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‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves
ÔWe were raided regularlyÕ: with Assad gone, banned books return to SyriaÕs shelves.
Under the deposed dictator, books had to pass detailed scrutiny by government censors.
Employees at Dar al-Fikr organise books at the entrance of the store. Syria
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DUKAS_180398215_EYE
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves.
Under the deposed dictator, books had to pass detailed scrutiny by government censors.
Wahid Taja, an employee of Dar al-Fikr, poses for a portrait in one of Damascus’s most prominent publishing houses established in 1957. Syria
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DUKAS_180398214_EYE
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves
ÔWe were raided regularlyÕ: with Assad gone, banned books return to SyriaÕs shelves.
Under the deposed dictator, books had to pass detailed scrutiny by government censors.
The inside of ExLibris, a 23-year-old English language bookstore located in an upscale neighbourhood of Damascus. Syria
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DUKAS_180398212_EYE
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves.
Under the deposed dictator, books had to pass detailed scrutiny by government censors.
A copy of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four on the shelves of ExLibris, a book surprisingly not banned by the previous Assad regime. Syria
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DUKAS_180398213_EYE
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves.
Under the deposed dictator, books had to pass detailed scrutiny by government censors.
A customer glances at books in Dar al-Fikr bookstore in Damascus. Syria
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_180398211_EYE
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves
‘We were raided regularly’: with Assad gone, banned books return to Syria’s shelves.
Under the deposed dictator, books had to pass detailed scrutiny by government censors.
Wahid Taja reads Burhan Ghalioun’s book, a Syrian-French intellectual and longtime critic of the Assad regime, which was previously banned. Syria
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DUKAS_181388591_EYE
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
Diverse city has grown tense since fall of Assad regime, as security forces target groups loyal to the former dictator
A young boy walks in the Baba Amr district of Homs, where many buildings are still damaged or destroyed from former bombing and raids during the Assad regime.
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DUKAS_181388592_EYE
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
Diverse city has grown tense since fall of Assad regime, as security forces target groups loyal to the former dictator
A boy carrying a small child passes a clocktower, a well known symbol of Homs, draped with the new Syrian flag.
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DUKAS_181388595_EYE
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
Diverse city has grown tense since fall of Assad regime, as security forces target groups loyal to the former dictator
An Hayat Tahrir al-Sham soldier directs traffic in the city center of Homs, Syria.
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DUKAS_181388593_EYE
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
Diverse city has grown tense since fall of Assad regime, as security forces target groups loyal to the former dictator
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham members can be stand guard at the city center of Homs, Syria.
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DUKAS_181388589_EYE
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
'We live in constant fear': Alawites in Syria's Homs terrified of reprisals.
Diverse city has grown tense since fall of Assad regime, as security forces target groups loyal to the former dictator
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham Soldiers stand guard at the former political security directorate of Homs, where they know maintain control.
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'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
For 50 years Taha Tadmori had a window to the surveillance complex of the Assad regime. As Syria starts a new chapter, he recalls the horrors he witnessed and the family he lost.
Tahar Tadmori looks onto the the former political security directorate of Homs from his balcony.
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'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
For 50 years Taha Tadmori had a window to the surveillance complex of the Assad regime. As Syria starts a new chapter, he recalls the horrors he witnessed and the family he lost.
A view of the political security directorate compound from Taher TadmoriÕs balcony.
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DUKAS_180697020_EYE
'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
For 50 years Taha Tadmori had a window to the surveillance complex of the Assad regime. As Syria starts a new chapter, he recalls the horrors he witnessed and the family he lost.
Tahar Tadmori looks onto the the former political security directorate of Homs from his balcony.
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DUKAS_180697025_EYE
'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
'This place instilled constant fear in us': Taha Tadmori the man who lived next door to the brutal Homs security unit for 50 years.
For 50 years Taha Tadmori had a window to the surveillance complex of the Assad regime. As Syria starts a new chapter, he recalls the horrors he witnessed and the family he lost.
Tahar Tadmori poses for a portrait in his home in Homs, Syria where the Assad regime built the former political security directorate right next door.
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DUKAS_179797401_EYE
Syria’s new rulers invite Assad security officials to surrender
Headquarters of intelligence service in Damascus is now ‘settlement centre’ where those who served inside turn themselves in.
Syrian authorities are asking those who served inside to turn in their weapons and themselves. Lines of men wait in the courtyard to receive slips of paper saying they have officially surrendered and reconciled with the new administration.
