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23 Dec, 2024 12:50

Kremlin weighs in on Assad divorce rumor

Reports that the former Syrian president’s wife had filed for separation in Russia are not true, spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said
Kremlin weighs in on Assad divorce rumor

Media reports that Asma Assad is seeking a divorce from her husband Bashar, the former president of Syria, within the Russian court system, are not true, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday.

Moscow granted humanitarian asylum to Bashar Assad and his family after his government was toppled by militants earlier this month. Asma Akhras was born in the UK in 1975 and has dual British-Syrian nationality. She and her future husband first met in London, where she had a career at the US-headquartered financial giant J.P. Morgan. They married in 2000, shortly after he took the presidency of Syria on the death of his father, President Hafez Assad.

Rumors about a possible Assad split were published in Turkish and Arab media on Sunday and claim that Asma has filed for divorce in a Russian court, having decided that life in the country does not suit her. The same outlets claimed that Bashar Assad is banned from leaving Moscow and that his personal assets have been frozen by Russian authorities. Peskov’s denial on Monday applied to all aspects of the media coverage.

The 49-year-old had kept a relatively low profile in her capacity as the first lady of Syria. In May, the presidential service announced that she had been diagnosed with leukemia, something of a throwback to her previous bout with cancer, from which she reportedly had a full recovery in 2019.

Some British media claimed that she may now be stripped of her British citizenship and may even face prosecution in her country of birth, for allegedly influencing the policies of her husband.

“[As] a British national, it is important that she faces prosecution if the evidence supports the allegation, and not merely stripped of her citizenship. This is an important process and it is only right that justice is served before an English court,” the British legal group Guernica 37 told Sky News in March.

Western nations have accused Bashar Assad of committing mass atrocities in the context of the Syrian war, which erupted in 2011. US President Joe Biden has called his toppling a “fundamental act of justice,” though he also acknowledged that the forces that have replaced him in power have their own record of abuses.

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