As the 11,000 photos of victims killed in Syria’s prisons — brought out by a military photographer in January 2014 — are circulated, families and friends are beginning to identify those whom they knew.

Syrian journalist Mousa Alomar writes a tribute to one of the slain, Jordanian cab driver Shadi al-Hassan:

They wrote “9151” on his forehead!

There are no tears for him, as he wasn’t a pilot [Mu’az al-Kasasbeh, burnt alive by the Islamic State in early February]. He was just a taxi driver between Amman and Damascus.

Two years ago, Assad’s mukhabarat (intelligence services) abducted him from al-Soumarriyah Station with his white Camry (with Jordanian plates), which he used to support his three children.

His family were then shocked, regrettably, to find a picture of him tortured to death as part of the scandal of the age. There will be no reaction to his death by torture. They didn’t film it, it wasn’t at the hands of extremists — just monsters — and his name wasn’t Mu’az.

May God grant patience to [his] mother’s heart.

SHADI AL-HASSAN DECEASED