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Media, Law & Policy

Syrian Accountability Project to Release Report on the 2016 Siege of Aleppo

Wednesday, April 26, 2017, By Martin Walls
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College of LawfacultyInstitute for National Security and CounterterrorismNewhouse School of Public Communications

Siege—the blockade and subjugation of a city—is an ancient and enduring strategy of war, responsible for some of the cruelest events in modern conflict: the battles of Sevastopol during the Crimean War, of Leningrad during World War II, and of Sarajevo during the Bosnian War.

Add to these notorious examples the 2016 Siege of Aleppo, an attritional campaign of the Syrian Civil War that lasted 160 days, from July to December, pitting the victorious Syrian Arab Republic against a rebel coalition mixed into a civilian population of some two million. Taken together, the Battle of Aleppo, which began in 2012, and the subsequent siege killed an estimated 31,000 people, with 75 percent of those believed to be civilians. One of the world’s oldest cities and a cultural capital, Aleppo was reduced to rubble.

syrian-accountability-project-logoOn Thursday, April 27, the —a student-run organization based in the SU College of Law and led by professor of practice David M. Crane, a former war crimes prosecutor—will publish its latest white paper detailing this sad chapter of the civil war: “Covered in Dust, Veiled by Shadow: The Siege and Destruction of Aleppo.”

A close examination of the multiple war crimes and crimes against humanity that occurred during the 2016 blockade, the “Covered in Dust” release event will take place in the Joyce Hergenhan Auditorium in Newhouse 3 from 10 a.m. to noon. Discussants will be Ken Harper, associate professor of multimedia photography and design in the Newhouse School; Cora True-Frost, associate professor of law in the College of Law; and Corri Zoli, research assistant professor in the Maxwell School and director of research for the .

Authored by law students Kaitlyn Degnan, Zachary Lucas and Sean Mills, “Covered in Dust” uses open sources, media accounts and contacts in the field to describe events and to document crimes that occurred during the siege in violation of the , the and the Syrian Penal Code.

Although siege itself is not banned under customary international law, this strategy often employs tactics that are considered crimes. In terms of targeting citizens and the aid workers trying to help them, the Siege of Aleppo was especially egregious. “Covered in Dust” documents six distinct categories of incidents that are representative violations: the use of siege to starve a civilian population; indiscriminate shelling of civilians and specifically the dropping of “barrel bombs”; the use of chemical weapons (there were reportedly at least eight chlorine gas attacks during the blockade); attacks on humanitarian and medical operations, including on aid convoys and hospitals; and extrajudicial killings, especially during the final days of the battle.

The information in this white paper is drawn from SAP’s extensive legal analysis, now in its sixth year. The project’s comprehensive Conflict Narrative and Crime-Based Matrix are detailed accounts of war crimes and crimes against humanity during the civil war. The narrative is a daily accounting of recorded and pertinent crimes taken from open sources, while the matrix highlights specific incidents from the narrative, noting the date, location, description and responsible party. The matrix also provides the relevant source of potential legal liability under the Rome Statute, the Geneva Conventions and/or the Syrian Penal code.

The purpose of this white paper and SAP’s wider work is to aid the eventual administration of transitional justice for the people of Syria after the war. To this end, “Covered in Dust” will be sent to the newly created , which was formed with the help of Crane in December 2016.

“Covered in Dust” joins two previous SAP white papers that also draw from the project’s Conflict Narrative and Crime-Based Matrix. (released March 2016) carefully documents 142 cases of the use of rape and sexual violence as a weapon of war by all sides of the Syrian conflict. “ released in April 2017, documents the sarin gas attack on a rebel-held town that reportedly killed at least 87 people, including 28 children.

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