What a landmark conviction for Syrian war crimes means for victims' relatives and international justice
A former Syrian colonel, Anwar Raslan, was found guilty by a German court of overseeing torture at a notorious detention centre in Damascus.
On Thursday, a former Syrian colonel in Bashar al-Assad's forces was convicted in a court in Germany for crimes against humanity.
Anwar Raslan was sentenced to life in prison for overseeing the murder of at least 27 people and the torture of at least 4000 in a Damascus prison. The case marks the world's first criminal prosecution of state-sponsored torture in Syria.
Today, we hear from Wafa Ali Mustafa, the daughter of one man believed to be forcibly disappeared by the Syrian regime, and Sara Kayyali, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch who has been investigating human rights abuses in Syria, who says while this conviction is important, "justice doesn't start and end in European courts."