DAMASCUS, Dec 8 (Reuters) – A year after dictator Bashar al-Assad’s ouster in Syria, little has changed in Amina Beqai’s desperate quest. She types her missing husband’s name yet again into an internet search box, hoping for answers to a 13-year-old question. In vain.
Beqai has nowhere else to turn.
A National Commission for Missing Persons established in May has been gathering evidence of enforced disappearances under Assad, but has yet to offer families any clues on the estimated 150,000 people who vanished in his notorious prisons.
They include Beqai’s husband Mahmoud, arrested by Syria’s security forces at their home near Damascus on April 17, 2012, and her brother Ahmed, detained in August that year.
Assad’s overthrow initially stirred hope that prison records could tell families

WMBD-Radio

Raw Story
ABC News
Associated Press Top News
Law & Crime
Newsday
KTRE 9 News
KCCI 8
WRDW-TV News 12 Crime
ABC30 Fresno World
The Blade