Ayesha Roscoe
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I mean, this must have been beyond devastating for the families who would have held on hope that they would see their father, their daughter, their son. And, you know, they had all this excitement that the regime failed and they don't find that loved one and they still don't know what happened.
So, I mean, what happened to those prisoners?
So, I mean, what happened to those prisoners?
So, I mean, what happened to those prisoners?
I mean, what these men are describing is unimaginable. How does their testimony match with what we already know about the killings in Sednaya?
I mean, what these men are describing is unimaginable. How does their testimony match with what we already know about the killings in Sednaya?
I mean, what these men are describing is unimaginable. How does their testimony match with what we already know about the killings in Sednaya?
So with all of this evidence of mass killings, I imagine that grieving families want to know at the very least, Where are the bodies of their loved ones? Exactly, Aisha.
So with all of this evidence of mass killings, I imagine that grieving families want to know at the very least, Where are the bodies of their loved ones? Exactly, Aisha.
So with all of this evidence of mass killings, I imagine that grieving families want to know at the very least, Where are the bodies of their loved ones? Exactly, Aisha.
And that's when we met the excavator driver. When we come back, the excavator driver.
And that's when we met the excavator driver. When we come back, the excavator driver.
And that's when we met the excavator driver. When we come back, the excavator driver.
We're back with NPR's Ruth Sherlock, who's been covering the revelation that many thousands of Syrians killed by the Assad regime wound up in mass graves. So, Ruth, you wanted to report on the graves, but it couldn't have been easy to find people willing to talk at this point.
We're back with NPR's Ruth Sherlock, who's been covering the revelation that many thousands of Syrians killed by the Assad regime wound up in mass graves. So, Ruth, you wanted to report on the graves, but it couldn't have been easy to find people willing to talk at this point.
We're back with NPR's Ruth Sherlock, who's been covering the revelation that many thousands of Syrians killed by the Assad regime wound up in mass graves. So, Ruth, you wanted to report on the graves, but it couldn't have been easy to find people willing to talk at this point.
That is a lot to come to terms with for everyone, for those who had family members who were killed, as well as those who played a part in this machinery of death. There's so much being uncovered right now, but I have to think that there is so much that we still don't know, right? That's right.
That is a lot to come to terms with for everyone, for those who had family members who were killed, as well as those who played a part in this machinery of death. There's so much being uncovered right now, but I have to think that there is so much that we still don't know, right? That's right.
That is a lot to come to terms with for everyone, for those who had family members who were killed, as well as those who played a part in this machinery of death. There's so much being uncovered right now, but I have to think that there is so much that we still don't know, right? That's right.
Well, I mean, that's the big question going forward. Like, what does justice look like for Syria? And who might be held accountable?