By Tariq Alhomayed
First conference for the Syrian opposition leaders convened in Damascus in June (Reuters)
Anyone
following Syrian affairs would have to stop and take note of the statement
issued by the recent Syrian opposition conference held near Damascus, and
attended by nearly 300 members of the internal opposition. The statement
included language that the al-Assad regime is not used to, and we are certainly
not used to hearing from a conference held within Syria itself!
The
closing statement of the opposition conference, held in the town of Helbon in
the outskirts of Damascus, said that “the decisive factor in achieving national
democratic change, which entails overthrowing the corrupt, authoritarian,
security regime, is the continuation of the Syrian people’s peaceful
revolution”. The statement continued “therefore, the conference calls on all
powers and actors involved, as well as their friends and their supporters, to
continue to engage in the [the revolution] and provide all forms of support, so
as to help it continue until the objectives of the Syrian people have been
achieved, in terms of freedom, dignity, and democracy”.
It
is hard to imagine that the al-Assad regime could accept such language,
especially when the regime is described by the internal conference with terms
such as “authoritarian” and “corrupt”, and likewise the calls for more to join
the revolution and continue it. It is strange of course that the conference was
held inside Syria, and that the opposition members were able to issue a
statement without being attacked by the al-Assad regime’s Shabiha, or the
conference being stormed by the security forces.
Thus,
the question that comes to mind is: has the al-Assad regime become exhausted
and hence unable to pursue the participants in the internal opposition
conference, or did the regime allow them to meet in order to achieve its own
private goals?
Indicators
suggest the most plausible answer is that the al-Assad regime deliberately
turned a blind eye to the opposition conference held just outside Damascus,
even though it released a statement calling for the continuation of the
revolution and the need to overthrow the corrupt and authoritarian regime, in
order to send a message to Moscow that the al-Assad regime is giving the
internal Syrian opposition an opportunity to mobilize, contrary to what others
have said, and that it is not oppressing and killing everyone. Will the
al-Assad regime’s tricks help it to secure Moscow’s position? The short answer
is no. Bashar al-Assad’s regime has burned all its bridges with the Syrian
people, and the Syrian revolution today has reached a point of no return. The
Syrians are no longer afraid of the al-Assad police regime, which used to
intimidate the Syrian youth with its authority. Now young school students are
burning pictures of Bashar al-Assad and Baath party publications, and chanting
slogans which no one expected to hear being repeated in public on a daily
basis. The Syrians have even burned the Russian flag.
Thus,
regardless of the multitude of Syrian opposition conferences, internally or
externally, and whether the al-Assad regime has a hand in them or not, the
reality is that Syria has changed, and more changes are coming, whether today
or tomorrow. The al-Assad regime today is becoming more powerless; it is now
being challenged by school students. The current state of affairs has become a
reality that all but a few inside Syria are aware of, specifically the al-Assad
regime and its followers. It seems that they are unable to hear anything, with
their bullets drowning out all sounds around them.
-This commentary was published in Asharq al-Awsat on 20/09/2011
-Tariq Alhomayed is the editor-in-chief of Ashar al-Awsat
-Tariq Alhomayed is the editor-in-chief of Ashar al-Awsat
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