HomeMonthly ReportsDetainees and Forcibly Disappeared PersonsSNHR’s Monthly Report on Arrests/Detentions in Syria

SNHR’s Monthly Report on Arrests/Detentions in Syria

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At least 89 Arbitrary Arrests Recorded in Syria in April 2025

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The Hague – The Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR) revealed in its latest report released today that no fewer than 89 arbitrary detentions were documented in April 2025.

The 25-page report stresses the urgent need for the Syrian leadership to establish legal regulations that will put an end to the harrowing era of arbitrary arrests and enforced disappearances, and ensure respect for the basic human rights of individuals, in the wake of the major political and military changes brought about by the downfall of the Assad regime on December 8, 2024, with the regime having been succeeded by a transitional government.

As such, this report summarizes the record of arbitrary arrests/detentions, and releases of detainees from various detention centers during this transitional period following the fall of the Assad regime on December 8, 2024, with particular focus on the cases documented in April 2025.

As the report reveals, 89 arbitrary detentions, including nine children and four women, were documented in April 2025. The transitional government was responsible for 36 of these cases, including three women, while the remaining 53 arbitrary detentions, including nine children and one woman, were carried out by Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

The report also shows the distribution of April’s cases across all Syria’s governorates. Analysis of the data reveals that Aleppo governorate saw the highest number of arbitrary arrests/detentions in April, followed by Homs, then Deir Ez-Zour, then Hasaka governorate, and then Raqqa governorate.

Meanwhile, the report compares the number of detentions carried out in April 2025 to the number of releases. On this point, the report notes that the number of arrests carried out by SDF exceeds the number of releases, which is explained by the arrests carried out by SDF that targeted individuals who voiced criticism of the group’s practices in its areas of control, and expressed support for the Syrian transitional government.

The report notes that, in April, the transitional government detained 92 individuals with some being arrested on accusations of involvement in human rights, while others were arrested for their involvement in the attacks carried out by non-state armed groups linked to the former Assad regime. These attacks, which took place in early April, targeted security and military sites belonging to the ministries of defense and interior in the governorates of Tartus and Latakia.

Moreover, the Internal Security forces, affiliated with the transitional government’s Ministry of Interior, carried out arbitrary arrests/detentions targeting a number of individuals in connection to criminal cases, with these arrests being concentrated in the two governorates of Damascus and Daraa. Furthermore, the report recorded arrests of individuals over their voicing criticism of the current transitional government on social media, with these arrests being concentrated in rural Hama governorate. The Ministry of Interior’s General Security also arrested civilians to pressure their fugitive relatives into surrendering themselves, with these cases being concentrated in Hama governorate.

Moreover, the recorded arrests of Kurdish civilians on accusations of working with SDF, with these arrests being concentrated in Aleppo governorate. Other civilians were arrested as they were trying to irregularly cross into Lebanon through informal crossings between Lebanon and Syria in Homs governorate. Those were released a few hours after being held in detention centers in Damasus governorate. The General Security also arrested/detained a number of local activists from Suwayda governorate at a checkpoint in Homs governorate as they were travelling to SDF-held areas in northeastern Syria. Those were also released a few hours after being held in detention centers in Idlib governorate.

Moreover, the SDF continued its policies of arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance. In pursuit of these policies, SDF personnel carried out mass raid and arrest campaigns targeting civilians on the pretext combating ISIS cells. The SDF also arrested and detained civilians who were taken to SDF training and recruitment camps, with these arrests being concentrated in SDF-held areas. There were also a number of arrests/detentions targeting civilians who criticized SDF practices in the group’s areas of control and expressed support for the Syrian transitional government. SDF also continued abducting children with the objective of conscripting them, with these children being sent to military training camps. The parents and families of these conscripted children are not allowed to contact them, with the SDF also refusing to disclose their fate.

Releases

The report documented the transitional government’s release of about 27 individuals in April 2025, including three women, with those released having been detained for periods ranging from a few hours to one month. Most of those detained and released are originally from the governorates of Damascus, Homs, Hama, and Suwayda.

The report also documents the SDF’s release of nine detainees from their detention centers, including two children, with those freed having been imprisoned for periods ranging from a few days to one month. Most of the freed detainees were from the governorates of Deir Ez-Zour, Aleppo, and Raqqa.

