Various organizations, including
UNESCO and the
World Association of Newspapers, endeavoured to secure Nayyouf's release from prison on humanitarian grounds due to his precarious mental and physical condition. International outcry ensued in response to the incident, which had occurred just as Nayyouf was planning to release information detailing Syrian human rights abuses, but the government denied involvement. However, Nayyouf was granted a full release and his travel ban was lifted, hours before President Bashar al-Assad was due to visit Paris. Nayyouf moved to France and then the UK, as he applied for political asylum, while he sought medical treatment for the injuries he suffered from torture during his confinement, which left him partially paralysed. According to Nayyouf's attorney, lawyers for the ruling
Ba'ath Party accused Nayyouf of "attempting to change the constitution by illegal means, creating sectarian strife, and publishing reports harmful for the state", and ordered him to appear in Syria for an investigation in September 1992. After his release, Nayyouf has continued to speak out against human rights violations in Syria, targeting torture, deaths in detention, and executions including the
Tadmor Prison massacre on 27 June 1980, in which over 1,000 accused Islamists were executed at Palmyra prison. On 26 May 2002, Nayyouf missed a planned appearance at the 55th World Freedom Congress in
Bruges, Belgium, where he was to be formally presented with the Golden Pen of Freedom (an award he had won in 2000 while imprisoned), prompting widespread concern for his safety. Members of the Congress alerted police, who initiated an international search. On 27 May, he was found safe in a hospital near Brussels. According to Nayyouf, unknown persons took him from his hotel room and forced him into a car. He was driven for several hours before being left in a forest more than away. He was found by a passerby in a car and taken to the hospital at
Anderlecht, where police found him. Nayyouf accused the Syrian government of being behind the abduction, and stated that his abductors had offered to allow him to return to Syria if he would withdraw his claims of human rights abuses by the Assad government. In 2004, Nayyouf gave an interview to the Dutch newspaper
De Telegraaf in which he claimed that Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein hid his arsenal of weapons of mass destruction in Syria before the United States
invaded Iraq in 2003. Nayyouf claimed that officers of the
Special Republican Guard organized the smuggling in collaboration with relatives of
Bashar al-Assad including
Dhu al-Himma Shalish and
Assif Shoakat, who is also CEO of Bhaha, an import/export company owned by the Assad family. Nayyouf identified sites near the cities of
al-Baida,
Tell Sinan, and
Sjinsjar as alleged holding sites for Iraqi WMDs. == References ==