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What's At Stake?Call for the Release of Jailed Syrian Human Rights Lawyer
The situation of human rights defenders in Syria has deteriorated over the past year. Peaceful human rights activists have been subjected to increasing repression. The May 2006 "Beirut-Damascus, Damascus-Beirut" Declaration that called for better relations between Lebanon and Syria was followed by the largest crackdown on civil society since the repression of the "Damascus Spring" in 2001. A dozen human rights activists and intellectuals who co-signed the Declaration, including writer and journalist Michel Kilo and human rights lawyer and activist Anwar al-Bunni, were arrested by the Syrian authorities. The year 2006 was also marked by the increasing use of travel restrictions on human rights defenders to deter them from pursuing their legitimate activities. Among those who were barred from traveling last summer are film director and civil society activist Omar Amiralay; Radwan Ziadeh, director of the Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies; and Suhair al-Atassi, founder and president of the Jamal al-Atassi Forum for Democratic Dialogue. These three and many others have been added to a long list of activists, artists and intellectuals subject to onerous travel restrictions. Since his arrest on May 17, 2006, Anwar al-Bunni has been detained in harsh conditions at the Adra prison near Damascus. He was recently subjected to physical abuse by prison guards who beat him and forcibly shaved his hair. On October 9, an investigating magistrate charged al-Bunni with "disseminating false information likely to undermine the morale of the nation," "slandering and insulting state institutions," and "joining an international group without the government's authorization." The first two charges are related to al-Bunni's denunciation of the use of torture by security forces and his calls for democracy and reform in Syria. The latter charge is connected to the formation of a center for human rights training in Syria funded by the European Union. Mr. al-Bunni briefly ran the center that was closed down by the authorities in March 2006 before it even started its activities. Anwar al-Bunni appeared before the Damascus Criminal Court on January 21, 2007, and his trial is due to resume on February 18. On January 11, 2006, Anwar al-Bunni's brother, Akram al-Bunni, also a well-known human rights defender, was prevented from leaving Syria by the security services. He was about to fly to Brussels to attend meetings with European Union officials on the situation of human rights in Syria. Syrian officials have not given any explanation for this arbitrary travel restriction. Anwar al-Bunni is a founding member of the Syrian Human Rights Association and the Freedoms Center for the Defense of Journalists and Journalism in Syria and a member of the Committee for the Defense of Prisoners of Conscience. He is a leading figure of the Syrian human rights and democracy movement and has devoted his legal career to defending those in Syria who face persecution for the non-violent expression of their opinions, including intellectuals and human rights activists arrested as part of the crackdown on the "Damascus Spring." For years, al-Bunni has been persistently harassed by the Syrian authorities to punish him for his human rights activities and deter him from representing prisoners of conscience as clients. Mr. al Bunni and his family have received constant threats and have been under permanent surveillance by the security forces. The authorities have also orchestrated defamation campaigns against him to dissuade potential clients from seeking his services. Instead of protecting one of its members, the Baath party-controlled Bar Association in Damascus has taken part in the harassment campaign against al-Bunni by taking disciplinary measures against him including repeated suspensions from practicing law and threats of disbarment. Despite the persistent attempts of the authorities to obstruct his work, al-Bunni has never stopped his struggle for human rights and democracy in Syria and is currently using his trial before the Damascus Criminal Court as a platform to denounce the government's human rights practices. In his response to the charges brought against him, Anwar al-Bunni told the Court that disclosing the use of torture by state authorities does not undermine the morale of the nation:
i The Response of Anwar el Bunni to the First Criminal Court of Damascus; for the full text of the response see: http://www.rezgar.com/debat/show.art.asp?aid=81437
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