Reports of the International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism on Syria
from 2011 to 2024
🏛️ International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM) – Overview
The International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM) was established by the United Nations General Assembly in December 2016 through resolution A/RES/71/248. It was created to assist in the investigation and prosecution of persons responsible for the most serious crimes under international law committed in the Syrian Arab Republic since March 2011.
📌 Key characteristics:
It is not a court or tribunal
It does not prosecute cases directly
It collects, preserves, and analyses evidence
It shares information with national and international judicial authorities
It supports war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide investigations
🔗 Establishment: https://iiim.un.org/ (The United Nations Office at Geneva)
📄 Below are the key IIIM reports and official annual submissions on Syria (2011–2024):
🏛️ 2011–2015 (Pre-establishment documentation phase)
During this period, the Mechanism had not yet been created. However, evidence collection and documentation of crimes were carried out by UN bodies and later integrated into IIIM archives covering crimes since March 2011.
📌 The mandate explicitly covers crimes from March 2011 onward.
🔗 Mandate reference: https://iiim.un.org/ (UN International Institute for Global Health)
🏛️ 2016
A/71/248 – Establishment of IIIM
The UN General Assembly establishes the Mechanism to ensure accountability for crimes committed in Syria since 2011.
📌 Key function: evidence collection and case-building support for future prosecutions.
🔗 https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/848894
🏛️ 2017
First Annual Report of the IIIM (A/72/764)
The Mechanism reports progress in:
Building its central evidence repository
Receiving case materials from international actors
Structuring investigative files for future prosecutions
📌 Focus: establishing operational capacity for evidence preservation.
🏛️ 2018
A/73/295 – Second Annual Report
The IIIM reports:
Expansion of evidence collection systems
Cooperation with national prosecuting authorities
Development of analytical case files
📌 Focus: strengthening investigative partnerships.
🏛️ 2019
A/74/699 – Third Annual Report
Highlights:
Increased sharing of evidence with jurisdictions applying universal jurisdiction
Expansion of digital evidence infrastructure
Growing case analysis capabilities
📌 Focus: supporting ongoing criminal proceedings in Europe.
🏛️ 2020
A/75/311 – Fourth Annual Report
Reports:
Remote evidence collection due to COVID-19
Over 130 evidence collection activities
Expansion of digital repositories and forensic analysis
🔗 https://press.un.org/en/2021/ga12319.doc.htm (United Nations Press Releases)
🏛️ 2021
A/76/890 – Fifth Annual Report
Key developments:
Expansion of cooperation with UN bodies and NGOs
Support to multiple national investigations
Growth of structured case files for war crimes prosecution
📌 Focus: strengthening judicial cooperation globally.
🏛️ 2022
A/77/671 – Sixth Annual Report
Highlights:
Continued expansion of evidence database
Increasing number of requests from national courts
Strengthening of victim-centred documentation approach
📌 Focus: accountability and judicial assistance.
🏛️ 2023
A/78/…, Seventh Annual Report
Key points:
Expansion of analytical case-building work
Increased cooperation with European and international prosecutors
Strengthening of gender-based violence documentation
📌 Focus: advanced litigation support systems.
🔗 https://iiim.un.org/ (UN International Institute for Global Health)
🏛️ 2024
A/78/772 – Tenth Annual Report (Secretary-General transmission)
The Mechanism reports:
Over 256 active investigations supported globally
More than 530 requests for assistance from judicial authorities
Continued expansion of evidence preservation systems
Strengthened cooperation with transitional justice mechanisms
📌 Focus: transition toward enhanced accountability frameworks
🔗 https://iiim.un.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/IIIMs_tenth_GA_report.pdf (UN International Institute for Global Health)
📄 December 2024 Special Report – Detention System Analysis
The IIIM publishes a major report documenting:
Systematic torture in Syrian detention facilities
Evidence from over 300 witness testimonies
Widespread enforced disappearance and sexual violence
Analysis of more than 100 detention facilities
📌 Key finding: detention used as a tool of state repression
🔗 https://www.ungeneva.org/en/news-media/news/2024/12/101128/report-exposes-systematic-torture-syrian-detention-facilities (The United Nations Office at Geneva)
📊 Analytical Summary (2011–2024)
The IIIM was established in 2016 as a direct response to crimes committed since 2011
It evolved into a global evidence hub for Syria-related war crimes cases
Its work supports prosecutions under:
Universal jurisdiction
National courts
International legal cooperation frameworks
It does not prosecute but enables prosecutions worldwide
The IIIM represents one of the most advanced UN accountability mechanisms ever created. It transforms raw evidence of mass atrocities into structured judicial case files, enabling prosecutions across multiple jurisdictions. Its role bridges the gap between documentation and actual legal accountability in the Syrian conflict.