Hussein Assi | |||
Dark Tunnel in Syria Will Finally See End
Member of the national council of media and information Ibrahim Awad stressed that the Syrian crisis was close to an end and that Syrians would very soon witness the end of the dark tunnel, and expressed belief the crisis would not last very long despite everything. In an exclusive interview with Al-Manar Website, Awad said that the scene of the July 2006 war was repeating itself in Syria, with some change in details. He noted that the whole world was standing against Syria and besieging the Syrian regime, just like the whole world sought to get rid of the Resistance throughout the July war. He expressed belief that victory would be at the side of the regime which has rejected the American plots. While stressing there was not a unified Syrian opposition and saying that there were rather oppositions in Syria, he noted that the newly formed National Council did not make any change in this regard. He said he did not find in any opposition figure a potential alternative to the current regime. He renewed calls to give the Syrian leadership further time to achieve reforms, given that the reform process cannot be finalized in twenty-four hours. ASSAD RESPONDED TO DEMANDS… BUT! On Sunday, Syrian Grand Mufti Sheikh Ahmed Badreddin Hassoun’s son and history professor Mohammed al-Omar were killed by gunfire from a group of armed terrorists. They were attacked while traveling in the professor's car on the Aleppo-Idlib road in northwest Syria. Awad recalled that the Syrian leadership has responded to reform demands a few months ago and even lifted the emergency law, despite the fact that similar crises usually force the regimes to impose the emergency law, instead of lifting it. “Yet, President Bashar Assad wanted to show good will, and therefore lifted the emergency law, and worked to achieve other reforms, alongside the government,” he said. BETWEEN SYRIA’S COLLAPSE AND NORMALIZATION While remarking that Syria was the only remaining state in the region which had the courage to refuse the American conditions, Awad warned that the collapse of such resistant regime would facilitate the implementation of the American plan and therefore, would lead to the normalization of ties with the Zionist entity. He also expressed regret that some so-called Arab regimes were actually seeking reconciliation with the enemy. REFORM NEEDS TIME Syrian so-called opposition movements announced the formation of a "historic" united front against President Bashar Assad's regime at a meeting in Turkey on Sunday. Among those represented in the Damascus Declaration were former parliamentarian Riad Seif, seen as possibly playing a leadership role if Assad were to fall, and Riad al-Turk, Syria’s top dissident. While saying he respected all those who called for reform and those who represented a peaceful opposition, Awad said he did not find, until now, in any opposition figure a potential alternative to the current Syrian leadership. He said the regime admitted there was some illness in some place, but launched reforms to deal with it. He noted that reform needed time and “could not happen in twenty-four hours.” He said that preparing a lunch or dinner banquet required preparations for many days. “What about the reform process? It needs more time, without doubt.” JULY WAR TAKING PLACE IN SYRIA Awad stressed that the same scene was repeating itself in Syria, despite some change in details. He noted that the whole world was seeking to weaken the Syrian regime in order to overthrow it. “The whole world is besieging and isolating the Syrian regime, just like they did with the Resistance in 2006, when they were seeking to get rid of it. However, just like they failed in 2006, they will fail in 2011.” CRISIS CLOSE TO END Asked whether the crisis would last too long before seeing an end, Awad said he did not see this scenario possible anymore. He noted that, one month ago, he was scared the crisis would take a lot of time. “However, I can assert now that the Syrian crisis has approached its end, and the dark tunnel faced by the Syrians nowadays is close to this end,” he concluded. | |||
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