• عربي
Fadel Abdulghany
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • BIO
  • Articles
  • Interviews
    • Videos
    • Talks and Lectures
  • Transitional Justice
  • Quotes to the Media
  • Home
  • BIO
  • Articles
  • Interviews
    • Videos
    • Talks and Lectures
  • Transitional Justice
  • Quotes to the Media
No Result
View All Result
Fadel Abdulghany
No Result
View All Result
Home Articles

99’000 disappeared and counting The tale of enforced disappearances in Syria

Fadel Abdul Ghany

26 December 2020
99’000 disappeared and counting The tale of enforced disappearances in Syria

It is estimated that about 1.2 million Syrian citizens have been arrested and detained at some point since March 2011. During this period, an estimated number of 99 000 persons have been forcibly disappeared, while the Syrian Regime is responsible for about 84 000 of these cases (SNHR Report of 30 August of 2020, p. 8, 9).

The crime of enforced disappearance, which is often accompanied by acts of torture, violates international law. The Syrian Arab Republic is not a party to the 2006 International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (ICPPED). However, the prohibition of enforced disappearances flows also from customary rules of international humanitarian law, when taking place within an armed conflict, as well as from the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which Syria has ratified.

While enforced disappearances are not specific to the Syrian armed conflict and are in fact a common feature of many armed conflicts, the sheer number of enforced disappearances sets Syria apart, especially when compared to the total population of Syria (21 million at the start of the popular uprising in 2011). Assuming that each forcibly disappeared person has at least five family members or friends, nearly half a million individuals are directly affected by the crime of enforced disappearance, i.e. nearly 2.3 % of the total population. This very high percentage has a terrifying effect on the Syrian society as a whole.

Published on the Voelkerrechtsblog website.
View full Article

ShareTweetShareSend

Related Posts

The Risks of Omitting Justice Mechanisms in Peace Agreements
Articles

The Risks of Omitting Justice Mechanisms in Peace Agreements

28 September 2025
The Flag: The Supreme National Symbol Embodying National Identity in Protocol and Diplomacy
Articles

The Flag: The Supreme National Symbol Embodying National Identity in Protocol and Diplomacy

25 September 2025
The Role of Law in Syria’s Political Transformation: An Approach to Transitional Jurisprudence
Articles

The Role of Law in Syria’s Political Transformation: An Approach to Transitional Jurisprudence

21 September 2025
The Syrian Constitutional Declaration between Requirements for Stability and Principles of Good Governance
Articles

The Syrian Constitutional Declaration between Requirements for Stability and Principles of Good Governance

20 September 2025
A ‘Three Dimensions Model’ to Preserve Victims’ Rights in Syria
Articles

A ‘Three Dimensions Model’ to Preserve Victims’ Rights in Syria

16 September 2025
The Syrian Political Citizen and the Transitional Phase
Articles

The Syrian Political Citizen and the Transitional Phase

30 August 2025
Tweets by Fadel
Fadel Abdul Ghany

Fadel Abdulghany

Founder and Head of the Syrian Network for Human Rights from June 2011 to date.

Master’s in International Law (LLM)/ De Montfort University/ Leicester, UK (March 2020).

Bachelorette in Civil Engineering /Projects Management / Damascus University.

Recent Posts

  • The Risks of Omitting Justice Mechanisms in Peace Agreements
  • The Struggle for Freedom: Syria’s Abdulghany tracks those ‘disappeared’ by Assad regime
  • The Flag: The Supreme National Symbol Embodying National Identity in Protocol and Diplomacy

Quick links

  • Home
  • BIO
  • Articles
  • Interviews
    • Videos
    • Talks and Lectures
  • Transitional Justice
  • Quotes to the Media

© 2023 SNHR - Fadel Abdul Ghany.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • BIO
  • Articles
  • Interviews
    • Videos
    • Talks and Lectures
  • Transitional Justice
  • Quotes to the Media

© 2023 SNHR - Fadel Abdul Ghany.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist