Jubilant men, women, and children wandered the home and its sprawling garden in a daze, the rooms stripped bare except for some furniture and a portrait of Assad discarded on the floor
world1 day ago
Riyad Avlar spent 20 years languishing in Syria's jails, including a decade in the infamous Saydnaya prison, the scene of some of the Bashar Al Assad government's most brutal abuses.
Those long years behind bars have left him with one obsession: documenting and healing the atrocities committed inside the prison where he himself was locked up.
"I am sure we'll see Bashar Al Assad in court one day," predicted Avlar, who is Turkish.
In 2017, just months after he was freed, he co-founded the Association of Detainees and Missing Persons of Saydnaya Prison (ADMSP), which advocates for those jailed for daring to defy Assad's rule.
"We don't want revenge, we want justice," he told AFP at the organisation's headquarters in Gaziantep, southeastern Turkey.
It is here that Avlar and others who survived the brutalities of Saydnaya collect and compile documentation and testimonies relating the horrors that occurred inside an institution Amnesty International has described as a "human abattoir".
Thousands of inmates in the prison just north of Damascus, some held since the 1980s, were freed on Sunday by Syrian rebels who seized the capital in a lightning advance.
Images of the former captives walking free, haggard and emaciated, some needing help even to stand, were beamed around the world as a symbol of Assad's fall.
"It made me so happy to see them (freed) but when I saw images of the walls and the cells, it took me straight back there," said Avlar, who was arrested in 1996 while studying in Damascus over a letter sent to relatives relating the government's abuses in Syrian prisons.
"I can still feel the trauma."
Even today, he sometimes jolts awake at night believing himself to still be behind bars — he was once held inside a cell in pitch darkness for two months.
"I saw people die in front of my eyes, many from starvation," said the activist with fine-rimmed black glasses, whose salt-and-pepper beard hides a scar from the torture he was subjected to 25 years ago.
The guards, he said, would often throw scraps of food into the toilet in front of starving prisoners.
"The prisoners ate it because they had to stay alive," he said.
Part of his recovery was through theatre and learning the saz, a long-necked lute popular in Turkey — which for him was "art therapy".
But it has also helped being part of the association's work, through which he has been able to help countless families acquire proof of life for loved ones held inside Saydnaya.
That was thanks to "insiders", prison employees who secretly passed internal documents to the organisation, he said, without giving further details.
Saydnaya, where hundreds of Syrians rushed this week in the desperate hope of finding their loved ones, now stands empty.
More than 4,000 inmates were freed by the Islamist-led rebels, the ADMSP said.
The group estimates that more than 30,000 people were either executed or died as a result of torture, starvation or lack of medical care between 2011 and 2018.
And with so many bodies, the authorities were forced to use rooms lined with salt as makeshift morgues to make up for the lack of cold storage.
Haunted by his grisly memories, Avlar has no interest in going back there but acknowledges he has long dreamed of the day when "Saydnaya would be turned into a place of remembrance".
"I am so happy there is not a single prisoner left in there," Avlar said.
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