The report further reveals that, in April 2025, Internal Security forces, which are affiliated with the transitional government’s Ministry of Interior, continued to carry out raids and detention campaigns targeting individuals accused of being involved in violations during the rule of the Assad regime, particularly in the governorates of Latakia, Homs, Hama, and Damascus. The people targeted in these operations included former military personnel, government employees, and media professionals who had previously worked for state-run stations affiliated with the Assad regime. These operations involved the seizure of large quantities of weapons and ammunition. The detainees were transferred to Homs and Hama central prisons and Adra Prison in Rural Damascus governorate. Moreover, the report recorded arrests/detentions targeting individuals who were involved in the attacks carried out by non-state armed groups linked to the former Assad regime. These attacks, which took place in early March, targeted military and security sites belonging to the ministries of defense and interior in the transitional government, mainly in the governorates of Latakia, Tartus, and Hama, and resulted in the extrajudicial killing of hundreds.

Although these operations were conducted as part of security campaigns, we have yet to verify whether they were carried out based on lawful judicial warrants.

As the report further notes, SNHR’s data is viewed as a reputable principal source of information by many UN bodies, being used in numerous statements and resolutions, including the draft resolution on the human rights situation in Syria (A/C.3/78/L.43), passed by a vote on Wednesday, November 15, 2023, condemning the Assad regime’s continued serious violations of international law. This resolution also acknowledged that the documented number of people detained and forcibly disappeared in Syria during the regime’s rule exceeded 135,000. Relatedly, the resolution holds the deposed regime responsible for the systematic use of enforced disappearance, which, it notes, constitutes a crime against humanity.

In the end, the report outlines a number of conclusions and recommendations:

Conclusions

  • Failure to comply with fair trial procedures: The data documented shows that many detentions have been carried out without judicial warrants or legal guarantees, which is an explicit violation of Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) that prohibits arbitrary arrests and affirms detainees’ right to know the cause of their detention and to appear before a court as soon as possible following their arrest.
  • Violating the dignity of detainees and the prohibition of torture: The report documents physical and psychological abuses against detainees, including torture and degrading treatment, that explicitly contravene the 1984 Convention Against Torture, which compels all parties to take effective measures to prevent torture and to hold those who carry out torture accountable.
  • More must be done to ensure the legal and organized release of detainees: While we have documented the release of some detainees, these processes currently lack any clear judicial procedures or transparent investigative processes, which raises concerns about arrests continuing outside the relevant legal frameworks, in violation of the principle of the arbitrary deprivation of liberty, as established in Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
  • More must be done to protect victims’ rights and their families: The fact that enforced disappearance persists without the fate of forcibly disappeared persons being revealed or any official information about them being provided to their families is a violation of the 2006 International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, which compels states and organizations to reveal detainees’ place of detention and to enable families to know their loved ones’ fate.
  • Absence of accountability mechanisms and transitional justice: Despite the political changes in Syria, insufficient measures have been taken to date to ensure accountability for past violations or to achieve justice for the victims, reflecting an inadequate level of commitment to the requirements of transitional justice which necessitates establishing investigation and accountability mechanisms, in addition to ensuring that these violations do not recur in the future.
  • Armed opposition factions/SNA have carried out arrest and torture practices against some residents in areas under their control.
  • The SDF has committed violations of basic human rights, including torture and enforced disappearance even though it possesses a political structure, which means that it is also obligated to comply with international human rights law.

 

Recommendations

UN Security Council and international community

  1. Refer crimes to the International Criminal Court (ICC), and apply diplomatic pressure on government and international stakeholders, including the Russian government, to ensure the extradition of those responsible for crimes, such as Bashar Assad and his close aides, to the competent international courts for trial.
  2. Freeze and seize the funds of the former regime
  • Take legal action to freeze and confiscate the funds and assets of the former regime’s officials who were involved in violations, and use those resources to support transitional justice programs and compensate victims.
  1. Support international efforts to reveal the fate of missing persons and achieve national reconciliation
  • Secure the necessary resources to support the efforts of the Independent Institution on Missing Persons in the Syrian Arab Republic (IIMP) and the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP), including training local teams on advanced search techniques to identify the missing.
  • Fund programs to support national reconciliation, and provide psychological and social support for the families of forcibly disappeared persons.

 

UN Human Rights Council

  • Continue to focus on the issue of detainees and forcibly disappeared persons in Syria and regularly highlight this issue in all annual meetings.
  • Promote cooperation and coordination with active local human rights groups in Syria to support the efforts of documentation and accountability.

 

Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic (COI)

  • Launch in-depth investigations into all the arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance cases included in this report and previous reports.
  • Focus on the issue of forcibly disappeared persons and ensure the monitoring of the status of forcibly disappeared persons following the Assad regime’s downfall.
  • Cooperate with human rights groups, including SNHR, to secure the necessary evidence.

 

International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM)

  • Collect and analyze evidence on the crimes of arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance, and torture included in this report.
  • Support the exchange of information and expertise with Syrian organizations working in the field of documenting violations.

