Refugee influx spurs German justice to tackle Syrian war crimes

epa05003612 Refugees sit at a inspection station near the Austrian-German border near to Passau, Germany, 30 October 2015. An escalating row in Chancellor Angela Merkel's government over mass arrivals of migrants from war zones provoked a rebuke on 30 October 2015 from German deputy Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, leader of Germany's Social Democratic Party (SPD). Merkel's September 5 decision to open Germany's borders and absorb migrants has won global praise but local recrimination. The ruling party of southern Bavaria state, the Christian Social Union (CSU), is pressing Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) to limit new arrivals. A key bone of contention is a CSU demand for "transit zones" at the Austrian border, analogous to the sealed-off sections of airports where transferring passengers change plane without going through a country's immigration control.  EPA/SEBASTIAN KAHNERT

 

Berlin / AFP

Germany will on Tuesday start its first war crimes trial over atrocities in Syria, as a mass refugee influx brings not only witnesses and victims but also suspects into the country.
Aria L., a 21-year-old German national and suspected extremist, posted on Facebook photos of himself posing next to two decapitated heads in Syria—and his case is not the only one from the war-torn country to occupy German justice. “Ten investigations linked to Syria or Iraq are currently being examined by the federal prosecutor, on top of more than 30 cases against former extremists over their membership in a terrorist group,” said a spokesman for the prosecutor’s
office.
Among other key war crimes suspects are Ibrahim Al F., a 41-year-old Syrian and the alleged leader of an extremist rebel group known for kidnapping and torturing civilians in Aleppo.
Another suspect is Suliman AS, a 24-year-old Syrian suspected of having kidnapped a UN soldier in 2013.
Such investigations have gained momentum particularly as 1.1 million asylum seekers arrived in Germany last year, about 40 percent of whom fled the wars in Syria and Iraq. Authorities dealing with their asylum requests have picked up and sent 25 to 30 tips every day to prosecutors, as Germany since 2013 requires applicants to complete a form asking if they have witnessed war crimes or could name perpetrators of violations.
“The refugee influx has provided new opportunities for prosecutors to collect specific information,” said Geraldine Mattioli, expert on international justice at Human Rights Watch.
Mixed success
Germany is no stranger to trying war crimes committed abroad, although past attempts have been met with mixed success. In 1993, pushed by an inflow of refugees fleeing the war in Yugoslavia, Germany formed a special police unit dedicated to investigating war crimes committed in the Balkans.
Other European countries took similar action, with one of the most active investigations carried out by Dutch police.
German prosecutors eventually examined 127 cases and heard 4,500 witnesses. But the Herculean effort led to only four trials, including a genocide conviction.
Undeterred, the prosecution service sought ways to refine their procedure, becoming more sophisticated in tackling cases involving massacres in Africa’s Great Lakes region. There, the judiciary dispatched its investigators to collect evidence on the ground and sought to offer better protection for witnesses.

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