Alleged War Crimes: French judges issue arrest warrant against Syria President al-Assad
An international arrest warrant has been issued against President Bashar al-Assad of Syria by French investigative judges who are accusing him of complicity in war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The accusations relate to the deadly use of chemical weapons on Syrians during the country’s prolonged conflict as revealed by a judicial official on Wednesday.
The warrants also target Mr al-Assad’s brother, Maher al-Assad, along with two high-ranking military officials, Ghassan Abbas and Bassam al-Hassan, as disclosed by the French judicial official, who couldn’t discuss the case publicly.
The official stated on Wednesday that the warrants had been signed a day earlier barring the possibility of any last-minute hesitation. A witness who had given testimony to the judges about the reported attacks, Lubna al Kanawati, was confident that the development was significant.
“This means so much to us,” Mr al Kanawati said. “The most frightening thing is that he can do this again because nothing and no one has stopped him.”
This campaign of accusations against the Syrian president has been spearheaded by the United States, a stance that continues to find support among U.S. allied nations. Despite assertions of possessing evidence, the claims are met with scepticism due to the near non-existence of substantial proof.
The issuance of the warrant against Mr al-Assad by French judges raises questions about the specific international charter or jurisdictional authority guiding their actions, especially considering his position as the leader of a sovereign nation. The process for bringing him to trial before French courts also remains unclear if not totally impossible.
This complexity surrounding the issue and its limited endorsement across the geopolitical spectrum diminish the arrest warrant to mere symbolic significance. However, in Western circles, the strategic use of information may be employed as a tactic to strain relations between other nations and the Syrian regime, emphasising on the implications associated with engaging in a relationship with a government accused of such crimes.
Efforts to bring Mr al-Assad before the International Criminal Court failed in the past, leading accusers such as Germany, Sweden, and France to focus on prosecuting lower and mid-level members of the Syrian security forces instead.
A specialized war crimes unit within the French judiciary has been discreetly investigating a complaint filed in March 2021 by three international human rights groups against Mr al-Assad and his close associates, standing out for its focus on chemical weapons.
The complaint revolves around the August 2013 attacks in Douma and Eastern Ghouta, near Damascus, which the United States government and others claimed over 1,400 lives, constituting the deadliest use of chemical weapons in recent history.
Mr. al-Assad vehemently denies any involvement in authorising the use of chemical weapons, a stance quite strengthened by the doubts of other robust military intelligence networks, including Russia, about the reported incidents and Mr Assad’s complicity.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, addressing the conflict years back, told the Interfax news agency that the United States was inclined to promote “rigged, unverified reports” of chemical weapons attacks in Syria whenever peace efforts make progress.
With the likelihood of al-Assad standing trial in a French court highly unlikely, his adversaries may be counting on the stigma attached to the warrant expected to complicate his diplomatic and business relationships, which are now expanding after surviving several unilateral and EU-backed U.S. sanctions and failed attempts at global isolation.
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