Japanese Ghouta, Syria – Amina Habya was nonetheless awake when she heard screaming exterior her window in Zamalka, Ghouta, on the evening of August 21, 2013.
The regime of Bashar al-Assad had simply fired rockets crammed with sarin gasoline at Zamalka, and folks had been shouting: “Chemical weapon assault! Chemical weapon assault!”
She rapidly soaked a towel in water and put it over her nostril as she ran as much as the fifth – and highest – flooring of her constructing together with her daughters and sons-in-law.
As a result of chemical substances are usually heavier than air, Habya was conscious the higher ranges of buildings could also be much less contaminated.
They had been secure, however Habya later found that her husband and son, who weren’t dwelling, and her daughter-in-law and two kids, who had been asleep, had all suffocated to demise.
“Dying was all over the place,” mentioned 60-year-old Habya, sitting on a plastic chair exterior her dwelling carrying a black abaya, black hijab and a black scarf round her face.
Habya nonetheless lives in Zamalka in a modest one-floor condominium together with her married daughters, remaining grandchildren and sons-in-law. Their constructing is one in every of few intact within the neighbourhood.
The others had been levelled by regime air strikes in the course of the struggle.
Chatting with Al Jazeera, she held up a photograph of eight kids wrapped in black blankets, corpses retrieved after the sarin gasoline assault, suffocated to demise.
Two of them had been her grandchildren.
“This one is my granddaughter and this one my grandson,” she informed Al Jazeera, gesturing to 2 useless kids within the picture.
About 1,127 individuals had been killed within the assaults, whereas 6,000 others suffered acute respiratory signs, in accordance with the Syrian Community for Human Rights.
“[Rescuers] discovered 5 individuals useless in a toilet. Some [corpses] had been discovered on the steps and a few on the ground. Others [died] whereas they had been quick asleep,” Habya mentioned.
A legacy of chemical warfare
On December 8, al-Assad fled to Russia along with his household earlier than opposition fighters may attain the capital.
For 13 years, he and his household waged a devastating struggle on their individuals, relatively than give up energy to the favored rebellion in opposition to him that began in March 2011.
Al-Assad’s regime systematically launched air assaults on civilians, starved communities, and tortured and killed tens of 1000’s of actual and perceived dissidents.
However the regime’s use of chemical weapons – banned by worldwide legal guidelines and conventions – was presumably one of many darkest points of the battle.
In accordance with a 2019 report by the World Coverage Institute, the Syrian regime carried out 98 p.c of the 336 chemical weapon assaults in the course of the struggle, whereas the remainder had been attributed to ISIL (ISIS).
The confirmed assaults befell over a six-year interval between 2012 and 2018 and often focused rebel-controlled areas as a part of a broader coverage of collective punishment, the report mentioned.
Cities and districts within the suburbs of Damascus had been hit dozens of occasions, as had been villages in governorates like Homs, Idlib and Rif Dimashq.
The Syrian Community for Human Rights estimates that about 1,514 individuals suffocated to demise in these assaults, together with 214 kids and 262 ladies.
In Japanese Ghouta, victims informed Al Jazeera they nonetheless can’t shake the harrowing reminiscence, at the same time as they’re crammed with pleasure and aid that al-Assad is lastly gone.
Pleasure and despair
Earlier than the struggle, Habya says, she neither hated nor cherished al-Assad, however she grew terrified because the regime started to brutally repress protesters – and uninvolved civilians.
In early 2013, regime officers kidnapped and jailed her son whereas he was praying in his store. Months later, they killed her son’s household within the chemical weapon assault.
Habya by no means noticed her son once more and simply discovered that he died within the infamous Sednaya Jail in 2016.
Habya believes the regime notably repressed and persecuted civilians in Ghouta as a result of it sits on Damascus’s doorstep and rebels had taken it over.
“We grew to become so scared,” Habya informed Al Jazeera. “Simply the identify ‘Bashar al-Assad’ would instil concern in all of us.”
Because the al-Assad regime dedicated a rising record of atrocities, then-US President Barack Obama informed reporters in 2012 that the usage of chemical weapons in Syria was a “purple line” and – if crossed – would compel him to make use of army pressure in Syria.
