Security14:56 · 2h ago

Austrian Court Convicts Former Syrian Intelligence Chief for Torture Under Assad Regime

Behadrei HaredimReligious
Translated & summarized from Behadrei Haredim by baba
The story · English

An Austrian court in Vienna convicted Khaled Al Khaladi, a 63-year-old former senior Syrian official, of torture and assault committed between 2011 and 2013 during his tenure as head of the General Intelligence Service in Raqqa. The court sentenced him to eight years in prison after testimonies from over a dozen victims detailed severe abuses including beatings, electric shocks, and forced exposure to hot and cold water. Al Khaladi was charged with torture, causing serious bodily harm, coercion under aggravating circumstances, and cruel assault.

Al Khaladi fled Syria and arrived in Austria in 2015 seeking asylum amid ongoing controversy over how he managed to leave Syria and enter Europe. Austrian prosecutors revealed in 2025 that he had also acted as an Israeli Mossad agent and escaped to Europe with Israeli assistance. He was arrested in Austria in December 2024 after a manhunt lasting more than ten years. Al Khaladi received political asylum in Vienna with help from Israeli and Austrian intelligence agencies and lived in an apartment funded by Israel.

Five former Austrian intelligence officers were charged with illegal assistance related to Al Khaladi’s case, but most were acquitted due to lack of evidence. Survivor testimonies, some shared with The New York Times, describe a climate of terror under Al Khaladi’s direct command, including one victim who recounted interrogation and burns inflicted in Al Khaladi’s office. The case highlights the complex international dimensions of accountability for human rights abuses during the Assad regime’s crackdown on dissent.

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