REMARKS ON THE SECOND
PERIODIC REPORT
That
should have been presented by Syrian Arab Republic in 1984
INTRODUCTION
After 15
years of delay, Syrian authorities have not found it useful to
explain to us why we had not been entitled to this report in 1984.
In 1984, the number of the
political prisoners (Syrians and Arabs) in the Syrian prisons was 18
000 people, the number of disappeared was around 3100 people. It
was also the occasion to give us some explanation on the collective
massacres that took place in Hama (1982) and on the reality of a
human carnage (which was revealed by Nizar Nayyof – who is still in
prison today) in the neighborhoods of the prison of Palmyre. Rifaat
Assad, the brother of President Hafez Assad, orchestrated the
massacre of more than 700 political prisoners. It is unjust to put
these atrocities on the account of the current President, atrocities
that were committed at a time when he did not have a political role
in the country. But the responsibility for each Syrian citizen
today is to rebuild the future by repudiating these inhumane
methods. To ignore this black page of our contemporary history
would amount to blatant complicity, which we should as human rights
activists strongly denounce. The report of the Syrian government was
prepared on January 19 2000; in other words, before the death of
President Hafez Assad. So it reflects the past more than the
present or the future, and it expresses a set language, which does
not have a place at this time. After the promises of the speech of
investiture, the Syrian society has chosen the policy of WAIT AND
SEE. In spite of the release of almost 600 Syrian and Arab prisoners
and a major reduction in the number of the arrests during the last 8
months, it is difficult to speak about notable change. On the
occasion of the 31st anniversary of the state of emergency in Syria
(08/03/1994), I spoke about the «thermometer of austerity “, which
constituted our compass on the situation of the human rights in
Syria. Nowadays, these questions are always valid:
1 – Can we
find an authorized independent organization of human rights and
fundamental freedoms, which can work freely without interference in
its activities?
2 - Does the
government respect the principle of a warrant for arrest and the
time limits of police custody or control the limits of the extra
judiciary?
3 - Does it
respect the right of a multiparty system to exist and to exert their
right of expression?
4 -Does it
accept the independence of the judicial system, lawyers and trade
unions?
5 - Does the
sovereign government prevent the serious violations of the human
rights or, on the contrary, take part in these violations?
6 - Does it
respect the rights of cultural, national or religious minorities?
7. Does a
policy of the promotion of human rights exist?
Does it authorize the
democratic means of defense of the individual?
9 - Did the international bill
of human rights form part of the governmental references within the
framework of fundamental freedoms and the rights of the person?
10- Does it
guarantee a minimum of social and economical rights for a life
worthy of citizen?
For all these minimal
standards, doe we have any positive responses in Syria today?
The
CONSTITUTION
The Syrian
constitution is an example of partiality, ideologization and is
arbitrary. From several points of view, it is in contradiction with
the pact relating to the civic and political rights. It adopts the
ideology of the Baas Party openly in its preamble. The word
democracy had not the right to be mentioned (in the English
translation of the official report Paragraph 14 - one can read:
«The Syrian Arab Republic is a democratic, people’s socialist
state». But the better translation of the Arab text of the first
article of the Constitution is: « the Syrian Arab Republic is a
popular democracy and socialist state ».
The Syrian Constitution
«nationalizes » the state and the society for the political account
of one party (article 8). It limits public freedom to the respect
of principles which the executive power does not respect: the
construction and the protection of socialism, as well as the right
to form an NGO, which is limited by the respect of old programs of
the Baas party that even this party does not respect any more
(article 49).
The prevalence of the executive
power is very important in articles 111, 132, 139, 149. Article 28
about the independence of the courts does not guarantee impartiality
and competence. It is also the case of chapter 3 on the judicial
power. In spite of its weak points, the constitution has never been
a reference in the political process; in fact the laws of have
dominated the political scene in the country since 1963.