UN and international community

  • Apply pressure on all parties to compel them to publish lists of detainees’ names and reveal the location of these prisoners’ detention according to a fixed timetable.
  • Allow UN and international organizations, particularly the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), to access detention centers to assess the humanitarian conditions there.
  • Support organizations working on documenting violations and torture, and provide sustainable support for victim rehabilitation programs.

 

UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances

  • Increase the capacity of the team working on the issue of forcibly disappeared persons in Syria, especially in light of the high numbers and extensive scope of enforced disappearance cases in the country.
  • Prepare periodic and more detailed reports on developments to maintain pressure on involved parties.

 

UN Independent Institution on Missing Persons in Syria (IIMP)

  • Look into all the cases included in this report and cooperate with SNHR to obtain the necessary data.
  • Ask the transitional government to start working cooperatively with the IIMP in Syria to document the cases of the missing and take effective steps to ensure transparency and accountability.

 

Russian government

  • Cooperate with the international community to extradite Bashar Assad and other fugitives implicated in war crimes to the custody of the transitional government or the competent international courts.
  • Support the efforts aimed at promoting transitional justice in Syria to ensure fair reparation for the victims.

 

All parties to the conflict and the controlling forces

  • Arbitrary arrests and enforced disappearances must be ended immediately; the fate of all detainees and forcibly disappeared persons must be revealed.
  • Families must be allowed to visit detainees immediately, and the bodies of detainees who have died as a result of torture must be returned to their families.
  • Ensure the unconditional release of all arbitrarily arrested detainees, especially those who have been imprisoned merely for exercising their political and civil rights.
  • Allow international monitors, such as those with the COI and the ICRC, to access all detention centers with no restrictions.
  • A UN-supervised impartial international committee must be formed to monitor and periodically assess the release of detainees
  • End the policy of carrying out arrests without presenting legal warrants, and ensure that detainees appear before courts within a reasonably short period of time following their arrest.

 

Syrian transitional government

  1. Cooperate with international organizations
  • Issue official invitations to independent UN and international agencies, including:
  • International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM)
  • Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic
  • International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP).
  • International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
  • Enable these organizations to have unrestricted access to detention centers and crime scenes.
  1. Protect evidence and crime locations
  • Document burial sites and prisons and prevent any interference or evidence tampering.
  • Adopt clear measures to preserve all articles of evidence and ensure their use in fair trials.
  1. Promote transitional justice and accountability
  • Ratify the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and grant the ICC retroactive jurisdiction.
  • Devise a comprehensive plan to hold those responsible for crimes accountable, compensate victims, and enhance transparency in investigations.
  1. Reform Syria’s judicial and security system to prevent future violations
  • Enact new legislation that ensures the autonomy of the judiciary and prohibits all forms of arbitrary arrest.
  • Restructure the country’s security apparatus in accordance with international human rights standards.

 

  1. Ensure the highest standards for detentions carried out within the context of accountability
  • Activate judicial oversight over detentions carried out in the context of accountability to ensure compliance with the law and international standards.
  • Publish periodic lists of detainees held in the context of accountability, along with the reasons for their detention, to ensure transparency.
  • Develop an independent judicial review mechanism for detentions carried out within the context of accountability to prevent any violations.
  • Ensure protection of the rights of detainees arrested in the context of accountability to access independent legal representation and fair trials.
  • Emphasize that all accountability processes follow clear legal procedures while preventing any violations that may constitute human rights violations.
  • Establish a human rights monitoring mechanism to ensure that the pursuit of accountability does not become a tool used to justify arbitrary detention.

 

  1. Provide psychological and social support for those affected
  • Establish specialist programs to rehabilitate torture and detention survivors, and provide support for victims’ families.
  1. Enhance monitoring and accountability for the state security services
  • Establish independent monitoring committees to ensure the non-recurrence of violations during security services’ operations.
  • Hold those responsible for human rights violations accountable to ensure non-recurrence.
  1. Improve communication with families and enhance transparency
  • Hold regular meetings with local community representatives to clarify security policies and ensure that no groups are specifically targeted.
  • Publish periodic reports on arrests and releases to ensure transparency.
  1. Address misinformation campaigns
  • Establish official platforms on social media to publish accurate news.
  • Cooperate with independent media to ensure professional coverage of events.
  1. Respect human rights during security operations
  • Train security forces in how to treat detainees in a humane way.
  • Commit to releasing any suspect who was part of the Assad regime if it’s been established that they were uninvolved in perpetrating any violations.
  1. Expedite settlement procedures for wanted individuals
  • Implement a fair process to resolve the situation of wanted individuals and encourage them to reintegrate in society.
  1. Involve civil society in decision-making
  • Enhance the role of the local community in decision-making mechanisms to ensure fair representation for all groups.

View the full report.

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