    The UN Security Council will vote on Saturday on a resolution to boost humanitarian aid access in Syria, where the United Nations says 9.3 million people need help, although it is unclear if Russia and China will support or veto the draft. Australian UN Ambassador Gary Quinlan, who co-authored the text with envoys from Jordan and Luxembourg, told reporters the vote would be held Saturday morning. read more

    #Syria_conflict #Top_News #UN_aid_resolution

  • #Russia says UN #Syria_Aid resolution possible in days
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/18697

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attends the Gulf-Russian strategic dialogue at the Bayan Palace in Kuwait City on February 19,2014. (Photo: AFP - Yasser al-Zayyat) Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attends the Gulf-Russian strategic dialogue at the Bayan Palace in Kuwait City on February 19,2014. (Photo: AFP - Yasser al-Zayyat)

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday a #UN_Resolution on humanitarian aid access in Syria could be agreed in days if Security Council members do not try to “politicize” the issue, Interfax news agency reported. Moscow criticized a Western-Arab draft resolution and proposed its own text as well as another one that would condemn acts of “terrorism” in civil war-torn (...)

    #Top_News

  • Syria army, rebels agree new #Damascus area #truce
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/18674

    Syria’s army and rebels agreed a truce in the capital’s southern suburb of Babbila Monday, the latest in a series of local ceasefires in Damascus flashpoints, an AFP reporter said. The truces come more than a year into fierce daily battles in and around several areas of the city that have led to rebels and President Bashar al-Assad’s forces deciding to compromise, with neither side able to claim victory. In addition to Babbila, deals have been struck for local ceasefires in Qudsaya, Moadamiyet al-Sham, Barzeh, Beit Sahem, Yalda and Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp. read more

    #Syria_conflict #Top_News

  • Drowning in Debt: #Lebanon Loses $10 Billion Due to #Syria_war
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/drowning-debt-lebanon-loses-10-billion-due-syria-war

    Real growth would accelerate to 5% in 2014 and 6% in 2015. Government revenues would recover, leading to ... a shift in the primary balance from a deficit ... to a surplus. Real growth would accelerate to 5% in 2014 and 6% in 2015. Government revenues would recover, leading to ... a shift in the primary balance from a deficit ... to a surplus. (Photo: Marwan Bou Haidar).

    Which is the more dangerous indicator: indirect economic losses of almost $10 billion due to the Syrian crisis or paying $25 billion for “debt service” in the past seven years? The answer determines how to formulate future economic scenarios for Lebanon.

    Hassan Chakrani

    read (...)

    #Economy #Articles #Lebanon_economy

  • Donors pledge nearly $1.3 billion at Syria meeting
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/18233

    Donors meeting in #Kuwait Wednesday pledged nearly $1.3 billion in #humanitarian_aid for victims of the Syrian war, which the #UN chief said had left half the population in need of urgent help. The meeting comes just a week before the so-called ’Geneva II’ peace meeting aimed at finding a political solution to the 34-month conflict that has claimed more than 100,000 lives. Delegates from nearly 70 nations and 24 international organisations gathered for the one-day event chaired by UN chief Ban Ki-moon. read more

    #Syria_conflict #Top_News

  • WikiLeaks, Al-Akhbar collaborate on “embarrassing” Syria Files
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/wikileaks-al-akhbar-collaborate-embarrassing-syria-files

    Al-Akhbar will work with WikiLeaks over coming weeks to release a large number of emails detailing the inner workings of Syria’s political and business elite, the two organizations confirmed on Thursday.

    WikiLeaks announced in a statement on Thursday it will publish more than 2 million emails “from Syrian political figures, ministries and associated companies, dating from August 2006 to March 2012.”

    The Syria Files are set to reveal the intimate workings of the country’s ruling elite, as well as its opponents. Among the government departments included are the Ministries of Presidential Affairs, Foreign Affairs, Finance, Information, Transport and Culture.

    “The material is embarrassing to Syria, but it is also embarrassing to Syria’s opponents,” WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said.

    #wikileaks #syria_files