A STATE lacking
laws
In a general way, it is
possible to summarize the question of the confiscation of democratic
and public freedoms in the following way:
1. The persistence of the state
of emergency and the submission of the country to martial laws since
the 8/03/1963, this in spite of the absence of any legal
justification or objectives called upon by the government. In this
illegal " and abnormal situation ", the laws, and the constitutional
guarantees making it possible for citizens to defend their rights
became quite simply ineffective. In addition, new laws were
promulgated that go against what was envisaged by the national
constitution and the International Covenant on Civil and Political
rights. An example is " the principal law of the civil state
workers" at the beginning of 1984 and in particular article 138
which authorizes any person of the hierarchy to lay off a
subordinate when it seems appropriate to him and without
justification. Another example is that of the law of the
confederation of journalists of 1989. And there exist plenty of
other examples. According to martial law, the governor of the
martial law has the right, like all the sections of the security
services (currently more than a dozen), to arrest any citizen, from
his house or in the street or on his place of work. The procedure
is carried out without need to present " a warrant for arrest " or
to obtain authorization from the Attorney General. It is in the
same way possible to hold this same citizen indefinitely. The
citizen Saad Jaoudat Said was arrested on the day of the referendum
because he voted no. He remained there in prison for two months
without any charges being brought against him. Hussein Daoud,
expelled from FRG on the 12/12/2000, was arrested by the security
forces. Questioned under torture, he was transferred to the Military
Hospital 601 in Damascus. He remains in detention without any
charges being brought against him.
Approximately 1200 Syrian, Palestinian, Jordanian and Lebanese
prisoners are in the Syrian jails because of these " illegal" laws.
According to martial law, Syrian citizens do not have the right to
form political associations, organizations or parties, in order to
express or to defend their opinions. Concerning trade-union
freedoms, the official authorities continue to make more
unconstitutional violations and interventions with regard to the
trade unions. The organizations of workers and students are
infiltrated in their activities and their elections. The hierarchy
is often imposed. We will quote only certain obvious examples,
those concerning the elections of the confederation of the trade
unions of the workers, the doctors, the engineers and the
journalists. The Chamber of Commerce is until now the only
trade-union organization entitled to elections, and is not
controlled and relatively free within the framework of the policy of
"economic pluralism".
2. In 38 years, the systematic
marginalization of justice upset the values and created a true legal
underdevelopment marked by the domination of the extra-judiciary.
The omnipresence of the emergency courts, re-appearing since1992,
makes it possible to work of jure et de facto in
total infringement of the regulations of the international
instruments. The Higher State Security Court judged more than 500
prisoners of opinion in 4 years, including some after 15 years of
detention without charges ever brought against them. To expose
these lawsuits in detail can only further harm the image of Syria’s
already sick extra judiciary institutions. All things considered,
the humiliation of justice, lawyers, families and of all the
democrats, lawsuits based on interrogations with confessions
extorted under torture, of lawyers not having the right to discuss
with their customers before the lawsuit and the president of the
court categorically refusing any testimony. The rules of procedure
applied by the court are of course in contradiction with the
guarantees of the right to an equitable lawsuit, which it is of the
principle of contradiction and the right to be correctly defended,
of the principle of publishing the debates, the right of appeal to a
higher jurisdiction, right to the investigation of allegations of
tortures or, right to be judged by an independent and impartial
court.
Each time
that a prisoner purges his sentence, he is transferred to a section
for interrogation to sign a document of a personal self-criticism in
a spirit of later collaboration, including a condemnation of his own
party and a promise not to be involved politically ever again, and
of course supporting the policies of the President. We will like to
mention the case of doctor Abdel Aziz Al-Khayyer, the head of the
Communist Party arrested in 1992 and condemned to 22 years of
prison, and the defender of the human rights Nizar Nayyouf,
condemned to 10 years of prison.
Last but not least, one month
before the publication of the official report, more than 100
prisoners were arrested arbitrarily for political reasons (See the
list with this report)
3. Another law of exception is
that quoted in the paragraph 60 concerning the capital punishment in
the Syrian legislation. This law stipulates, «Anyone who joins the
Muslim Brotherhood organization is condemned to death » (art. 10 of
Act No. 49 of 8 July 1980). The change that the movement of the
Moslem brotherhood has known in the last 20 years, its criticism of
any form of violence and the adoption of a democratic program are
not enough to stop this legislative «policy».
