The Turkish Anadolu agency reported the horrific testimonies of Syrian women who were arrested, raped and tortured in the prisons of the Assad regime, which has no sanctity for a child, a minor or an old persons.

"Umm Mohammad" from the Eastern Ghouta, who was arrested by the Syrian regime in 2012 while she was going to work; where she was beaten and her own veil was removed ,and when she objected to that the soldiers raped her, and then put in a prison with seven women saw the effects of torture visible on their faces, as six soldiers were involved in the rape of a girl in the ninth grade, and in front of everyone.

She added that every woman entering Assad's prisons is subjected to harassment, rape and torture "even a woman aged 55 years old was raped" openly.

The detainees in Assad's prisons suffer from another face after they have been released from prison; sometimes their families disown them, as was the case with Umm Muhammad.

Sa'eha al-Baroudi is a mother of two children from the city of Hama, was arrested while traveling with her husband to Lebanon. She was interrogated and tortured for four hours. She was then transferred to the military security branch and her hands were tied behind her. She was blindfolded and put in a cell. 48 hours opened the door, and threw her a piece of bread and 3 pieces of olives.

The authorities removed her veil and uncovered the upper part of her body during interrogation. When she refused the charges, they placed her in a room filled with water and connected to the electricity and hang her on the ceiling her hands were tied and they down her to touch the water connected with the electricity and she blacked out.

Baroudi saw a complete family "the father and mother with their children", as well as 18-year-old women survivors of the Banias massacre before being deported back to the prison known as the "Balloona prison"; the bodies of the dead prisoners were tortured, there are 44 women in one room with no windows.

The number of detainees in Assad's prisons is estimated at hundreds of thousands including men, women, children and elderly people whom the regime rejected to release, although their detention is for flimsy reasons.

The file of detainees remains suspended in the Geneva negotiations and the discussions of Astana. The regime remains stubborn in its refusal to make any concession. The United Nations and the active countries are trying to circumvent the issue by establishing a constitutional committee and amending the constitution.