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Intelligence quotient: Syrian service blamed for violence

Published time: November 01, 2011 05:42
Edited time: November 01, 2011 22:56
Syrian regime supporters carry pictures of President Bashar al-Assad during a protest in the Nabaa neighborhood of Beirut (AFP Photo / Anwar Amro)
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Syrian authorities and an Arab League committee have reached a final agreement, according to Syrian state TV reports on Tuesday. The Arab League has demanded that tanks are pulled off the streets and that a dialogue is opened with the opposition.

­However, the Arab League has said that there’s been no official response yet from the Syrian side regarding the proposed plan to end violence in the country.

Earlier, President Assad said he would only talk to parties that had no links with“foreign powers or terrorism.”

With the protests, government crackdowns and violence raging in parts of Syria, the capital, Damascus, is still largely sheltered from them. But beneath the calm, many will remind you that in Syria walls most certainly have ears.

The “Mukhabarat”, the country’s intelligence service, has political clout in Syria. That is hardly a state secret. And since the unrest began in March, protestors have accused them of violent interrogations.

“We took to the street and started screaming ‘Allahu Akbar’ calling for the toppling of the regime. I was then chased and arrested by security forces,” one of the protesters told RT. “In a very tiny cell they beat me severely, damaging my back and knee. I was tortured with electric sticks. They accused us of receiving money for taking to the streets and being agents for America and Israel. After 48 hours of detention and torture, they took all my money and belongings, and threw me in the street.”

Serene Nkhuri is a lawyer specializing on detention cases. She says the influence of the security police extends even into the courtroom.

“We have three authorities in the country: the legal authority, the legislative, and the executive, but it is the security police who make the real decisions,” she explains. “The court judge waits for their decision and I feel sorry for the judge because he is not independent.”

Nkhuri believes this constant state of fear is thanks to decades of living under the Emergency Law – in place since 1963. In 2011, Assad repealed it in an effort to appease anti-regime protestors.

Shukri, who has worked for the Mukhabarat for 27 years, sustained gunshot wounds in what he says was an ambush by a group of terrorists. RT asked him about people’s fear of the Mukhabarat and accusations that they are behind the violence, detentions and torture.

“This is the wrong idea,” he insists. “We are protecting our people, but the terrorists shoot civilians and shoot us and then accuse security forces of doing such things. Accusations that we instill fear are also wrong. If this person has political activity without any intention of harming the country of conspiring against it, then he is free to do this and no one will chase him. But if he has links with terrorists and works against the country, naturally, he would be brought to justice.”

We posed the same questions to Syria’s Deputy Foreign Minister Faysal Mekdad.

“It depends on the people you talk to,” was his response. “Those who fear are people who take part in illegal activities, or carry arms, or put themselves in suspicious ways.”

When 20 per cent of the population is rumored to be in the intelligence service, it is no wonder, many prefer to keep their voices down in the light of day. But within a crowd, that fear is temporarily forgotten.

“Yes, I shall take to the street again and again. I shall raise my voice and fear nothing and no one,” the same protestor went on to explain. “We want freedom of expression but we get nothing. Only [President] Bashar al-Assad and his security men enjoy that. As for us, we are nothing. Why is that?”

Meanwhile, Assad's security forces are said to have killed some 3,000 people over the last eight months, with the death toll still mounting.

Comments (3)

Rightful rulers! 01.11.2011 13:58

Why isn't RT reporting that Syria is putting out landmines to prevent the opposition and civilians to escape.... Using landmines during peace time or even war times is against all international conventions. 
@African Child..... The fact is that NATO has no intentions of intervening in Syria. NATO isn't responsible for any executions or mass deaths of civilians. Give me some links to where you get your information from?.... They found mass graves in Tripoli of people opposed to Gaddafi, the war is now over and hopefully there can be a peaceful democratization of the country. It is apparently not possible that people here stop their propaganda bs.... The fact is that NATO didn't bomb areas that there were civilians and if there were any then Gaddafi used them as human shields to cover his weapons which is also a war crime...   

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African Child 01.11.2011 12:12

Is it not high time the white race became content with their own corner of planet earth. In Africa we had our own form of democracy similar to that of the old greek empire meeting regularly in their acropolis which we call village squares. If western type democracy is what the people in the Middle East wants then the Iraqis and Afghans will be throwing rose petals on their American 'liberators'. The fact is that NATO is going down (see the state of their economies) and doesnt want to go down alone, they are desperate for resources to shore up their crumbling empires and would want to continue to destroy other nations for them to stay afloat. Patriotic Syrians would rather have a bad Assad as a dictator and continue a dialogue process with him for change than see thousands of their fellow citizens killed in a foreign military intervention wi th their country bombed back to stone age like Libya that is still smoking. Allow Syrians to solve their problems in other to avoid a repeat of another Libya scenario where before NATO intervention only 210 people died on both sides of pro and anti Gaddafi, but after NATO intervened 60,000 protected civilians are dead and the battle is still raging.

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centurypatriot 01.11.2011 10:44

Leave Syria to handle her own internal problem! Arab League is nothing but an extension and lapdog of the bloody West and NATO so leave Syria alone!! Instead of screwing around with other countries, why dont US and EU try to overcome  their own economic crisis!!

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