Raslan defected from the Assad government and was smuggled with his family to
Jordan in December 2012. Syrian filmmaker and former detainee
Feras Fayyad was the first witness to testify in the Koblenz trial. He appeared as both a witness survivor, and plaintiff, giving testimony about his detention, torture, and sexual assault in Branch 251, which was used by prosecutors to support charges against Anwar Raslan. Raslan travelled to Germany in 2014 and was granted asylum there in the same year. He was arrested in February 2019 and charged in March 2020. The trial began in April 2020 in the city of
Koblenz have documented the trial. The prosecution is part of a larger trend in
universal jurisdiction to
investigate and hold accountable individuals who committed crimes during the
Syrian civil war. On 2 December 2021, the German federal prosecutor's office called for the life sentence against Anwar Raslan, in the first trial in the world for abuses committed by the Bashar al-Assad government. On 13 January 2022, Raslan was sentenced by the state court in
Koblenz to imprisonment for life "for a crime against humanity in the form of killing, torture, severe deprivation of liberty, rape and sexual coercion in unity of action with 27 counts of
Mord ('severe' murder in the
German penal code), 25 counts of dangerous bodily harm, two counts of especially serious rape, sexual coercion, 14 counts of deprivation of liberty for more than one week, two counts of hostage-taking and three counts of sexual abuse of prisoners." In August 2024, the
German Federal Court of Justice rejected Raslan’s appeal, making the sentence final. == See also ==