Rebels brand amnesty offer of Syria’s Assad ‘meaningless’

Share:

Assad wants to be remembered as the man who saved SyriaSyrian President Bashar Assad issued a general amnesty to rebels willing to lay down their arms on Thursday, state media said, but few, if any, were expected to accept the offer, which was widely seen as a ruse.

At about the same time, Russia, Syria’s staunchest ally, announced the creation of safe corridors to allow civilians to leave besieged areas of Aleppo city.

“Whoever bore arms… and had escaped from justice… is pardoned from all punishment when they surrender themselves and their weapons to authorities… within three months,” read the amnesty decree, whose text was published by Syrian state news service SANA.

The edict also offered pardons for anyone ensuring the release of kidnapped and missing people. Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011, thousands have been kidnapped and detained, mostly by forces loyal to Assad but also by the opposition pitted against him.

A spokesman for Ahrar al Sham, a hardline Islamist faction, used one word to describe the offer: “Meaningless,” he said in an interview on social media. He did not give his full name for reasons of security.

“No one will even consider it,” he added.

The amnesty comes as the government declared its complete encirclement of rebel-held areas of Aleppo, Syria’s largest city and one-time industrial powerhouse. Rebel factions have held sway over Aleppo’s eastern neighborhoods since 2012, but the government controls its western areas.

Until recently, the opposition also controlled large swaths of Aleppo countryside areas, allowing aid groups and merchants to ferry supplies from Turkey to the some 300,000 people living in rebel-held parts of the city. It also granted rebel factions a vital passageway to transport men and materiel, and mount attacks on government forces.

But a wide-scale, Russian-backed government campaign has locked down the area. On Wednesday, pro-government forces completed a pincer maneuver northwest and southwest of the city, tightening a siege that has been effectively in place since earlier this month despite repeated counter-offensives by the rebels.

Ali Haydari, Syria’s minister of reconciliation, who is responsible for bringing rebels “back to the bosom of the government,” hailed Assad’s decree as “the most complete amnesty to date.”

“This has been the clearest and most comprehensive pardon we have seen yet, and it involves kidnappers, which wasn’t the case in previous amnesties,” he said in a phone interview from Damascus, the capital, on Thursday. There have been nine such amnesties offered since the beginning of the crisis.

“As long as they are willing to lay down their arms, they are welcome to stay where they are,” he said.

“Some read in the past that these decrees were a sign of weakness [from the government],” Haydari  said, “but as we see now, they come before a backdrop of victories by the army in Aleppo, and they open the door wide for forgiveness from a position of strength.”

Three opposition groups inside Aleppo had already begun negotiating their surrender, he said. There was no confirmation of that from the opposition.

Many on the opposition’s side, however, believe the reconciliations are little more than a ruse to have them surrender so the government can continue punishing them out of sight.

They claim that those who have taken the government’s past offers have been “disappeared” and tortured for their participation in the fight against Assad’s rule.

Haidari dismissed those concerns.

“If those people who reconciled had been pursued and arrested, then there would have been no more reconciliations. But we have seen hundreds enroll in this process,” he said.

“To the contrary, trust in this has increased.”

Yet the same suspicion extended to statements made by Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, who announced on Thursday that Russia, in cooperation with Syrian authorities, would open “three humanitarian corridors” so as to “assist civilians taken hostages by the terrorists, as well as militants who chose to lay down their weapons.”

A fourth corridor in the northeast, Shoigu added, would be open to militants who refused to stop fighting. As was the case in similar arrangements forged in the central province of Homs and elsewhere, these militants would be allowed to exit the area with their personal weapons.

“I want to emphasize that we are taking this step, first and foremost, to ensure the safety of Aleppo residents,” said Shoigu, according to Russian broadcaster Russia Today.

Government and opposition activists on social media circulated images of a map indicating the location of the safe passages, and Syrian state TV announced three of them were already open and were ready to receive those fleeing the violence in “temporary housing centers” equipped with all necessary services. It added that the Nusra Front, Al Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria, had prevented people from leaving rebel-held areas.

Yet opposition-aligned community pages on Facebook said that one of the specified corridors, in the Saif al Dawlah neighborhood of the city, had been the target of an airstrike they said had killed one person and wounded others.

The strikes occurred even as other planes delivered aid drops containing tea bags, sugar, crackers and packets of what was said to be ketchup on the besieged eastern neighborhoods, according to pictures of the packages circulated on social media.

