Hostage envoy: Syria’s vast secret prison network complicates efforts to find Austin Tice

 

A Syrian man inspects cells at the prison of Saydnaya, north of Damascus, on Dec. 16, 2024. The U.S. government suspects Syria ran 40 or more secret prisons, making it difficult to find information on missing U.S. journalist Austin Tice.

A network of secret prisons run by the former Syrian government is more extensive than the U.S. had realized, and is complicating efforts to find American journalist Austin Tice, the U.S. hostage envoy said Friday.

The U.S. government initially estimated Syria had around 10 to 20 secret prisons, but there may be 40 or more, the chief envoy for hostage negotiations Roger Carstens told reporters Friday, following a brief trip to the Syrian capital, Damascus.

“I’ve been rather amazed at the amount of secret prisons that Assad seems to have amassed,” Carstens said, referring to former President Bashar al-Assad. “They’re in little clusters at times. Sometimes they’re in the far reaches of Damascus.”

The scale of the prison network has made it harder to locate Tice, according to Carstens.








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Assad downfall comes as family of American journalist held captive in Syria confirms he is alive and well




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