Torture trial in Germany

“Anwar R was part of Assad’s oppression system”

Today, Anwar R, main defendent in the first trial worldwide on state torture in Syria at the Koblenz Higher Regional Court, will give a statement. He is accused of 4000 cases of torture, murder in 58 and sexual assault in at least two cases. “Torture in the so-called al-Khatib branch was and continues to be part of the system that keeps Assad in power. Anwar R was deeply involved in this system. He die not only received order but issued them to his subordinates,” said ECCHR general secretary Wolfgang Kaleck before the hearing.

Policy paper - supply chains - Corona

Garment supply chains in intensive care?

Human rights due diligence in times of (economic) crises

COVID-19 has also led to a significant disruption of world trade. Faced with this crisis, transnational textile companies fall back on exactly what their supply chains are designed for: externalizing costs, outsourcing economic risk, and shifting the responsibility for workers’ social rights to suppliers. They leave behind corporate social responsibility as well as human rights obligations. ECCHR’s policy paper explores how proper human rights due diligence by textile companies and retailers should have looked like in the last years and how companies should act now to protect workers in the current situation.

Syria - Torture - Germany

State torture in Syria: First trial worldwide opened in Germany

On 23 April 2020, the first trial worldwide on state torture in Syria started at the Higher Regional Court in Koblenz, Germany. The defendants are Anwar R and Eyad A, two former officials in of the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s General Intelligence Service. ECCHR supports 17 torture survivors in the proceedings, seven of whom are joint plaintiffs and represented by ECCHR partner lawyers. Read our monitoring of the al-Khatib trial here.

Publication

ECCHR 2019 Annual Report

We are happy to share ECCHR’s 2019 Annual Report with you. In these volatile times, it is difficult to describe one’s own work over the past year. So much is happening. Yesterday’s analyses already seem outdated today. We would like to thank Mari Bastashevski for generously providing works from her series “State Business” to illustrate the report, as well as our many partners who contributed to the diversity of the texts. ECCHR’s strategic work is only possible thanks to our partners around the world, the generous support of our funders, and the engagement of our many friends.

Cover: ECCHR 2019 Annual Report

Yemen - arms exports - Europe

5 years of war in Yemen and Europe’s responsibility

European arms exports to Saudi Arabia

On 26 March 2015, the armed conflict in Yemen escalated when a Saudi and UAE-led military coalition started a bombing campaign in support of Yemeni President Hadi. Europe plays a part in this – some countries, including France, the UK and Germany, as well as European corporations profit from the war by exporting weapons and weapons components to countries conducting the attacks in Yemen.

Nach dem Luftangriff auf Deir Al-Ḩajārī, Jemen, Oktober 2016 © Photo: Mwatana

Afghanistan - Kunduz - Germany

Kunduz airstrike: Germany on trial

ECtHR heard case on 26 February

In September 2009, two US fighter jets, acting on the orders of German Army Colonel Georg Klein, bombed a large group of people on a sandbar in the Kunduz River (Afghanistan). More than 100 people – mainly civilians – were killed or injured. On 26 February 2020 – ten years later – the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) in Strasbourg heard the case before its Grand Chamber.