In Syria, rebels liberate Sednaya prison from Assad’s sadistic grip
As Syrian rebels moved into the capital, Damascus, there was one building more than any other in their sights.
Saydnaya, the infamous “human slaughterhouse” outside Damascus, was where thousands of regime opponents had been locked up, tortured and killed from the earliest days of the 2011 uprising to the long brutal years of civil war.
Rebels filmed as they entered Saydnaya, nestled incongruously in the peaceful hills north of Damascus, alongside a monastery and the country villas of Syrian and Arab elites.
Assad’s guards had only recently fled. “There are still women in the cells,” one of the rebels shouted as they entered the control room where screens showed feeds from surveillance cameras across the prison. Footage showed them breaking down cell doors and tellingbewildered prisoners they were free.
“Don’t be scared, we are revolutionaries,” one called out to the woman. From one cell, a blinking toddler, emerged. He appeared to have been born in captivity.
No comments:
Post a Comment