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Former prisoner revisits Syrian air base ordeal

Former prisoner revisits Syrian air base ordeal
A woman looks at a room of the infamous Saydnaya military prison, just north of Damascus, Dec. 9, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 12 December 2024

Former prisoner revisits Syrian air base ordeal

Former prisoner revisits Syrian air base ordeal
  • On Wednesday, 40-year-old father-of-three Riad Hallak was combing through the shattered ruins of a lecture theater that he said once held 225 detainees
  • During the early days of Syria’s 13-year civil war, Hallak was arrested in 2012 while attending a funeral for protesters shot dead by government security forces

DAMASCUS: The surrender of the Mazzeh air base outside Syrian capital Damascus by Bashar Assad’s forces triggered a round of Israeli air strikes designed to prevent his former arsenal falling into the hands of Islamist rebels.
But it also allowed a Syrian former detainee to revisit the ordeal he suffered at the hand of Assad’s ousted forces.
The president’s long and brutal rule came to a sudden end last week, and on Wednesday young rebels were roaming Mazzeh, periodically firing an old Soviet-designed anti-aircraft gun into the sky.
Fighter jets and helicopters lay wrecked alongside the runway, some of them destroyed in an Israel strike, but the offices and workshops had been broken into by Assad’s local foes.
A pile of drugs, apparently the much-abused psychostimulant captagon, had been hauled out of an air force building and set alight in an impromptu bonfire, which was still smoldering as AFP visited the site.
Mazzeh was not only an air base for jets and attack helicopters, but also served as an ad hoc detention center run by Assad’s air force intelligence wing.
On Wednesday, 40-year-old father-of-three Riad Hallak was combing through the shattered ruins of a lecture theater that he said once held 225 detainees.
During the early days of Syria’s 13-year civil war, Hallak was arrested in 2012 while attending a funeral for protesters shot dead by government security forces.
The tailor was bound, beaten and held for a month in a room designed to instruct air force pilots, before being transferred to another facility and detained for another two months and 13 days.
When the bearded rebel fighters at the gate heard his story, they allowed him back to the scene of his torment, to seek out evidence he hopes might help other families find missing loved ones.
The once ubiquitous portrait of Assad now lies in the dust, alongside the logo of the air force intelligence wing and a roll of barbed wire, incongruous among the damaged college-style desks.




A stash of pills burns on the grounds of the Mazzeh military air base on the outskirts of the Syrian capital Damascus. (AFP)


Hallak tells of how for a month he only left the room twice a day to use the toilet in batches of three prisoners, who otherwise slept in heaps, packed together on the cold concrete steps.
Once, when there was an explosion outside, he and his fellow inmates celebrated in the hope that rebels were storming the base — only to be mocked and threatened by a general and laughing soldiers.
“If anyone complained about the conditions, the general would tell us we were receiving five-star tourist treatment, and threaten to transfer us,” Hallak told AFP at the base.
Since his detention, Hallak and his wife have had three young children and now the family can hope to live more freely in a Syria that has shed the half-century rule of the Assad clan.
But looking in vain for records he hopes will shed light on his ordeal and the fate of missing friends, he struggled, like many in Syria, to express how this feels.
“It’s difficult to say,” he said, looking prematurely old with his close-trimmed grey beard.
“There’s no words. I can’t speak.”
International monitors have raised concerns that allowing former miliary bases to fall under the sway of the Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) rebel group will lead to chemical weapons falling into the hands of extremists.
Israel has used this fear as a justification for stepped up air strikes, including one on Mazzeh.
But the most dangerous substance that AFP journalists saw was the haul of captagon.
Assad’s government was notorious for producing the amphetamine-based drug in commercial qualities, flooding the lucrative Gulf market to bolster its wartime coffers.
The US government slapped sanctions on Syrian officials allegedly involved in the illicit trade, and Syria’s neighbors have seized millions of pills in a losing battle to prevent its spread.
But on Wednesday the fighters paid little attention to the haul, which their comrades had apparently set alight, as they passed by on motorbikes or manned the gates of the complex.


