Syrian survivor narrates tortures that she was subjected in regime prison

"It was pitch dark in there. They would turn on the lights only when the beatings and torture would start. I did not see the sun for a year, I was subjected to all kinds of torture in the underground prison. Those were the most painful days of my life," Hatice Ahmet, who is the 38-year-old survivor, that was arrested four years ago in Damascus for allegedly providing weapons to the opposition with her friends, said in an exclusive interview as narrating her hard times in the Bashar al-Assad regime's underground prison.

Hatice Ahmet, who was arrested by the regime forces in Syria along with her four friends, cannot forget the tortures she was subjected to in the Bashar al-Assad regime's underground prison.
The 38-year-old survivor was arrested four years ago in Damascus for allegedly providing weapons to the opposition with her friends. She was released a year later after none of the charges could be proven against her.

"It was pitch dark in there. They would turn on the lights only when the beatings and torture would start," she said, adding that she was also subjected to electric shocks.

Syria has been locked in a devastating conflict since early 2011, when the Assad regime cracked down on demonstrators with unexpected severity.

Since then, hundreds of thousands of people have been killed and more than 10 million displaced, according to UN figures, while women and children continue to bear the full brunt of the conflict.

"I did not see the sun for a year, I was subjected to all kinds of torture in the underground prison. Those were the most painful days of my life," she said.

Ahmet said that she saw her friends who were arrested with her for two weeks, but never heard from them again.

"The darkness doubled the pain, and the distance from my friends had shattered all my hopes."

The prison was located six stories under the ground.

"They let me go when I was proven innocent. But, I couldn't open my eyes for a long time after I came out."

She misses her friends who were arrested with her.

"My thoughts are always with my friends. We don't even know if they're alive. I hope we will not be subjected to pain like this again. I hope the pain my country is facing right now will go away."

Ahmet, her husband and their child migrated to an internally displaced persons (IDP) camp in Syria's Idlib after her release to start a new life. But their happiness was short-lived. Her husband lost his life in a regime air strike.

Now, they live as refugees in Turkey's Reyhanli district, bordering Syria.

According to the International Conscience Movement, an NGO, more than 13,500 women have been jailed since the Syrian conflict began, while more than 7,000 women remain in detention, where they are subjected to torture, rape and sexual violence.

The movement is an alliance of individuals, rights groups and organizations aiming to secure urgent action for the release of women and children in the prisons of the Syrian regime.

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