A portrait of Bashar Al-Assad is used as a doormat in a reconciliation centre run by HTS in Damascus, Syria.
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DUKAS_179797400_EYE
Syria’s new rulers invite Assad security officials to surrender
Headquarters of intelligence service in Damascus is now ‘settlement centre’ where those who served inside turn themselves in.
Syrian authorities are asking those who served inside to turn in their weapons and themselves. Lines of men wait in the courtyard to receive slips of paper saying they have officially surrendered and reconciled with the new administration.
Personnel from the Assad regime or other militias queue to get temporary IDs in a reconciliation centre run by HTS.
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DUKAS_179797402_EYE
Syria’s new rulers invite Assad security officials to surrender
Headquarters of intelligence service in Damascus is now ‘settlement centre’ where those who served inside turn themselves in.
Syrian authorities are asking those who served inside to turn in their weapons and themselves. Lines of men wait in the courtyard to receive slips of paper saying they have officially surrendered and reconciled with the new administration.
A man discusses with two HTS soldiers at a reconciliation centre where a torn image of the former president Bashar Al-Assad can be seen at the front gate.
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DUKAS_179797432_EYE
Syria’s new rulers invite Assad security officials to surrender
Headquarters of intelligence service in Damascus is now ‘settlement centre’ where those who served inside turn themselves in.
Syrian authorities are asking those who served inside to turn in their weapons and themselves. Lines of men wait in the courtyard to receive slips of paper saying they have officially surrendered and reconciled with the new administration.
An HTS soldier manages a large crowd of former personnel from the Assad regime, waiting to enter a reconciliation centre to turn in their weapons and receive a new temporary ID.
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DUKAS_179481773_EYE
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up.
A decade on from the Guardian's last visit, during the four-year-long battle for Aleppo between the Assad regime and rebel forces, it is clear that Syria's vicious civil war has ripped it apart, tearing at the social fabric and wreaking physical destruction that cannot easily be mended. At least 30,000 people were killed here, hundreds of thousands more lives ruined, and centuries' worth of priceless human heritage has been destroyed.
Khaled Khatib, media coordinator for the White Helmets, poses for a portrait at his station in Aleppo.
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DUKAS_179481771_EYE
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up.
A decade on from the Guardian's last visit, during the four-year-long battle for Aleppo between the Assad regime and rebel forces, it is clear that Syria's vicious civil war has ripped it apart, tearing at the social fabric and wreaking physical destruction that cannot easily be mended. At least 30,000 people were killed here, hundreds of thousands more lives ruined, and centuries' worth of priceless human heritage has been destroyed.
Residents walk through the Sha'aar neighbourhood of East Aleppo, which has been subjected to airstrikes from the Assad regime, and destroyed large parts of the neighbourhood.
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DUKAS_179481772_EYE
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up.
A decade on from the Guardian's last visit, during the four-year-long battle for Aleppo between the Assad regime and rebel forces, it is clear that Syria's vicious civil war has ripped it apart, tearing at the social fabric and wreaking physical destruction that cannot easily be mended. At least 30,000 people were killed here, hundreds of thousands more lives ruined, and centuries' worth of priceless human heritage has been destroyed.
A oppositional Syrian flag hanging in the Sha'aar neighbourhood of East Aleppo.
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DUKAS_179481769_EYE
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up
Inside Aleppo, the city Assad left to rot as a lesson in the price of rising up.
A decade on from the Guardian's last visit, during the four-year-long battle for Aleppo between the Assad regime and rebel forces, it is clear that Syria's vicious civil war has ripped it apart, tearing at the social fabric and wreaking physical destruction that cannot easily be mended. At least 30,000 people were killed here, hundreds of thousands more lives ruined, and centuries' worth of priceless human heritage has been destroyed.
Residents can be seen crossing the frontline into a YPG controlled part of the city in Aleppo.
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DUKAS_179480592_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
A man walks through the administrative offices of Sednaya prison, where papers and documents are spread all over the room from people looking for missing relatives.
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DUKAS_179480585_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
Family members of missing relatives look through documents in a surveillance room in Sednaya prison.
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DUKAS_179480588_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
Massive holes can be seen all over Sednaya prison, where people dug to find secret prison cells hoping to find missing prisoners.
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179480591_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
Umm Ali, 58 years old, waits outside of Sednaya prison, looking for her son, Ali. Mattresses can be seen where families have been sleeping while looking for missing family members.
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179480589_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
A view of Sednaya prison, notorious Syrian prison nicknamed, “the human slaughterhouse.”
