First public trial after Assad tests justice in the new Syria

Fourteen men stand accused of sectarian killings in the coastal region last March. The credibility of the trial will depend on how the proceedings hold up under public scrutiny.

First public trial after Assad tests justice in the new Syria

On most days, Aleppo’s Palace of Justice is a building Syrians pass without a second glance. But on 18 November, it became the setting for what could be a defining moment in the country’s modern history. Inside, a public trial opened for 14 men accused of taking part in the sectarian bloodshed that swept the coastal region last March. And for the first time in living memory, Syrians watched members of the security forces stand before a livestreamed court to answer for abuses against civilians —a stark break from the impunity that dominated the Assad era.

For a country emerging from half a century of authoritarian rule and more than a decade of conflict, the symbolism alone made the day historic. Syrians saw a courtroom no longer shielded by secrecy. They saw defendants represented by lawyers, able to challenge evidence rather than face outcomes written in interrogation rooms. And they saw a state testing its promise that, after everything Syria has endured, the rule of law—not political loyalty, fear, or force—should shape what comes next.

The credibility of this process will depend not only on the final ruling but on how the proceedings hold up under public scrutiny. Still, the fact that such a trial is taking place—openly, publicly, and with defendants from both sides of the conflict—marks a genuine inflexion point. Whether it becomes the foundation for a new judicial order or remains a symbolic gesture will echo far beyond the coastal towns where the violence erupted.

Trial origins

The trial’s origins lie in the attacks launched by remnants of Assad’s regime against forces of the new Syrian state in March 2025, a confrontation that killed dozens of government security personnel. Transitional forces crushed the rebellion swiftly, but the counter-offensive sparked a wave of retaliatory killings and sectarian attacks across the coastal region. More than 1,400 people were killed, including women and children.

In contrast to the former regime, which routinely denied its own abuses, the transitional authorities publicly acknowledged violations and established a fact-finding commission to reconstruct events and identify perpetrators on all sides. By mid-November, the commission had referred 563 suspects to the judiciary. The 14 selected for the first trial include seven accused of attacking transitional forces and seven accused of killing unarmed civilians while operating under the new security structures.

This dual-track design is intentional. It signals that accountability is not a weapon to be wielded selectively but a principle applied across the board—even to those acting under the authority of the new state. The courtroom underscored this approach. The judge declined to use the term “regime remnants,” traditionally used as a political epithet, and instead emphasised that all defendants were Syrians standing accused under Syrian law. In a moment defined by deep mistrust, this rhetorical shift mattered.

Hearings are scheduled through late December, after which judges will deliberate. But regardless of the verdict’s timeline, the process already marks a departure from the practices that defined the old order.

Delaying accountability for historic crimes carries a domestic price, but prosecuting recent violations offers the government strategic benefits

An important test

The coastal trial is far more than a legal proceeding. It is a public test of the transitional authorities' commitment to transparency, equal treatment, and institutional reform—a test many Syrians have long demanded.

Broadcasting the hearings acknowledges a simple truth: in Syria, justice must be visible to be credible. In a country where coerced confessions and undisclosed trials were once the norm, this level of transparency was a political act in itself.

Equally important is the decision to prosecute members of the new security forces alongside former regime loyalists. For decades, the Syrian state shielded its own personnel from accountability, regardless of the severity of abuses. Breaking with that precedent signals a meaningful shift. Whether the authorities can uphold this standard consistently remains uncertain, but beginning here conveys a clear message.

The trial also matters beyond the coast. In Sweida, still shaken by last summer's killings, families insist that only public accountability can pave the way for reconciliation. If the coastal trials are seen as credible, they could pave the way for a similar process once investigations there conclude, giving communities a rare chance to rebuild trust in a state that has failed them for generations.

Balancing act

Delivering justice in a country emerging from conflict is never straightforward. The trial has already exposed the political, legal, and institutional trade-offs shaping the government's approach.

The decision to prioritise prosecutions for recent violations, those linked to the March 2025 violence, has raised questions among victims of Assad-era crimes. Many expected that the worst perpetrators of decades of detention, torture, and disappearances would be the first to face justice. The fact that many of these individuals still walk free makes the sequencing of accountability feel deeply unsettling.

The authorities are aware of this tension but face structural obstacles. Syria lacks the legal framework needed for comprehensive transitional justice. The current criminal code does not recognise war crimes, crimes against humanity, or enforced disappearances. With no functioning parliament to pass the necessary reforms, the government's tools remain limited.

Politics, however, weighs just as heavily. The transitional authorities fear that sweeping prosecutions of former regime personnel could destabilise an already fragile environment. Over the past months, several high-profile Assad-era figures have enjoyed de facto impunity in the name of preserving civil peace.

Over the past months, several high-profile Assad-era figures have enjoyed de facto impunity in the name of preserving civil peace

Delaying accountability for historic crimes carries a domestic price, but prosecuting recent violations offers the government strategic benefits. As Damascus seeks greater international recognition, showing credible accountability, especially toward its own forces, is used as a diplomatic asset. The timing of the trial, coming shortly after President Sharaa's trip to Washington and as talks in the US Congress on lifting sanctions on Syria reach a critical point, is unlikely to be a coincidence.

To mitigate political fallout, the authorities appear to have opted for a simultaneous prosecution of individuals from both sides of the conflict. This pragmatic approach may blunt criticism among supporters wary of selective justice, but it does little to reassure victims of older atrocities still waiting for meaningful action.

Broader impact

The coastal trial marks Syria's first genuine attempt to build a judicial process that treats all citizens, regardless of affiliation, as equal before the law. Fragile as it is, this promise remains one of the few tools the transitional authorities possess to rebuild public trust and shape a new social contract.

If the proceedings are carried out fairly, they could begin to shift public perceptions of the new state. They could show that the authorities are capable of acknowledging harm, investigating wrongdoing, and holding perpetrators accountable—not selectively, but consistently.

If the process falters, whether by appearing politicised, manipulated, or unjust, it will deepen the cynicism that has shaped Syrian political life for generations. The stakes are extraordinarily high. This trial is not only about what happened on the coast in March 2025; it is about how Syria chooses to define justice after al-Assad, and whether the transition can rest on more than rhetoric.

For now, 18 November stands as a rare moment of possibility. A courtroom door opened, and Syrians looked inside. What happens next will determine whether that door remains open—or closes again, taking with it the fragile promise of a more just and accountable future.

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