http://therepublicgs.net/2013/09/15/death-under-torture-in-syria-the-horrors-ignored-by-pacifists/

<http://therepublicgs.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/dutorture.jpg>Death
under torture in Syria: the horrors ignored by pacifists

*Budour Hassan*

*15 September 2013*

Perhaps one of the cruellest aspects of the Syrian regime’s war on the
Syrian population is its success in normalising death and desensitising the
world to its harrowing massacres. Missing from the six-digit death toll are
the charred faces and untold stories of the martyrs, and of the suffering
inflicted upon the loved ones they leave behind. As one Syrian activist put
it: «One thing I will never forgive Bashar al-Assad for is denying us the
chance to grieve over our martyred friends». Indeed, with mass-murder
turning into a horrifyingly frequent occurrence two-and-a-half years on,
mourning the fallen has become a luxury most Syrians are deprived of.
Dehumanising Syrians

The dehumanisation of Syrians was painfully illustrated by the debate that
ensued after the chemical weapons attack on 21 August in the Damascus
countryside. The victims were treated as mere footnotes by the
international community, the mainstream media, and the anti-war camp. For
western governments who draw a «red line» with chemical weapons-use – and
Israel’s interests – the red blood of Syrian children slaughtered with
conventional weapons by the regime and its militias is not sufficiently
outrageous. The whole discourse, as Syrian writer and former political
prisoner Yassin al-Haj Saleh puts it, is about chemical weapons, not about
the criminal who used chemical weapons, the people murdered by them, or the
greater number of people murdered with guns.

For mainstream media, the Syrian people are stripped of their voices and
agency and the Syrian revolution is instead a «civil war» between two
evils: a secular dictator versus flesh-eating, bearded Islamists. Nowhere
to be seen or heard is the astounding defiance and communal solidarity that
has kept the revolution alive despite all odds; the brave struggle against
the oppressive «Islamic State in Iraq and Syria» that controls large parts
of the «liberated» areas in Northern Syria; and the ongoing grassroots
initiatives and protests against both the regime as well as the Islamist
extremists.

Meanwhile, for most anti-war coalitions: «war is peace and ignorance is
strength». They parade as facts hackneyed and false dichotomies to argue
that all the rebels are terrorists and Assad is now not only ostensibly
fighting imperialism, but terrorism as well. That Assad has been waging a
sectarian, all-out war on Syrian civilians for the past thirty months
matters little. That his regime has systematically arrested peaceful and
secular activists while releasing Al Qaeda-affiliated terrorists matters
less. And that thousands of imprisoned Syrian, including workers, children,
unarmed demonstrators, and community organisers, have been tortured to
death by regime forces since the start of the uprising matters none at all.
Killed under torture

So it follows that these «anti-war» campaigners will ignore one of the
regime’s latest torture victims: Khaled Bakrawi, a 27-year-old
Palestinian-Syrian community organiser and founding member of the Jafra
Foundation for Relief and Youth Development. Khaled was arrested by regime
security forces in January 2013 for his leading role in organising and
carrying out humanitarian and aid work in Yarmouk Refugee Camp. On 11
September, the Yarmouk coordination committee and Jafra Foundation reported
that Khaled was killed under torture in one of the several infamous
intelligence branches in Damascus.

*[image: 
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*Khaled was born and raised in Yarmouk refugee camp in the Southern
outskirts of Damascus. His family was displaced from the
ethnically-cleansed Palestinian village of Loubieh by Israeli occupation
forces during the 1948 Nakba (Palestinian catastrophe).

On 5 June, 2011, Khaled took part in the «return march» to the occupied
Golan Heights, witnessing Ahmad Jibril’s PFLP-GC, a regime-backed
Palestinian militia, exploit the patriotism and enthusiasm of Yarmouk’s
youth by instigating them to march to occupied Palestine in an attempt to
bolster Assad’s popularity and divert attention from the ongoing crackdown
of the then overwhelmingly peaceful revolution. Anticipating a brutal
reaction by the Israeli occupation army, Khaled tried to dissuade the
unarmed youth from entering the Israeli-occupied ceasefire zone, but to no
avail. He was left witnessing Syrian regime troops sip tea and look on
nonchalantly as Israeli occupation soldiers showered Palestinian and Syrian
protesters with bullets. In that protest, dozens were killed or injured.
Khaled was shot with two bullets in the thigh.
Insulting objectification

One of Khaled’s friends, who visited him in hospital after his injury,
recounts seeing him break into tears when he received flowers with a card
that read: «You did us proud; you are a hero». For Khaled, the sentiment
regarding a person’s injury as source of nationalist pride, was one more
testament to the insulting objectification of Syrians. It is precisely this
that illustrates the main reason for the uprising’s eruption: namely,
regaining the individual and collective dignity that, for over four
decades, was trampled on by a regime that can only consider Syrians as
cheap items and tools.
Killed by the wrong bullet