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179480587_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami, 31 years old poses for a portrait in front of the window of his cell door where he was imprisoned for 5 years in Sednaya.
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179480586_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
A view of Sednaya prison, notorious Syrian prison nicknamed, “the human slaughterhouse.”
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179480590_EYE
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria
'It was like I was reborn': Sednaya prison's former inmates adapt to a new Syria.
Former prisoners endured hearing fellow inmates being executed - but they are the lucky ones, with 100,000 people still missing.
Mohammed Ammar Hamami remembers from his time in the Assad regime's notorious Sednaya prison.
Mohammed finds his old medication on the ground outside his prison cell in Sednaya prison.
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179508789_EYE
Sacks of chemicals, plastic fruit ... and millions of pills: inside a Damascus Captagon factory
Burnt-out rooms reveal extent of lucrative regime-supported operation to smuggle drug across region.
On the outskirts of Damascus, just a 20-minute drive away from the centre of the Syrian capital, lay a sprawling industrial complex. Professed to be a soap factory.
Rebels broke into the complex as they pushed towards the capital city and found millions of Captagon pills and industrial quantities of precursor chemicals.
Aa view of the outside of a large warehouse near Douma, where capatgon was manufactured and hidden for smuggling.
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DUKAS_179508788_EYE
Sacks of chemicals, plastic fruit ... and millions of pills: inside a Damascus Captagon factory
Burnt-out rooms reveal extent of lucrative regime-supported operation to smuggle drug across region.
On the outskirts of Damascus, just a 20-minute drive away from the centre of the Syrian capital, lay a sprawling industrial complex. Professed to be a soap factory.
Rebels broke into the complex as they pushed towards the capital city and found millions of Captagon pills and industrial quantities of precursor chemicals.
Bags of sodium hydroxide flakes stacked in a warehouse above the captagon factory.
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179508790_EYE
Sacks of chemicals, plastic fruit ... and millions of pills: inside a Damascus Captagon factory
Burnt-out rooms reveal extent of lucrative regime-supported operation to smuggle drug across region.
On the outskirts of Damascus, just a 20-minute drive away from the centre of the Syrian capital, lay a sprawling industrial complex. Professed to be a soap factory.
Rebels broke into the complex as they pushed towards the capital city and found millions of Captagon pills and industrial quantities of precursor chemicals.
HTS rebels dump pills out of fake copper wiring in computer towers in a captagon factory in the outskirts of Douma.
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179508787_EYE
Sacks of chemicals, plastic fruit ... and millions of pills: inside a Damascus Captagon factory
Burnt-out rooms reveal extent of lucrative regime-supported operation to smuggle drug across region.
On the outskirts of Damascus, just a 20-minute drive away from the centre of the Syrian capital, lay a sprawling industrial complex. Professed to be a soap factory.
Rebels broke into the complex as they pushed towards the capital city and found millions of Captagon pills and industrial quantities of precursor chemicals.
An HTS rebel demonstrates how the factory used to hide and smuggle captagon in various items including fake fruit.
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_179572708_EYE
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out.
A chemical attack on the town of Douma killed 43 people in 2018. Now Assad has fallen, the enforced silence of those who witnessed it is over.
Chlorine is not as dangerous as sarin - a nerve agent that deposed president Bashar al-Assad deployed against civilians on several occasions in the 13-year civil war. But because chlorine is heavier than air, it sank down through the storeys and street-level gratings into two basements. At least 43 people choked to death, their blistered bodies blue and black when civil defence workers brought the corpses out to the street.
A man walks past by a street in , where rubble of many buildings still remain, destruction from the town of Duma, which was bombed by the Assad regime and subjected to chemical attacks from the Assad Regime
Douma, Syria, 13 December 2024
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DUKAS_179572707_EYE
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out.
A chemical attack on the town of Douma killed 43 people in 2018. Now Assad has fallen, the enforced silence of those who witnessed it is over.
Chlorine is not as dangerous as sarin - a nerve agent that deposed president Bashar al-Assad deployed against civilians on several occasions in the 13-year civil war. But because chlorine is heavier than air, it sank down through the storeys and street-level gratings into two basements. At least 43 people choked to death, their blistered bodies blue and black when civil defence workers brought the corpses out to the street.
Tea is being served at a wedding in town of Duma, where members of the community were subjected to chemical attacks from the Assad Regime.
Douma, Syria, 13 December 2024
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DUKAS_179572706_EYE
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out.
A chemical attack on the town of Douma killed 43 people in 2018. Now Assad has fallen, the enforced silence of those who witnessed it is over.
