Executive summary
Since 2011, the Syrian regime has expanded its ruthless methods to control dissenting voices and to counter political activism. These methods, ranging from enforced disappearance and arbitrary detention, to widespread use of torture and inhumane treatment in all their forms, have been widely employed without any perpetrators being held to account.
The Syrian regime has continued to operate with absolute impunity, deliberately denying and disregarding the rights of victims and their families. In addition, the majority of Syria’s armed factions, radical organizations, and de facto authorities, particularly the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (“Daesh”), have emulated these practices thus committing widespread arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance, torture, and killing during their control of Syrian territory.
The road to peace, recovery, and reconstruction in Syria and for the Syrian people starts with establishing the truth and ensuring justice and accountability for these grave violations. No negotiations or peace process can succeed while the families of detainees and the missing are denied knowledge of the fate of their loved ones, in the absence of real confidence-building measures as stipulated in UNR 2254, and without addressing the issue of detention and enforced disappearances as matters of top priority.
Against this backdrop, the Truth and Justice Charter (henceforth: the Charter) is put forth by a group of five associations formed by victims and survivors (and/or their family members) of enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention, and all violations that accompanied or resulted from enforced disappearance and detention including extrajudicial execution, torture, and sexual abuses.
The Charter represents the independent voices and initiative of Syrian victims and family members and lays out a common vision and framework on the question of enforced disappearance and arbitrary detention in Syria. In brief, our victims’ voices and narrative are at the centre-stage in our vision, and we believe that no solution or approach can be legitimate without taking into account and integrating the principles of this Charter.
The five associations represent the victims and survivors of these cruel violations in Syria, and the Charter is presented as a ‘living document’ open to the feedback and participation of other affected groups who agree with the key principles and foundations upon which the Charter is built. We stress the importance of developing a common vision and set of demands for joint initiatives between groups of victim organizations in the future to reach our goals on the local, regional and international levels through effective advocacy and campaigning.
The general framework detailed in the Charter is built on legal principles and international law instruments and treaties which guide its approach to the question of arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance in the Syria context. The Charter then sets forth the “Vision of the Victims” when it comes to justice, redress, accountability, and the future of Syria.
Reaching a comprehensive justice satisfying the needs and aspirations of victims, survivors, and their family members is a long-term process that will encompass cumulative stages. All of these stages are essential, but we as victims see some elements as critically urgent, while others may take longer to attain.
We therefore differentiate between short-term justice and long-term justice. In the short term, there are immediate measures that must be taken to put a halt to ongoing violations and alleviate the suffering of survivors, victims, and their families. In the medium- to longer-term, we have additional demands to ensure comprehensive justice and non-repetition of the crimes we have suffered and continue to suffer from.
To serve justice, the following demands must be realised:
As for the victims’ vision when it comes to accountability and fighting impunity, the following steps should be taken to lay the foundations of a genuine and effective transitional justice process driven by our peace aspirations, not revenge:
Furthermore, the Charter lays out a number of recommendations linked to the peace process and the future of Syria including:
In sum, the victims and their families must be at the centre of a true process of justice, truth, and accountability in order to uphold their rights and lay the groundwork for a Syria that respects the dignity of its citizens.
The founding signatories of the Charter are:
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