IMPUNITY
32. All citizens, regardless of their occupational or social
status have a legally guaranteed right to seek legal remedy in
respect to any act of injustice committed against them. Article 319
of the Penal Code stipulates that: «Any act that is likely to
prevent a Syrian from exercising his civil rights or fulfilling his
civil obligations shall be punishable by detention for a term of one
month to one year». Article 57 of the Syrian Code of Criminal
Procedure is also explicit in this regard, since it affirms that:
«Anyone who deems himself to be the victim of a felony or a
misdemeanor has the right to file a complaint with the Department of
Public Prosecutions, which has an obligation to institute public
proceedings if the complainant brings a personal action». In regard
to the exercise of this right, the code makes no distinction between
one person and another on grounds of color, gender, race, religion,
language or even nationality and this legal right applies to any
offence committed against the claimant.
85. Article 28, paragraph 3, of
the Syrian Constitution stipulates that: «No one may be subjected
to physical or mental torture or degrading treatment, the
perpetrators of which shall be liable to the legally prescribed
penalties.»
86. Under the legislation, it is prohibited to subject an accused or
convicted person or any person under judicial investigation, to any
mental or physical pressure with a view toward the extortion of a
confession or information. Article 391 of the penal code stipulates
as follows:
«1. Anyone who subjects a
person to illegal acts of violence with a view to obtaining from him
a confession to an offence or information pertaining thereto shall
be liable to a penalty of detention for a term of three months to
three years.
2If such acts of violence cause sickness or wounds, the minimum penalty
shall be one year’s detention.»
87. Any act that is likely to prevent a Syrian from exercising his civil
rights or fulfilling his obligations is punishable by detention for
a term of one month to one year if it is committed through the use
of threats, violence or any means of physical or mental coercion
(Article 319 of the Penal Code).
88. The courts
look into any allegation by a citizen concerning his subjection to
physical or mental torture or degrading treatment, award appropriate
compensation and impose the prescribed penalty.
(from the OFFICIAL REPORT)
Syria still has not ratified the convention for abolishment of
torture, and yet on March 13,1986, the Syrian representative at UN
said in an oral argument to the 42nd session of the Commission of
Human Rights in Geneva: "Torture is generally practiced in the
absence of laws or in the non-application of the current laws under
the domination of a non-democratic government, which prevents its
citizens from taking part in political life. The judicial system
bends to the political power preventing thus anyone from having his
right to have his day before the courts and the recognition by the
security forces of the truth (... Although torture aims at the man
as a human being, its goal is to dehumanize the human (...).
Whatever the called upon reasons or motivations, especially in a
state of war or occupation or for prisoners of war, torture cannot
be justified as a mean of obtaining information or humiliation
(...). I must say that the Convention Against Torture adopted by
the General Assembly of UN drew the attention of the Syrian
authorities. For that, the Ministry for Justice prepared a law,
which declared the adoption by Syria of the Convention, which will
be made public very soon. We hope that in the next session of the
Commission, next year Syria will become one of the signatories of
the Convention ". We are here at the 57th session, fifteen years
after this intervention, and Syria still has not ratified the
Convention. What follows is a non-exhaustive list of the prisoners
who died following torture or with ill treatments inflicted since
this official promise:
1987 : Ahmad al-Abbas, Ibrahim
Ahmado, Muhammed al-Arraj, Ahmad As'ad Ghanoum, Ihsan Izzo, Umar al-Jamil,
Ahmad Jaroud, Haytham Khoja, Rif'at al-Rachid, Taha Abdelrazzaq
Sarhan, Mudhar al-Jundi.
1988 : Abdel Razzaq Abazid,
Muhammad Rashid Abbas, Ridhwan Dughaim, Umar Wahid Haidar, Muhammed
Issa al-Mane', AbdelKader Murtada, Saleh Rukhaima, Wajih Shihadeh,
Musa Zaydan, Ahmad al-Zir.
1989 : Muhammed Hashem,
Muhammed Hassan, Khidr Jabr.
