donderdag 27 februari 2020

What Motivates Mazen Hamadeh?



Was it Mazen Hamadeh, he couldn’t bear it anymore to stay in the Netherlands, is he perhaps the ” Ceasar” of the West?
He was received as a hero in the Netherlands, it was him who suffered the horrible prisons of what he called the “Assad-regime”, these were his words in the Netherlands, to the Dutch government and recently in the run-up to a process, which be held at the ICC (International Criminal Court) to frame President Assad for war crimes against people like Mazen Hamadeh, who now went back to Syria. Hamadeh learned a lot in the Netherlands, the Auschwitz story, for example, if you were going to be sent to the hospital in Mezze, airport base means extermination, he said in the video. Also, he claims whole families went to prison and part of his family is still in prison. How come he went back to Syria? Maybe because he couldn’t cope with all the lies he spread, or the pressure from the Dutch government, the ICC and the US to pressure him and maybe to deliver evidence for the “Caesar” claims he made during a Senate hearing at the US. Al Hamadan’s need for preferential treatment, increased by the spotlights that the media and human rights organizations have shed on him, led him to believe that he is somehow the center of the Syrian issue, especially after he was hosted by the US (Caesar). Al Hamada’s ego inflation has become clear in his speech, saying that he was the one who stopped the bombing of Deir- ez-zour, and that the coalition wanted to use his expertise to manage the oil fields in eastern Syria.
The sources indicated that the former detainee’s psychological and financial crises pushed and accelerated his return to Syria, with Syrian mediators in Mohassan city to make it possible for his return in agreement with the Dutch government. In other words, he is of no use anymore for the Friends of Syria coalition, like James le Mesurier.
Ruim drie jaar geleden berichtte de Volkskrant:

'Ik voelde de spieren in mijn polsen langzaam scheuren'

Tussen 2011 en 2015 vonden in de Saydnaya-gevangenis in de Syrische hoofdstad Damascus iedere week massa-executies plaats, zo blijkt uit een nieuw rapport van Amnesty International. De Volkskrant sprak in februari 2014 met een toen 36-jarige Syriër die in 'het slachthuis' verbleef. Lees hieronder zijn verhaal terug.

Irene de Zwaan7 februari 2017, 8:48

Aldus Mazen Hamada in een interview. 


Waarom keert een Syriër terug naar zijn land als hij daar, gezien zijn eigen uitspraken, vermoord zal worden? Of zijn verhaal klopt niet, of hij wil dood. Zou de Volkskrant die Hamada's verhaal klakkeloos overnam dit kunnen uitzoeken?





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