Turkish premier: Syrian regime weaker every day
 
 
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23 May 2013 Thursday
 
 
 
 
 
 

Turkish premier: Syrian regime weaker every day

(Photo: AA)
6 May 2012 /TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH AP
President Bashar al-Assad's grip on Syria is getting weaker by the day and “victory is close,” Turkey's prime minister said on Sunday in an address to thousands of cheering Syrians who have fled Assad's brutal crackdown on an anti-regime uprising.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's cross-border taunt during a rare visit to a refugee camp, delivered while standing atop a bus and protected by snipers on rooftops, came a day before Syria was to hold parliamentary elections.

The regime has portrayed the vote for a 250-member parliament as a sign of its willingness to carry out democratic reforms. Syria's opposition dismissed the election Sunday as a cynical attempt to salvage Assad's tattered legitimacy and asked voters to stay away.

Assad's opponents say elections cannot be held under the threat of gunfire. Activists said at least five people were killed by army gunfire on Sunday. In late March, the UN said 9,000 people have been killed during the conflict, now in its fourteenth month.

"We think the elections have no credibility at all in the middle of a situation where the regime is killing the population," said Bassma Kodmani, a spokeswoman for the Syrian National Council, the main opposition group. "It is an insult to the democratic process."

An April 12 truce that was part of a peace plan for Syria written by UN-Arab League special envoy Kofi Annan has failed to take hold. Even so, the international community has not declared Annan's plan a failure, perhaps in part because it can't agree on an alternative.

UN officials hope a wider deployment of up to 300 international truce monitors will gradually calm the situation. About 40 observers are currently in Syria.

UN observers visited the towns of Zabadani and Dael on Sunday, and regime forces fired randomly into Dael after they left, wounding three people, said Adel, a local activist.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an activist group, said four people were killed by regime gunfire in the city of Homs and a fifth in an arrest raid in the capital of Damascus.

Western powers and their allies in the region, including Turkey, want Assad to step down, but are for now unwilling to use force against him. Assad allies Russia and China are expected to shield the regime from harsher diplomatic sanctions.

Despite the deadlock, Erdoğan delivered a hopeful speech Sunday to thousands of Syrian refugees being sheltered by Turkey.

"Bashar is losing blood day by day," Erdoğan told a crowd at a camp near the town of Kilis, just across from Syria. "Sooner or later, those who have oppressed our Syrian brothers will be called to account before their nation. Your victory is close."

Turkey hosts around 23,000 Syrian refugees, who live in several tent camps along the border.

Erdoğan also announced the intention of the Turkish government to increase the total number of container homes which are used at the camps in anticipation of more refugees, the flow of which the prime minister said had “gained momentum after the attacks made by the Syrian military on cities near the border with our country.”

The speech also acknowledged the growing role of international aid agencies in providing for refugees, a job which the Turkish government has insisted on managing unilaterally in months past. “We're undertaking close cooperation with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,” Erdoğan stated.

The camp Erdoğan visited houses more than 9,500 refugees. Two were killed there by cross-border fire from Syria last month. It is the most organized of the camps and looks like a small town with wide streets, soup kitchens, a health clinic and even a makeshift barber shop.

Back across the border, the regime was preparing for parliamentary voting despite the boycott calls from the opposition.

Monday's elections come three months after the adoption of a new constitution that allows the formation of political parties to compete with Assad's ruling Baath party and limits a president to two seven-year terms. Assad succeeded his father, and the two have been in power for a total of 42 years.

Opposition leaders said any reforms without their input are a farce.

"We are against these elections because they don't have any of the characteristics of free elections," said Haytham Manna, head of the National Coordination Body for Democratic Change in Syria, a group that represents activists in Syria and in exile. Manna spoke from Brussels.

In Syria, anti-regime activists also said they rejected the vote and had seen little government preparation for elections in some opposition areas.

In Dael, a southern town, residents prevented people from putting up election posters and instead posted photos of the 20 people from the city who have been killed in the uprising.

"They are our candidates for Parliament," said Adel, the local activist, referring to the dead. He declined to give his full name for fear of retribution.

Another activist, Fares Mohammed, from the town of Zabadani northwest of Damascus, said residents there would hold a general strike to protest the elections.

"Everyone here rejects the elections," he said by phone.

In Damascus, where support for the regime still runs strong, some said they hoped the election would lead to promised reforms.

"This Parliament will be different from the previous one due to the increase in the number of the participating parties and the new constitution," said Rabea al-Shaallan, a housewife and a mother of three.

In February, state media said 57 percent of nearly 15 million eligible voters turned out for the referendum on the constitution. The figures were impossible to verify, and opposition activists say they believe many participated out of fear.

Throughout the uprising, key constituencies have continued to support Assad, including religious minorities such as Christians and Alawites, who fear a takeover by Syria's Sunni Muslim majority. The Assads are Alawites, followers of an offshoot of Shiite Islam, as are many members of the ruling elite.

 
COMMENTS
@Deniz, you obviously like to see a nation to address one issue at a time rather than many. Your focus just on the economy to take on more responsibility is shortsighted and ignorant. Turkey has to take interest in its region or neighbourhood otherwise others (like PKK, IRAN and Israel) will capatil...
Senol
If Mr. Erdogan is wanting to improve Turkey's relations with Israel he should be getting more aggressive with Syria and Iran.
Ramesh
The PM is becoming more and more Like Assad too. His hubris is contributing to more killing. He is sectarian and he thinks only Assad is. He must be humbled by voting his party to a minority status... God willing.
Umar
Esteemed PM would be well advised not to meddle into this civil war and burn more than his fingers by doing so. Funny that he again plays the "Muslim card" with his strange hint to on what side "God" is supposed to be. God, if there is one, dear PM, does not take sides , especially not in mutual mur...
migo
As a person who voted for AKP in last elections I really really feel disapointed in regard of failed policies of AKP, specially the foreign policy... Our GDP per capita is around 10.000 dollars and we are trying to meddle in everyones business. When our GDP per capita is around 30.000 dollars I wou...
Deniz
Do Turks do anything else besides talking? your insignificant drivel isn't saving lives in Syria. Just saying
rekon
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