Talk:Center for Documentation of Violations in Syria

The registry of names of the war dead between 1914-1922
When complaining about the reliability of the data, one must remember that it took Finland over 80 years to create The registry of names of the war dead between 1914-1922. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 01:59, 19 October 2013 (UTC)

Located in Douma?
''Meanwhile, Syrian activists said a leading human rights lawyer had been abducted near Damascus on Tuesday.
 * Spanish journalists kidnapped in Syria – BBC, 10 December 2013

''Razan Zaytouna was seized along with three other activists from the eastern suburb of Douma after armed men broke into the office of the Violations Documentation Centre (VDC), which monitors casualties.

''The Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC), a network of opposition activists of which Ms Zaytouna is a founding member, demanded their immediate and unconditional release.

''There was no claim of responsibility for the abduction, but Ms Zaytouna is reported to have recently received threats from Islamist rebel groups.

''BEIRUT - Prominent Syrian human rights lawyer Razan Zeitoune was kidnapped along with her husband and two colleagues in the Damascus town of Douma.
 * Prominent Syrian activist Razan Zeitoune kidnapped – NOW, 10 December 2013

''"Masked men stormed and vandalized the Douma office of the Violation Documentation Center in Syria and [kidnapped] Razan Zeitoune, [her husband] Wael Hmadeh, Nazem al-Hamadi and Samira al-Khalil,” sources told NOW on Tuesday.


 * What the hell? Obviously the kidnapping is more immediately relevant, but I too am stuck on her locale. I thought they'd be in Europe somewhere. For well over two years they help launder rebel, often Islamist rebel, crimes and blame the "regime." And she was right in one of the Damascus suburbs the "regime" has at times controlled, or shelled, or whatever - and it takes some Islamists to finally shut the operation down or threaten it over ... what, I wonder? --Caustic Logic (talk) 11:13, 12 December 2013 (UTC)

More on the Abduction
(...of VDC director Razan Zaitouneh)

VDC Entries/Another Zaitouneh Woman Taken
So, I checked the VDC's own database for missing and detained people, and Razan and her cohorts still do not appear on either. It sometimes seems that only having the regime allegedly to blame gets you there, and that isn't the case here. Hey, she helped found the system ...

Two near-matches in the Damascus suburbs pop up on the detainees list. First, it says a woman Yara Fares was detained in Damascus suburbs (unspecified) on December 8, two days before Razan. Notes: "Wife of the detainee " Maher Tahan ". She has detained on Sehnaya checkpoint-Damascus Suburbs." Photo provided. Then, more close to home, Nibal Fadlallah Zetouneh, age 51, from Jaramana (largely Christian and generally pro-government, BTW), an Arabic teacher. Taken a bit earlier, on November 27, she could be Razan the lawyer's older sister, but that would add complications to the story. Notes: "she was arrested when she was in the school," and clues suggest it was regular government forces that met her there.

That was November 27. The database doesn't yet suggest Nibal was released, but it gives a link to her Facebook page with recent posts suggesting she's been free since ... December 1 at the latest, when she started the account and posted the photo the VDC uses. (Unless she's doing that all from detention?) First, there's no mention of the Arabic name Razan ( رزان ) therein, though I didn't check for sister ( شقيقة ), and she'll be one to use synonyms and allusions, so it might take a few tries. The basic (Google-translate-suggested) words for arrest, released, etc. also do not appear. It's mainly poem-type stuff.

Her first post after a maybe four-day arrest suggests she minored in drama: Google translated, it says in part "Here in the cold dark depths of your cell ... O Sun of yearned Damascus ... Here we send prayers of parents ... Mosques and churches ... " She sounds at least vaguely anti-government, but certainly not Salafist. Another post seems to be a note from her father "To my daughter behind bars," consoling her that "no matter how long the darkness of the prison .... Must dawn .. The dawn of freedom days (Liban/Yban = يبان = ? ) It seems "the darkness of the prison" was four days and then she was out and on Facebook, while the "dawn of freedom" they seem to speak of remains elusive. Razan Zaitouneh, no apparent relation, was gotten to first by those who'd overthrow Nibal's captors and burn down the churches, it seems. If so, she may not be so fortunate. --Caustic Logic (talk) 11:15, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

Web hosting?
I was wondering how the abductions would effect the day-to-day operations of the center. There seems to be little of no effect, the web site is still up, weekly reports are still appearing. Apparently all this manual work is done somewhere outside Syria.

I checked the IP-address. From where I sit, www.vdc-sy.info is served from IP-address 62.102.150.141 in Sweden. Data for the IP-address say it is used by "Media Frontiers ApS".

From the Media Frontiers web site I read:
 * ''The goal of Media Frontiers is to contribute to a global context in which online news media and civil society organisations can positively impact on reducing human insecurity and promoting democratic development. To realise this Media Frontiers supports news media and civil society organisations in achieving operational and financial sustainability through the provision of specialised services.

Also on the front page I read:
 * Soros provides core funding for Media Frontiers
 * ''The Open Society Foundations (OSF), created by George Soros to build vibrant and tolerant democracies whose governments are accountable to their citizens, has provided core funding to Media Frontiers.

Makes me wonder: are we not part of civil society? Are we not about "reducing human insecurity?" Are we not asking for accountability from governments? Why do WE not use Media Frontiers to host our work? (Why do we use a crappy platform best suited for writing about videogames and Pokémon?)

The answer lies in the Soros definition of Civil Society. It definitively does not mean us! In the Open Society Foundations (OSF) vocabulary "Civil Society" is just another form of weaponized nonviolence in the target nations and a tool of capitalist oppression in the developed world. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 15:58, 4 January 2014 (UTC)