Chlorine is not as dangerous as sarin - a nerve agent that deposed president Bashar al-Assad deployed against civilians on several occasions in the 13-year civil war. But because chlorine is heavier than air, it sank down through the storeys and street-level gratings into two basements. At least 43 people choked to death, their blistered bodies blue and black when civil defence workers brought the corpses out to the street.
HTS rebels roam the streets outside of Duma on top of vehicles throughout the city.
Douma, Syria, 13 December 2024
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_179572710_EYE
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out.
A chemical attack on the town of Douma killed 43 people in 2018. Now Assad has fallen, the enforced silence of those who witnessed it is over.
Chlorine is not as dangerous as sarin - a nerve agent that deposed president Bashar al-Assad deployed against civilians on several occasions in the 13-year civil war. But because chlorine is heavier than air, it sank down through the storeys and street-level gratings into two basements. At least 43 people choked to death, their blistered bodies blue and black when civil defence workers brought the corpses out to the street.
Tawfiq Diam, 79 years old, poses for a portrait outside the basement where his wife and four children were killed by a chlorine attack on April 7th, 2018.
Douma, Syria, 13 December 2024
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_179572711_EYE
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out.
A chemical attack on the town of Douma killed 43 people in 2018. Now Assad has fallen, the enforced silence of those who witnessed it is over.
Chlorine is not as dangerous as sarin - a nerve agent that deposed president Bashar al-Assad deployed against civilians on several occasions in the 13-year civil war. But because chlorine is heavier than air, it sank down through the storeys and street-level gratings into two basements. At least 43 people choked to death, their blistered bodies blue and black when civil defence workers brought the corpses out to the street.
Hamad Shukri, 16 years old, poses for a portrait outside a basement where members of the community in Duma were hiding. Hamad was 10 years old when the chemical attacks happened.
Douma, Syria, 13 December 2024
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_179572709_EYE
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out
Syrian chlorine victims can finally speak out.
A chemical attack on the town of Douma killed 43 people in 2018. Now Assad has fallen, the enforced silence of those who witnessed it is over.
Chlorine is not as dangerous as sarin - a nerve agent that deposed president Bashar al-Assad deployed against civilians on several occasions in the 13-year civil war. But because chlorine is heavier than air, it sank down through the storeys and street-level gratings into two basements. At least 43 people choked to death, their blistered bodies blue and black when civil defence workers brought the corpses out to the street.
Hamad Shukri, 16 years old, poses for a portrait outside a basement where members of the community in Duma were hiding. Hamad was 10 years old when the chemical attacks happened.
Douma, Syria, 13 December 2024
David Lombeida / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
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Syria: FSA Military Police
FSA Military Police in Aleppo, Syria, on March 24, 2013. (Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sip USA)
DUKAS/SIPA USA -
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Syria: FSA Military Police
FSA Military Police in Aleppo, Syria, on March 24, 2013. (Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sip USA)
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Syria: FSA Military Police
FSA Military Police in Aleppo, Syria, on March 24, 2013. (Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sip USA)
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Syria: FSA Military Police
FSA Military Police in Aleppo, Syria, on March 24, 2013. (Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sip USA)
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Syria: FSA Military Police
FSA Military Police in Aleppo, Syria, on March 24, 2013. (Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sip USA)
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Syria: Empty Streets of Aleppo
The empty streets of Aleppo, Syria's largest city and center of the latest clashes between the Free Syrian Army and the forces loyla to Bashar Al Assad's regime. March 22, 2013.
(Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sipa USA) Photo Credit: Sebastiano Tomada/Sipa USA
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Syria: Empty Streets of Aleppo
The empty streets of Aleppo, Syria's largest city and center of the latest clashes between the Free Syrian Army and the forces loyla to Bashar Al Assad's regime. March 22, 2013.
(Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sipa USA) Photo Credit: Sebastiano Tomada/Sipa USA
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Syria: Empty Streets of Aleppo
The empty streets of Aleppo, Syria's largest city and center of the latest clashes between the Free Syrian Army and the forces loyla to Bashar Al Assad's regime. March 22, 2013.
(Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sipa USA) Photo Credit: Sebastiano Tomada/Sipa USA
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Syria: Life on the frontline of Aleppo
Children collect scraps along the destroyed streets of Salahadeen, one of Aleppo's neighborhood and a front line in the fight between the FSA and the soldiers loyal to Bashar Al Assad's regime. Aleppo, Syria, on March 21, 2013. (Photo by Sebastiano Tomada/Sipa USA)
DUKAS/SIPA USA