The press release issued last week by Hassan Soufan, a member of the Civil Peace Committee, was intended to defuse public outrage over the release of several former regime figures accused of war crimes. At first, it was met with cautious optimism. Many Syrians saw it as a long-overdue gesture of transparency—an indication that the transitional government might finally be responding to demands for clarity on its murky stance toward justice and accountability.
But that optimism quickly faded. Instead of easing tensions, Soufan’s remarks ignited public anger and confirmed long-standing fears. His defence of the decision to release former regime officers—without trial, explanation, or legal review—was widely seen as evidence that justice is being sacrificed for political convenience. As trust in official processes erodes, so too does the risk of citizens turning to vigilante justice—a path that threatens not only civil peace, but the very possibility of a credible, lawful transition.
Civil peace over justice?
At a press conference at the Ministry of Information in Damascus, Hassan Soufan laid out the committee’s stance: civil peace, he argued, must be the cornerstone of national stability. He cautioned that transitional justice should not devolve into a sweeping campaign of prosecutions, but instead focus on holding “masterminds and major perpetrators” accountable—those directly responsible for grave crimes, rather than individuals merely affiliated with the former regime. In principle, this mirrors international norms in transitional justice. In practice, however, both the government’s actions and Soufan’s defence of them have sharply undermined that framework.
The release of figures like Fadi Saqr—former head of the National Defence Forces and widely believed to have led violent crackdowns—was justified on the grounds that such individuals had “played a positive role” in reducing bloodshed. But this justification, offered without transparency or legal scrutiny, exposed a dangerous precedent: that so-called civil peace can be secured by pardoning those accused of serious crimes, as long as they serve a political purpose.
Soufan characterised these decisions as “imperfect but necessary,” describing them as pragmatic steps required to stabilise a delicate transition. But for many Syrians—especially families of victims—these words rang hollow. Rather than reconciliation, the releases felt like erasure: a bypassing of truth, justice, and accountability in favour of political convenience.