Reckoning with the Assad Regime's 'Machinery of Death'

反思阿萨德政权的“死亡机器”

Up First

新闻

2025-01-26

32 分钟
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单集简介 ...

The fall of Syria's leader in December opened the doors to a vast network of detention centers and prisons across the country, uncovering further evidence of the true scale of killings under former president Bashar al-Assad. On this episode of The Sunday Story, NPR's Ruth Sherlock takes us to a notorious prison where thousands were detained and killed, and she visits a suspected mass gravesite outside Damascus. She meets former prisoners and those forced to play a role in what has been called the regime's "machinery of death." Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy

单集文稿 ...

  • Aisha I'm Aisha Roscoe, and this is the Sunday Story from Up First.

  • In late December, NPR correspondent Ruth Sherlock drove from the Syrian capital, Damascus, into the open, flat scrubland outside the city.

  • It's a desolate place where stray dogs roam and where eventually a dirt track led to an area closed off by high cement walls.

  • There's these metal gates between the walls, but it's barricaded by a mound of earth.

  • But the gate has opened a crack.

  • So we're going to climb over the.

  • Mountain to get inside.

  • Inside, it seemed at first there was very little, just dirt and some Russian military trucks.

  • But that's because what is here lies hidden below ground.

  • This is a mass grave site, one of dozens that Syrians are discovering across the country, a remnant of Bashar al Assad's brutal regime.

  • There's a bone here.

  • The weather has worn it, a lot of it away.

  • It's white and partially eroded.

  • I just want to take a moment and really think about what we're doing here because it's easy to not comprehend.

  • The truth of what this place could be.

  • But.

  • But when you hear the stories you.

  • Hear every day, truck after truck after truck piled high with corpses of people.

  • Who'D been executed or died in detention under the Syrian regime were brought here.

  • And it's chilling to think that many.