Many who regarded Khaled Bakrawi as a hero following his injury by the
Israeli occupation uttered not one word of condolence after his death under
torture in the regime’s dungeons. Neither the Palestinian Liberation
Organisation nor any other Palestinian political faction has condemned the
killing of one of Yarmouk’s most prominent, likeable, and hard-working
activists. Neither have they protested the killing of three other
Palestinian prisoners under torture within five days. It seems that for
them, a Palestinian is only worthy of the title «martyr» if s/he is killed
by the Zionist occupation. Having the misfortune of being slain by the
«anti-imperialist and «pro-resistance» Assad regime renders the killing
acceptable, and the killed undeserving of sympathy.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, as well, failed to issue
any tribute to martyred Palestinian refugee Anas Amara, a 23-year-old law
student, Yarmouk resident, and PFLP activist since the age of nine. Anas, a
revolutionary communist who distanced himself from the reformist bourgeois
left and participated in the Syrian revolution from its very inception, was
killed in a regime ambush near the besieged Yarmouk camp in April this
year. He was killed, we can put it, by the «wrong bullet,» for his killing
warranted no outrage from those who claim to champion the Palestinian cause.
Deafening silence

The deafening silence coming from the Palestinian leadership as well as the
United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near
East (UNRWA) about the plight of Palestinian refugees in Syria is not at
all surprising. Yarmouk, Syria’s largest Palestinian refugee camp, has been
under suffocating siege by the Syrian Arab Army since July 2013. The 70,000
civilians trapped in Yarmouk have been denied access to electricity and
food; to stay alive, some have resorted to eating dogs. Despite the
numerous appeals by Yarmouk residents and Syrian activists to break the
siege on the Camp, now on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe, the
Palestinian leadership and UNRWA have yet to answer to any of these pleas.

Also disregarded are the appeals by Palestinian groups in Syria to release
Palestinian detainees in Syrian regime jails. They, like their Syrian
sisters and brothers, also face imminent danger to their lives. But as if
collective punishment, arbitrary arrests, strict siege and constant
shelling by the regime were not enough, Palestinians and Syrians have to
fight on another front: Islamist extremists kidnapped Wassim Meqdad,
activist, musician, and one of only two doctors treating the wounded in
Yarmouk Camp, on 12 September.
War crimes

Any coalition or organisation that claims to strive for peace and human
rights but does not clearly condemn war crimes and crimes against humanity
perpetrated by the Syrian regime is not a genuinely pro-peace movement. The
word «peace», after all, has been deemed void of its true meaning thanks to
all the warmongers who claim to promote precisely peace. And while this
might be a term we can work to reclaim for opposing war is an ethical and
noble position, doing so without explicitly opposing the Syrian regime and
Iranian-Russian intervention, and without siding with the Syrian people’s
revolution for freedom and dignity, is a position that is at once morally
and politically bankrupt.

It is cynically ironic for anti-war groups to remain silent about the
deadly torture of over 2,000 Syrian political prisoners as they protest
together with Syrian regime supporters and right-wing Islamophobes against
a potential US strike on Syria. As these pacifist groups (rightly) blast
Western governments for their hypocrisy, they should take a second to think
about their own hypocrisy in abandoning the Syrian revolution since day
one, long before it was militarised. Also, it is highly recommended they
read George Orwell’s «Notes on Nationalism», for many of these vocal
anti-war activists fit into the nationalist, pacifist category Orwell so
critiqued:

«There is a minority of intellectual pacifist whose real thought unadmitted
motive appears to be hatred of western democracy and admiration of
totalitarianism. Pacifist propaganda usually boils down to saying that one
side is as bad as the other, but if one looks closely at the writings of
younger intellectual pacifists, one finds that they do not by any means
express impartial disapproval but are directed almost entirely against
Britain and the United States. Moreover they do not, as a rule, condemn
violence as such, but only violence used in defence of western countries».

In the Syrian case, such pacifists endeavour to veil their position with
truisms about peace and neutrality, yet focus their energies on opposing a
potential US war on Syria on the one hand, while condoning the actual war
launched by the Syrian regime on the other. Even though the self-proclaimed
«anti-imperialist» pacifists maintain that they are anti-intervention on
principle, they only object to Western intervention in Syria while saying
nothing about Iran and Russia’s far more flagrant and aggressive
intervention. While it is understandable that opposing their own
government’s abuses should be priority, this does not justify supporting a
genocidal regime, downplaying its crimes, and turning their backs to the
heroic struggle of the Syrian people. For it is such struggles against
totalitarianism, as any «leftist» worthy of the name would not need be
reminded, that exist as nascent fronts in the larger fight for a global
humanity living and dying under the boot and the indignity of them all.

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