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Dia Hadid

πŸ‘€ Speaker
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753 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

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Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

As the months went on, Shabawi watched more mothers come into the cell and she watched them have their children snatched away, including newborn babies. She says pregnant women detained alongside her were taken to hospital when they went into labour. After birth, the women were returned to their lock-up with their babies.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

They were allowed to nurse them for a few weeks and then the guards took the babies away. It was a fate spare we feared as well because when she was arrested with Heber, her two-year-old, she was also a few weeks pregnant. But after almost eight months of detainment and weeks before she was due to give birth, she was finally sentenced and she was shifted to a notorious prison called Adra.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

They were allowed to nurse them for a few weeks and then the guards took the babies away. It was a fate spare we feared as well because when she was arrested with Heber, her two-year-old, she was also a few weeks pregnant. But after almost eight months of detainment and weeks before she was due to give birth, she was finally sentenced and she was shifted to a notorious prison called Adra.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

They were allowed to nurse them for a few weeks and then the guards took the babies away. It was a fate spare we feared as well because when she was arrested with Heber, her two-year-old, she was also a few weeks pregnant. But after almost eight months of detainment and weeks before she was due to give birth, she was finally sentenced and she was shifted to a notorious prison called Adra.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

She still doesn't know what her crime was, but in prison she was told she'd be released soon and she was given one phone call. So she called her sister and asked if somebody could pick her up and she told her sister, Heva isn't with me. I don't know where she is.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

She still doesn't know what her crime was, but in prison she was told she'd be released soon and she was given one phone call. So she called her sister and asked if somebody could pick her up and she told her sister, Heva isn't with me. I don't know where she is.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

She still doesn't know what her crime was, but in prison she was told she'd be released soon and she was given one phone call. So she called her sister and asked if somebody could pick her up and she told her sister, Heva isn't with me. I don't know where she is.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

Shbawi returned to her village heavily pregnant. Her husband by that point had abandoned her and married another woman. This happened a lot to women who'd been detained. When they were freed, they weren't greeted as heroes. They often faced immense stigma over the possibility that they'd been sexually assaulted while confined.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

Shbawi returned to her village heavily pregnant. Her husband by that point had abandoned her and married another woman. This happened a lot to women who'd been detained. When they were freed, they weren't greeted as heroes. They often faced immense stigma over the possibility that they'd been sexually assaulted while confined.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

Shbawi returned to her village heavily pregnant. Her husband by that point had abandoned her and married another woman. This happened a lot to women who'd been detained. When they were freed, they weren't greeted as heroes. They often faced immense stigma over the possibility that they'd been sexually assaulted while confined.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

Shbawi jokes that it would have been better if her husband had died in a Syrian prison so she could tell their kids that he was a martyr. It was Shbawi's brother who began the search for Heba. He heard that she might be in an orphanage, and so he went banging on their doors across Damascus.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

Shbawi jokes that it would have been better if her husband had died in a Syrian prison so she could tell their kids that he was a martyr. It was Shbawi's brother who began the search for Heba. He heard that she might be in an orphanage, and so he went banging on their doors across Damascus.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

Shbawi jokes that it would have been better if her husband had died in a Syrian prison so she could tell their kids that he was a martyr. It was Shbawi's brother who began the search for Heba. He heard that she might be in an orphanage, and so he went banging on their doors across Damascus.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

And after three months of running around, the intelligence agency that had detained Shbawi finally returned Heba to him. Shbawi was in their village waiting. She'd just given birth and was recovering. And then they arrived. She says when she saw her daughter, their reunion was bittersweet. Shbaoui says she came to her girl and asked her, do you remember me? And Heba replied, mama.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

And after three months of running around, the intelligence agency that had detained Shbawi finally returned Heba to him. Shbawi was in their village waiting. She'd just given birth and was recovering. And then they arrived. She says when she saw her daughter, their reunion was bittersweet. Shbaoui says she came to her girl and asked her, do you remember me? And Heba replied, mama.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

And after three months of running around, the intelligence agency that had detained Shbawi finally returned Heba to him. Shbawi was in their village waiting. She'd just given birth and was recovering. And then they arrived. She says when she saw her daughter, their reunion was bittersweet. Shbaoui says she came to her girl and asked her, do you remember me? And Heba replied, mama.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

She says, I hugged her in my arms and I saw her. But as the days wore on, Heba grew distant. She screamed when Shbawi tried to bathe her, feed her, dress her. It was like she blamed her mother for their separation. But Sukaina Shbawi, at least, was one of the lucky ones. Her daughter came back.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

She says, I hugged her in my arms and I saw her. But as the days wore on, Heba grew distant. She screamed when Shbawi tried to bathe her, feed her, dress her. It was like she blamed her mother for their separation. But Sukaina Shbawi, at least, was one of the lucky ones. Her daughter came back.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

She says, I hugged her in my arms and I saw her. But as the days wore on, Heba grew distant. She screamed when Shbawi tried to bathe her, feed her, dress her. It was like she blamed her mother for their separation. But Sukaina Shbawi, at least, was one of the lucky ones. Her daughter came back.

Up First from NPR
Syria's Missing Children

I'm not sure we'll ever be able to get an accurate count, but a respected monitoring group, the Syrian Network for Human Rights, they estimate some 3,700 children remain missing after they were detained during the war by Assad regime forces.