UN Security Council lifts sanctions on Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa

UN Security Council lifts sanctions on Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa
Updated 07 November 2025

UN Security Council lifts sanctions on Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa

UN Security Council lifts sanctions on Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa
  • Resolution tabled by the US, which also delists Interior Minister Anas Hasan Khattab, is adopted with 14 votes in favor, none opposed; China abstains
  • US envoy to UN Mike Waltz says council is sending ‘a strong political signal that recognizes Syria is in a new era’ after fall of Assad regime last December

NEW YORK CITY: The UN Security Council voted on Thursday to lift sanctions on Ahmad Al-Sharaa, effectively removing the Syrian president from the Daesh and Al-Qaeda Sanctions List in a move widely seen as signaling international recognition of the post-Assad political order in Syria.

Resolution 2729 was tabled by the US and adopted with 14 votes in favor, zero against and one abstention, by China. It also delists the Syrian interior minister, Anas Hasan Khattab, who was previously designated under the same sanctions regime.

Acting under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, the council declared on Thursday that both officials were no longer subject to asset freezes or travel bans imposed under previous counterterrorism measures.

Al-Sharaa arrived in Belem, Brazil, on Thursday for the 2025 UN Climate Change Conference, COP 30, and is due to meet US President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington on Monday.

Al-Sharaa led the Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham coalition during the December 2024 offensive that toppled the Assad regime, after which he became the de facto leader of Syria.

Washington had been urging the 15-member Security Council for months to ease sanctions on Syria and officials within its new government.

The US permanent representative to the UN, Mike Waltz, said that by adopting the resolution the council was sending “a strong political signal that recognizes Syria is in a new era since Assad and his associates were toppled in December 2024.”

He added: “There is a new Syrian government in place, led by President Ahmad Al-Sharaa, that is working hard to fulfill its commitments on countering terrorism and narcotics, on eliminating any remnants of chemical weapons, and promoting regional security and stability, as well as an inclusive Syrian-led and Syrian-owned political process.

“As President Trump previously indicated, now is Syria’s chance at greatness.”

In making its decision, the Security Council recalled a series of previous resolutions targeting Daesh, Al-Qaeda and affiliated groups, and reaffirmed its “strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and national unity of the Syrian Arab Republic.”

The text of the resolution, seen by Arab News, emphasized that the delisting of the Syrian officials was consistent with efforts to promote “the long-term reconstruction, stability and economic development” of the country, while maintaining the integrity of the global framework for counterterrorism sanctions.

The resolution specifically welcomed the commitment of the Syrian Arab Republic to: ensuring “full, safe, rapid and unhindered humanitarian access” in line with international humanitarian law; to countering terrorism, including foreign terrorist fighters, and individuals, groups, undertakings and entities affiliated with Daesh or Al-Qaeda; to the protection of human rights and ensuring the safety and security of all Syrians, regardless of ethnicity or religion; to counter-narcotics efforts; to the advancement of transitional justice; to the nonproliferation and elimination of remnants of chemical weapons; to regional security and stability; and to an inclusive, Syrian-led and Syrian-owned political process.

It expressed an expectation that Syrian authorities would adhere to these pledges and help to uphold regional stability.

Al-Sharaa was sanctioned by the UN in May 2014 when Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, at the time affiliated with Al-Qaeda, was added to the Daesh and Al-Qaeda Sanctions List. The designation imposed a travel ban and asset freeze that would remain in place for more than a decade.

The Security Council’s vote on Thursday followed a decision by Washington in May to lift most of the US sanctions on Syria. Those measures, introduced in 1979 and expanded significantly after the Syrian civil war began in 2011, restricted trade, investment and energy exports. While the bulk of the restrictions have been lifted, some congressional measures remain in place pending further review.

By formally delisting Al-Sharaa, the Security Council resolution is viewed as marking a turning point in international engagement with the new authorities in Syria.

Diplomats described the move as both pragmatic recognition of the changed realities on the ground in the country, and an incentive for continued cooperation on the issues of humanitarian access, counterterrorism efforts and political reform.