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Torture horror: Horror inside Assad’s ‘human slaughterhouse’ prison revealed

Prisoners inside Bashar al-Assad’s infamous Sednaya Prison, nicknamed the “Human Slaughterhouse,” endured unimaginable torture, forced to consume their own blood and commit horrific acts of violence under brutal conditions.

Torture and Death Inside Sednaya

Former detainees recount a world where humiliation, starvation, and death were routine. Torture methods included savage beatings, electrocution, and the chilling use of a hydraulic “iron press” to execute inmates. In one of the prison’s grotesque rituals, guards scattered food onto blood-soaked floors, forcing prisoners to eat from the filth.

Mass Hangings and Systematic Killing

Twice a week, prisoners were told they were being transferred but were instead hanged in the dead of night. Survivors describe the gurgling sounds of suffocation as bodies dangled for minutes before guards ensured death by snapping necks. Amnesty International’s reports reveal this was part of a state-sanctioned effort to crush dissent.

The Fall of Assad’s Regime Brings Liberation

As rebels stormed Damascus, they uncovered Sednaya’s horrors, freeing thousands of inmates, including women and children born behind bars. Syria’s once-dreaded prisons are now giving up their grim secrets, exposing decades of atrocities under Assad’s regime.

The discovery of mass graves, torture tools, and survivors’ harrowing stories underscores the need for accountability. International observers are now calling for justice for the countless victims of Assad’s reign of terror.

Herbert Bauernebel

Herbert Bauernebel has been reporting from New York since 1999 and currently works for Bild.de, OE24 TV, and US Live. He also runs the news portal AmerikaReport.de. Bauernebel has covered nearly all major US events of the past quarter-century, including 9/11, Hurricane Katrina, Barack Obama’s election, Donald Trump’s surprise victory, the pandemic, last year’s election showdown, as well as natural disasters such as hurricanes and oil spills. He has also reported firsthand on international events, including the Asian tsunami, the Haiti earthquake, and the Fukushima disaster. He lives in Brooklyn with his family and holds degrees in communication and political science from the University of Vienna. Bauernebel is the author of a book about his experiences on 9/11, And the Air Was Full of Ash: 9/11 – The Day That Changed My Life.

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Herbert Bauernebel

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