Syrian victims await the outcome of a landmark torture trial.

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Koblenz is a city in the German state of Koblenz. Victims and human rights activists in Syria are awaiting the outcome of the world’s first criminal trial on state-sponsored torture in the war-torn country.

On Thursday, almost two years after German federal prosecutors detained the main defendant, the verdict will be delivered down at a court in Koblenz, a city in southwestern Germany.

Former Syrian colonel Anwar Raslan, 58, is the highest-ranking former government official to be convicted for atrocities committed in Syria. He sought asylum in Germany in 2014.

Prosecutors allege that he was involved in crimes against humanity.

Despite the fact that Raslan was not specifically charged of torturing or killing anyone, they claim he ran a branch of Syria’s notorious secret agency, Branch 251, in Damascus, and its nearby prison in 2011 and 2012 before defecting and fleeing the country.

As a result, they say Raslan was responsible for the torture of at least 4,000 people, sexual assault and at least 30 deaths due to ill-treatment at Branch 251 during that period.

The German federal prosecutor has called for Raslan to get a life sentence.

Wassim Mukdad, a survivor of Branch 251 who gave evidence, said during an online press conference in Berlin on Monday: “We want some proof that our suffering counted for something. I hope that me, and a lot of others, were able to give a voice to those who couldn’t share their stories.”

Eyad al-Gharib, a former Syrian intelligence officer who was lower in rank, is also a defendant. He arrived in Germany as an asylum seeker in 2018 and is alleged to have detained more than a dozen protesters in 2011 and delivered them to Branch 251, where they were tortured.

Since the trial began in April 2020, the Higher Regional Court in Koblenz has held 106 hearings, with more than 80 witnesses from around Germany and Europe giving evidence.

The evidence given by witnesses – on torture, threats and sexual abuse, as well as inhumane prison conditions – made for harrowing listening.

The case also marks the first time a trial included the so-called Caesar photos.

In 2013, a Syrian military defector codenamed Caesar, provided more than 53,000 pictures showing his government’s bureaucratic efforts to document deaths in its prisons.

According to Eric Witte, a senior project manager with the Open Society Justice Initiative, which supported several witnesses in the case, the trial has international significance for several reasons.

First, it reminds the world of “the brutality of the al-Assad regime and some of the most horrific atrocities of our time,” he told Al Jazeera.“It’s also important to the Syrians, who participated in the trial as witnesses, and those who were involved in painstaking efforts, to document the systematic nature of these crimes.”Germany is able to prosecute crimes that took place in Syria due to a legal principle known as “universal jurisdiction”.This means German police and prosecutors may bring cases before local courts, regardless of where crimes were committed.This means German police and prosecutors may bring cases before local courts, regardless of where crimes were committed.

‘Learning experience’

TRIAL International, a Switzerland-based organisation fighting against impunity for international crimes, says universal jurisdiction.In 2015, it recorded three trials using universal jurisdiction. Today there are 30 ongoing trials.

As the first of its kind, the Koblenz case has been a test run for investigators and prosecutors, said Patrick Kroker, senior legal adviser with the European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR), and who has been supporting nine Syrian witnesses.

“It’s a learning experience. And although the verdict is obviously not binding on any other [universal jurisdiction] cases, it will be noticed,” he said.In Germany, a defendant who receives a life sentence can usually expect to leave jail after 15 years. However, in exceptional circumstances some defendants may not be released on probation, a spokesperson from the Koblenz court told Al Jazeera.

In their final arguments last week, Raslan’s state-appointed lawyers described the trial as “political”.They say their client has never tortured anybody personally and had actually tried to help arrested opposition activists – and argue that he be freed. In a final, personal statement given last Thursday, Raslan said he was ready to accept German justice.

After Thursday’s verdict, the court will hear an explanation for the decision. A jail sentence is likely; ECCHR lawyer Kroker suggested it might be 20 years. An eventual appeal is also probable.