Arrest the Syrian torturers

This is hard to report, but Avaaz’s own members are being tortured by Syria’s monstrous regime. Manhal* reports that he was held in a secret prison where they pulled out his fingernails and toenails and electrocuted his body parts. "I have seen death, and I’ve been tortured nearly to death," he's told us. But if we act now, we can make Manhal's sacrifice the last straw that turns the whole world against the Assad regime.

The Arab League’s observers have failed to stop the brutal crackdown, but pressure on Assad is mounting. Avaaz has just released a terrifying report revealing the scale of Syria’s detention facilities, including what they did to Manhal. If we build a massive global outcry now, we can force key governments to confront the horrors in this report and accelerate the end of Assad.

Sign the petition right now, and when we reach 500,000 signatures we’ll deliver it along with Avaaz’s report to the Arab League and the United Nations Security Council, demanding they refer Assad to the International Criminal Court to be tried for crimes against humanity:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/arrest_syrias_torturers/?tta

The compromised Arab League observers have witnessed Assad’s snipers and the nightmare faced by civilians. The UN has already stated that there have been crimes against humanity in Syria. And now the regime is being dealt its next critical blow -- a harrowing report compiled by Avaaz’s brave Syrian activists making the final link that those crimes against humanity were committed by high-level members of the Assad regime.

The regime’s pathetic defense for its despicable acts has been that it is fighting a terrorist insurgency, not a peaceful democracy movement. This defense has allowed countries like Russia, China and India to stall the international community from taking action. But reports like the one Avaaz is releasing put the lie to this corrupt and atrocious regime. Now we just need the world to witness the horrors it contains.

The time could be up for Assad if we raise a deafening wave of public pressure to tip the scales. Let’s unite the world to demand that the UN Security Council refer the brutal Syrian regime to the International Criminal Court to be tried for crimes against humanity. Sign now and tell everyone:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/arrest_syrias_torturers/?tta

Across the Arab world, people power has toppled dictator after dictator, and our amazing Avaaz community has been at the heart of these struggles for democracy, breaking the media blackouts imposed by corrupt leaders, empowering citizen journalists, providing vital emergency relief to communities under siege, and helping protect hundreds of activists and their families from regime thugs. Let’s not let Manhal’s suffering for freedom be in vain. Let’s demand the UN take action now.

With hope and determination,

Luis, Ian, Maria Paz, Ricken, Emma, Wissam, Heather and the whole Avaaz team

* - “Manhal’s” name has been changed to protect his identity.

2012-01-12_162747.jpg

SOURCES

Avaaz Detention Facilities Report
http://avaazimages.s3.amazonaws.com/DetentionCentresinSyria.pdf

US slams Syria violence, says 'past time' for UN action (AFP)
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i2gQpPoA7F-2VGwtTsr1f...

France’s Sarkozy says Syrian president must quit after ‘massacres’ committed by his regime (Washington Post)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle-east/arab-league-calls-emerge...

U.S. says Syria not living up to Arab League deal (Reuters)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/03/us-syria-usa-idUSTRE80219K2012...

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Avaaz.org is a 10-million-person global campaign network that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people shape global decision-making.

Comments

I'm pretty unimpressed by Avaaz's willingmess to jump on board this campaign, and thinking it's time to withdraw my membership.

Don't get me wrong. I'm now fan of brutal regimes killing their people. But why Syria, and why now?

Why not Saudi Arabia, or the USA for that matter. And just recently we had Avaaz playing the same game in Libya, and in that case as in this one, the human rights campaign arose perfectly in time with the requirements of american foreign policy.

Libya's worth some thought. Gadaffi was an dictator to be sure, and did not tolerate opposition. That said he did bring a measure of stability to a country with a lot of ethnic tensions, and his brutality has been outdone by his successors. Gadaffi did pretty well at looking after his people economically too, and put up considerable resistance to the incursions of western capitalists. He played a significant role beyond libya's borders also, as for example with his work on establishing the African Monetary Fund to provide an alternative to looting by the IMF. Gadaffi's removal has led to ethnic killings, a devolution to warring rival warlords, and economic collapse. Meanwhile the west moves in to carve up the economy for themselves, and the local people who this was all supposed to be in aid of are mostly forgotten.

Avaaz was a cheerleader for the 'Arab spring', supposedly popular and democratic revolution in Libya, but has been silent on the substantial human rights abuses that followed, and on the economic plunder. I don't really expect Syria to be much different.

I'm disturbed at the relatively recent shift whereby America's military escapades in the middle east recieve almost no protest. What happened there?

ABC: Perpetual war for perpetual peace
http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/3766550.html

http://globalspin.blogs.time.com/2012/01/04/in-post-gaddafi-libya-freedo...

So AVAAZ is leading their members, nearly 11 million supposedly intelligent people, by the nose? Intelligent enough to work a computer and join in debates, anyway.

We choose AVAAZ topics by polls of preferences.

I don't care who opposes the Syrian slaughterers of thousands of their own people, every bit of opposition helps.

To find any praise for Chaddafi is ludicrous, almost obscene. It was Libyans who toppled him, not our signatures to AVAAZ. Libyans asked for the outside help. If the Libyans now slice each other up, it's their business. Outsiders have no right to interfere.

When there is a surge or popular support for anything, now and again US policy comes aboard. It's not AVAAZ or we falling in line with a movement, it's US policy jumping on a moving train.

You didn't think everything through, or you're grinding an axe for someone.

So why are we talking about libya rather than south sudan? And why now?

There are dissidents in most countries. It doesn't usually amount to much without help, but given encouragement and funds and arms, it's fairly easy for the US to manufacture a rebellion, and that's been standard operating procedure in country after country for longer than I've been around to know about it. It's no secret.

Syria's Govt 's violent reaction is ugly, but I can't think of many governments in the world that would not resort to force faced with a massive uprising. What do you suppose the US govt would do?

How many people are actually being killed on each side is pretty hard to know through the fog of propaganda. Read the abc article I linked.

The timing of the Syrian uprising is perfectly on queue for the requirements of the US's progressive isolation of Iran.

I'm not suggesting duplicity on the part of either Avaaz or the syrian protesters. Rather they are pawns in the Great Game.