Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Syrian rebel leader says will dissolve fallen regime forces, close prisons

Syria's rebel leader Ahmed al-Sharaa said the now-toppled regime security forces will be dissolved, and the country's notorious prisons will also close.

The New Arab Staff & Agencies
12 December, 2024

HTS leader Ahmed al-Sharaa said he would also investigate the regime's chemical weapons depots [Getty/file photo]

Syrian rebel leader Ahmed al-Sharaa told Reuters in a written statement on Wednesday that he would dissolve the security forces of the toppled regime of Bashar al-Assad.

His forces swept across Syria in a lightning offensive that overthrew 50 years of Assad family rule, replacing it with a three-month transitional government of ministers that had been ruling a rebel enclave in Syria's northwest.

The military command affiliated with his group, which is known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, already said they would grant an amnesty to military conscripts.

He would now also "dissolve the security forces of the previous regime and close the notorious prisons," Sharaa said in a statement shared exclusively with Reuters by his office.

Syrians have flocked to the infamous prisons where the Assad regime is estimated to have held tens of thousands of detainees, desperately looking for their loved ones. Some have been released alive, others were identified among the dead and thousands more have not yet been found.

Sharaa, better known by his nom de guerre Abu Mohammed al-Golani, also said he was closely following up on possible chemical weapons depots and coordinating with international organisations to secure them. The group had already announced it would not use those weapons under any circumstances.

He reiterated that he would form a government of technocrats. The current transitional government is set to rule until March 2025, according to a statement by his group.

Earlier, the United States said it welcomed the comments made by the rebel leader about securing potential chemical weapons sites, but would wait to see what actions are taken, the Pentagon said on Wednesday.

"We welcome this type of rhetoric but... actions have to meet words as well," Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh told reporters.

The fall of the Assad regime comes after the HTS rebels captured the capital city of Damascus on Saturday, following the rapid offensive which swept through large swatches of the country, seizing the key cities of Aleppo, Homs and Hama.

New Syria PM says all religious groups’ rights ‘guaranteed’

AFP Damascus
Published on December 12, 2024 

A man waves a Syrian opposition flag at the Citadel of Aleppo in northern Syria, on Wednesday.

Syria’s new prime minister said the alliance that ousted president Bashar al-Assad will “guarantee” the rights of all religious groups and called on the millions who fled the war to return home.
Assad fled Syria after a lightning offensive spearheaded by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) group and its allies, which brought to a spectacular end five decades of brutal rule by his clan.
Syrians across the country and around the world erupted in celebration, after enduring a stifling five decades that saw anyone suspected of dissent thrown into jail or killed.
With Assad’s overthrow plunging Syria into the unknown, its new rulers have sought to assure members of the country’s religious minorities that they will not repress them.
“Precisely because we are Islamic, we will guarantee the rights of all people and all sects in Syria,” said Mohammad al-Bashir, whom the rebels appointed as the transitional head of government.
Asked whether Syria’s new constitution would be Islamic, he told Italian daily Corriere della Sera that “we will clarify all these details during the constituent process”.
Bashir, whose appointment was announced Tuesday, is tasked with heading the multi-ethnic, multi-sectarian country until March 1.
After decades of rule by the Assads. Syrians now face the enormous challenge of charting a new course as they emerge from nearly 14 years of war.
Roaming the opulent Damascus home of Assad, Abu Omar felt a sense of giddy defiance being in the residence of the man he said had long oppressed him.
“I am taking pictures, because I am so happy to be here in the middle of his house,” said the 44-year-old.
“I came for revenge. They oppressed us in incredible ways,” he added.

‘FREE COUNTRY’
The war has killed more than 500,000 people and forced half the population to flee their homes, with six million of them seeking refuge abroad.
In his interview with Corriere della Sera, which was published on Wednesday, Bashir called on Syrians abroad to return to their homeland.
“Mine is an appeal to all Syrians abroad: Syria is now a free country that has earned its pride and dignity. Come back,” he said.
“We must rebuild, be reborn and we need everyone’s help.” He also said that Syria’s new rulers would be willing to work with anyone so long as they did not defend Assad.
“We have no problem with anyone, state, party or sect, who kept their distance from the bloodthirsty Assad regime,” he said.
Assad was propped up by Russia, where he reportedly fled, as well as Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah group.
On Wednesday, the Kremlin said it wanted to see rapid stabilisation in Syria, as it criticised Israel over hundreds of air strikes it conducted on its neighbour over the past two days. “We would like to see the situation in the country stabilised somehow as soon as possible,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
Russia was continuing to discuss the fate of its military infrastructure in the country with Syria’s new leadership, he added.
Iran, meanwhile, upheld its view that Assad’s overthrow was a “product of a joint US-Israeli plot”.
While Assad had faced down protests and an armed rebellion for more than a decade, it was a lightning offensive launched on November 27 that ended up forcing him out of power.
The rebels launched their offensive from northwest Syria on the very same day that a ceasefire took effect in the Israel-Hezbollah war in neighbouring Lebanon.
That war, which killed thousands in Lebanon, saw Israel inflict staggering losses among Hezbollah’s ranks.
Assad’s fall raises the question of how Hezbollah will ever recover, given that it had long relied on Syria as a conduit of weapons and supplies from Iran.
Qatar on Wednesday said it would reopen its embassy in Damascus “soon”, while US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is expected in Turkiye tomorrow to discuss developments in Syria.
Robert Ford, the last US ambassador to Syria, helped spearhead the terrorist designation of HTS in 2012, but said that in the past few years the group has not attacked US or Western targets and has instead fought Al-Qaeda and Islamic State group forces.
Ford also pointed with hope to post-victory statements by rebel chief Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, including welcoming international monitoring of any chemical weapons that are discovered.
“Can you imagine Osama bin Laden saying that?” said Ford, now a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute.
“I’m not saying ‘trust Jolani.’ He’s obviously authoritarian. But I sure as hell want to test him on some of these things,” he added.

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