Monday, October 14, 2013

Syrian Cartoonist Akram Raslan Reported Slain


From Cartoonists Rights Network: Syrian cartoonist Akram Raslan is reportedly dead.

According to unconfirmed reports, Mr. Raslan was put on secret trial in Syria on July 26, 2013, along with other prisoners of conscience (fellow journalists, artists and other intellectuals). Mr. Raslan was subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment, but, then was taken away from the others and executed by the Deputy Vice President for Security Affairs in Syria, Mohammed Nassaf Kheir Bek. He is buried in a mass grave near Damascus.

Mr. Raslan, who had been drawing cartoons about the ruthlessness of president  president Bashir al-Assad, was "disappeared" from the newspaper offices where he worked about nine months ago. He was incarcerated in a Syrian prison. During that time, he received the Cartoonist Rights Network International's 13th annual Award for Courage in Editorial Cartooning.

"As Mark Twain once said, 'against the assault of laughter, nothing can stand.' The tyrant might be able to call out an army to quell a rebellion in the streets, but against his own people laughing at him, there’s no defense. The power of the pen is nowhere more powerful than in the hands of a daring cartoonist. 
"Akram Raslan knew the risks when he started drawing president Bashir al-Assad as a ruthless dictator. Two years ago, another Syrian cartoonist, Ali Ferzat, was kidnapped, driven to the outskirts of Damascus and brutally assaulted because of the growing popularity of his cartoons criticizing Assad. As the goons were finishing their work they broke his fingers, telling him that his broken hands would assure he never drew another cartoon embarrassing the big boss. 
"When this attack became public, political cartoonists and journalists all over the world responded with an unprecedented flood of anti-Assad cartoons, editorials and newspaper articles. The regime paid a heavy public relations price for the attack on Ferzat. This time, instead of an extrajudicial beating during the dark of night, the regime chose to trump up charges of sedition against the cartoonist. The only evidence against him will be the cartoons he has drawn that embarrass Bashir al-Assad and his minions.


My thanks to Bado for alerting me to this story. 

1 comment:

The Spine said...

Very sorry to hear this terrible news. At times like this I wish I could believe that the pen really is mightier than the sword but that is so rarely ever true.