The packets included material with Cyrillic writing, suggesting they were from Russia, although an activist, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons, said they were dropped by Syrian government helicopters.

Meanwhile, Usama Taljo, a member of the opposition’s Aleppo City Council, denied any passage had been open.

Another activist, Maher Thalji, said the location of the corridors proved the government was not to be trusted.

“All these passageways lead to sections under regime control. Had they really cared about civilians’ well-being, they would open up to all areas and let people choose,” he said in an interview on social media on Thursday.

He also cast doubt that any rebels would choose surrender.

“If civilians aren’t even thinking of handing themselves over, how would any rebel do so and give up their arms? They know it would inevitably lead to their end,” he said.

His words were echoed by the Ahrar al Sham spokesman:“It’s a long war. The regime has been trying to besiege Aleppo for three years. But the battle has not finished yet.”

LA TIMES

Share:

Comments

14 responses to “Rebels brand amnesty offer of Syria’s Assad ‘meaningless’”

  1. Oh Yeah Avatar

    It sounds logical that the rebels brand amnesty offer of Syria’s Assad as ‘meaningless’, after all he slaughtered everyone indiscriminately without mercy.

    1. Michaelinlondon1234 Avatar
      Michaelinlondon1234

      Russia should use nukes on the US state department . It is the only way those war criminals will be brought to some sort of justice.

      1. Oh Yeah Avatar

        Syrian President Bashar Assad issued a general amnesty to rebels willing to lay down their arms on Thursday, state media said, there was no word about the US state department…

        1. This’s beyond your comprehension. 😉

    2. You either have no clue what’s going on, or you support terrorists against the legitimate government of Syria.

      1. Oh Yeah Avatar

        Do you have a clue what’s going on?

        I can’t judge it since I don’t live in Syria or anywhere in the middle east, you claiming to know better – then explain it for me how come that it’s a
        legitimate government of Syria?

        We in EU don’t like the type of legitimate governments as in Syria or Turkey.

        You probably approve this system….

        1. Depends on your definition of a legitimate government. Look who support the Syrian government, and who is fighting it. You will find the Syrian Christians, Armenians, Syriac, and all Eastern Christians support it, besides all other religions and sects of the civilised people, majority! Even the ones who supported the “rebellion” in the beginning, now they changed.
          Now who is against the government and SAA? Extremist Muslims of the Wahhabis (Saudis and ilk) and Muslim brotherhood (Turkish gov). Who is do the actual fighting against the SAA and Syrians? Terrorists! ISIL, Nusra, Al-Qaeda branches, other terrorist bearded rats and thugs!
          Is this enough for you or you still need more clarification?

          1. Oh Yeah Avatar

            We doing all that can be done in order to stop those entering the EU.

            Unfortunately the Muslim brotherhood penetrated into EU many years ago when no-one was talking about islamists and terrorists.

            Salafists are for the moment the worse nightmare we have, they managed to recruit the newcomers ‘refugees’.

            You have your problems in the middle east, we don’t like to have them in our society.

          2. I agree. It’s middle eastern problems only. And to keep these problems in the middle east the west should stop interfering in the middle eastern affairs. This will also prevent the flood of illegal immigrants.

          3. Oh Yeah Avatar

            You agree…., I didn’t ask your approval.
            “the west” a diffuse concept because in your eyes the West is anything except Russia and the Arab states.
            We do not engage in active military actions, only humanitarian.

            You are dumber than other naive idiots regarding our refugee rules and giving them shelter – we have always accepted refugees via proper channels.

            This invasion of illegal immigrants is organised by groups and states that are interested in destabilizing the european union – Putin and ISIS are primary problem candidates.

          4. You seem very angry…you see. You resort to personal attacks as soon as you are cornered and out of argument. But hey I’m no nice to your kind you such an inferior complex degenerate moron! LOL

  2. 5thDrawer Avatar
    5thDrawer

    Pick a couple of the kids who haven’t shot anyone yet, but have been ‘trained’ to blow themselves up, and send them in without the bomb-belts and with a couple of the broken guns, to, as they say, test the waters.
    They can say they did their Jihadi thing, but then perhaps report back that they had found paradise with Assad.

  3. 5thDrawer Avatar
    5thDrawer

    If Russia sent those as survival pkgs, assume Russia has run out of meat, peanut-butter, and Tofu.
    And maybe water to use the Tea in.

Leave a Reply