After the sarin gasoline assault in August 2013, Obama was pressured to follow through on his warning, which risked angering his constituents who believed the USA mustn’t intrude in international conflicts.
In accordance with a ballot by the Pew Analysis Heart, which was carried out between August 29 and September 1 of that 12 months, solely 29 p.c of Obama’s base of Democrats believed the US ought to strike Syria, whereas 48 p.c outright opposed. The remainder had been uncertain.
Ultimately, Obama referred to as off the strikes and accepted Russian President Vladimir Putin’s supply to permit the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) – a United Nations physique – to destroy stockpiles of chemical weapons in Syria.
Though the OPCW did do away with many chemical weapons the Syrian authorities claimed to have by the point its preliminary mission concluded on September 30, 2014, the UN physique mentioned the federal government might have hid some stockpiles.
After the regime’s recurrent use of chemical weapons within the struggle, OPCW took the choice to droop Syria from the Chemical Weapons Conference in April 2021 for failing to uphold its obligations.
Hungry for justice
The dearth of repercussions in opposition to the regime angered Syrians, with many victims from the 2013 assault nonetheless eager for justice.
Habya’s daughter Eman Suleiman, 33, poked her head out from the facet of the door and informed Al Jazeera she needs the worldwide neighborhood to assist maintain al-Assad accountable for his atrocity crimes, suggesting the Worldwide Felony Court docket (ICC) may indict him.
Nonetheless, Syria is presently not a member of the Rome Statute, a treaty that confers jurisdiction to the court docket. The one means the ICC can open a case in Syria is that if the brand new authorities signal and ratify the statute, or if the UN Safety Council passes a decision allowing the court docket to analyze atrocities in Syria.
Al-Assad and his closest aides may theoretically be charged with a protracted record of grave abuses, together with the usage of chemical weapons, which can quantity to against the law in opposition to humanity, in accordance with Human Rights Watch.
In November 2023, French judges accepted an arrest warrant for al-Assad, which accuses him of ordering the usage of chemical weapons on Japanese Ghouta.
The warrant was granted underneath the authorized idea of “common jurisdiction”, which allows any nation to strive alleged struggle criminals for grave crimes dedicated anyplace on this planet.
“We wish to see [al-Assad] on trial, sentenced and held accountable,” Suleiman informed Al Jazeera.
“We simply need our rights. Nothing much less and nothing extra. In any nation on this planet, if somebody kills one other particular person, they’re held accountable,” she mentioned.
However even when some type of justice is achieved, no verdict or jail sentence will carry again the useless, Habya says.
“God will punish each single oppressor,” she sighed.
Talking out
5 years after the primary chemical weapon assault, the al-Assad regime perpetrated one other one in Japanese Ghouta on April 7, 2018.
This time, chlorine gasoline was used, killing about 43 individuals and injuring scores, in accordance with a report by the OPCW.
Each al-Assad and his key ally Russia claimed Syrian rebel groups and rescue workers staged the attack.
They then reportedly intimidated and muzzled victims after capturing jap Ghouta days later.
Tawfiq Diam, 45, mentioned regime officers “visited” his dwelling every week after his spouse and 4 kids – Joudy, Mohamed, Ali and Qamr, who had been between eight and 12 years previous – had been killed within the chlorine assault.
“They informed us that they didn’t use chemical weapons, nevertheless it was the terrorists and armed teams who did,” Diam recalled, with resentment.
Diam added that regime officers introduced alongside a journalist from a Russian community who requested an interview concerning the chemical weapons assault.
He mentioned he informed the journalist and safety officers what they wished to listen to underneath duress.
Now, he says, he can lastly communicate freely concerning the assault after dwelling in concern of the regime for therefore lengthy.
Habya agrees, saying the concern she carried in her coronary heart underneath al-Assad’s rule disappeared when he fled.
She remembers feeling overwhelmed with pleasure when she requested dozens of younger males exterior her dwelling why they had been cheering and celebrating on December 8.
“They informed me: ‘The donkey, Bashar, is lastly gone.”