EPISODE · May 15, 2020 · 18 MIN
The Two Anwars
from Branch 251 · host 75 Podcasts
How did the Branch 251 trial actually come about? Your hosts Karam and Fritz talked to someone who played an important role in transforming the terrible stories of these crimes into legal cases: Anwar Al Bunni. He has been instrumental in building the case and kick-starting this first criminal trial against Syrian officials. He was also imprisoned himself simply because he was doing his job as a human rights lawyer defending political prisoners in Syria. Eight years ago, he was detained in Branch 251 and was face to face with the main accused Anwar R. who slapped him in the face. But then, he saw him again, years later. In a refugee center in Berlin. And now, once more, in a court of law.Subscribe to keep every episode coming to you automatically every week. If you would like to support the podcast, go to our website and click 'Support This Podcast'.You can follow us on Twitter @Fritz_Streiff and @KaramShoumali.Some additional sources on this episode and the trial here:Arabic-German coverage by German public television ARD/ WDR about the first trial days in Koblenz: https://www1.wdr.de/nachrichten/wdrforyou/deutsch/wdrforyou-gericht-prozess-syrien-koblenz-de-100.htmlSee also: https://twitter.com/fritz_streiff/status/1260506797472911360?s=20@ECCHR Berlin hearing summaries can be found here: https://ecchr.eu/en/case/trial-monitoring-first-trial-worldwide-on-torture-in-syria/…Weekly monitoring reports by the Syria Justice and Accountability Centre (SJAC): https://syriaaccountability.org/topic/trial-monitoring/updates/…@MansourOmari survived the Syrian regime’s torture and is blogging for @AmnestyUK, Part 3 here: https://www.amnesty.org.uk/blogs/campaigns-blog/syrian-torture-trial-koblenz-germany-part-3Logo design by laurenshebly.nl -- Photo by James Lawler Duggan/AFP/Getty Images.
What this episode covers
How did the Branch 251 trial actually come about? Your hosts Karam and Fritz talked to someone who played an important role in transforming the terrible stories of these crimes into legal cases: Anwar Al Bunni. He has been instrumental in building the case and kick-starting this first criminal trial against Syrian officials. He was also imprisoned himself simply because he was doing his job as a human rights lawyer defending political prisoners in Syria. Eight years ago, he was detained in Branch 251 and was face to face with the main accused Anwar R. who slapped him in the face. But then, he saw him again, years later. In a refugee center in Berlin. And now, once more, in a court of law.Subscribe to keep every episode coming to you automatically every week. If you would like to support the podcast, go to our website and click 'Support This Podcast'.You can follow us on Twitter @Fritz_Streiff and @KaramShoumali.Some additional sources on this episode and the trial here:Arabic-German coverage by German public television ARD/ WDR about the first trial days in Koblenz: https://www1.wdr.de/nachrichten/wdrforyou/deutsch/wdrforyou-gericht-prozess-syrien-koblenz-de-100.htmlSee also: https://twitter.com/fritz_streiff/status/1260506797472911360?s=20@ECCHR Berlin hearing summaries can be found here: https://ecchr.eu/en/case/trial-monitoring-first-trial-worldwide-on-torture-in-syria/…Weekly monitoring reports by the Syria Justice and Accountability Centre (SJAC): https://syriaaccountability.org/topic/trial-monitoring/updates/…@MansourOmari survived the Syrian regime’s torture and is blogging for @AmnestyUK, Part 3 here: https://www.amnesty.org.uk/blogs/campaigns-blog/syrian-torture-trial-koblenz-germany-part-3Logo design by laurenshebly.nl -- Photo by James Lawler Duggan/AFP/Getty Images.
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The Two Anwars
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