1990 : Zahi Abadi, Muhammed
Dawud, Mounir Francis, Ziad Musa Qatnani.
1991 : Jamal Hassino, Hussein
Zaydan.
1992 : Mounir al-Ahmad, Ahmad
Rif'at Rajab.
The international campaign after the death under torture of engineer
Mounir Francis and the tragedy of Doctor Nour Eddin Attasi
undoubtedly played a key role in the precautions taken after this
date. This had not prevented the death under not yet elucidated
conditions of Mr. Salah Jedid nor the " calculated " end of Mr.
Karim Al-Haj Hussein (25/12/95), 23 hours after his release or of
the journalist Rida Haddad who was not released in spite of an
advanced cancer. Arrested in 1970, Haddad remained in detention for
fifteen years. The verdict of the Higher State Security Court was
pronounced after 14 years of arbitrary detention without judgment or
lawsuit. It came out of the prison of Adra to enter the French
Hospital of Damas and to die one year later (17/06/1996), leaving a
moving testimony on the slow torture practiced by the security
forces. Another victim of torture still remains in the prison of
Sednaya. He told his story before the Higher State Security Court
on March 2, 1993 without succeeding in moving the judges, here are
the extracts:
" On December 7, 1986 at dawn,
a patrol made up officers (it quotes two names) and other agents of
Fara Falasine/235 / (center of detention in Damas) made came to my
home to arrest me. Not finding me at the house, they struck my wife
in front of our small daughter, who was then four years old, and
took her along to Fara Falastine, where one separated her from her
two daughters, of whom the younger was only one month old (...
During her absence, the house was ransacked by the moukhabarat. It
is what my wife could note on her return a few days later (... They
made pressure on the owner so that it refuses to honor his
engagement in our connection and expels my family. I ask the court
to examine the injury caused by the forced expulsion of my wife and
my two children.
Since my arrest on September 19, 1987, I was awfully tortured to
extract information, by whipping me and making me undergo the
"German chair ". They burned certain parts of my body acid,
crushed my fingers and subjected me to psychological tortures while
whipping and by insulting my wife in front of me and while making my
mother come and then threatening to torture her. They hit me with
blows of fists, kicks and I had the broken nose... One pulled apart
my legs so as to cause a fracture of the tailbone. And during all
this time, my interrogation continued. It was only at the end of
six days that I was led to the hospital to attend to my fracture.
The medical care was delayed for three days by the moukhabarats The
doctors declared that I needed a treatment that could require at
least two months of hospitalization. Once started, the care was
stopped with much resumption because of the pressure exerted by the
officers on the doctor who looked after me. At the end of three
weeks, this one ended up yielding and stopped my treatment before it
was not completed I left the hospital on October 22, 1987,
handicapped for life. Repression continued during four years in the
prison of Palmyre without I being entitled to a medical consultation
".
(Mohammed Mradni is condemned
to fifteen years of prison with forced work and deprivation of his
civic rights). The torture inflicted on our colleague Nizar Nayyouf
leaves after-effects for life. It is because he requested medical
attention that he underwent months of isolation. The torture,
exerted against more than 18,600 prisoners with forty practiced
methods, remains unpunished.
Critical cases in prisons
The following is a
non-exhaustive list of political prisoners in a very bad health
Fares Murad (in prison since
1975), Haytham Na’al (in prison since 1975), Imad Shiha (in prison
since 1975), Abdul Wadud Yousof (in prison since 1980) Ibrahi A’ssi
(in prison since 1980), Mouhammed Moumar (in prison since 1986),
Mouhamed Nizar Mradni (in prison since 1987), Nizar Nayyouf (in
prison since 1992)
Freedom
of expression
275. In
Syria, freedom of expression is safeguarded and conscience
constitutes the only form of censorship of freedom of thought.
Every citizen has the right to participate in political, economic,
social and cultural life (art. 26 of the Constitution) since Syria
has a press association known as the «Journalists’ Federation».
(OFFICIAL REPORT)
The ministry of information
imposes a strong censorship on all the sources of information likely
to provide information to citizens or to enable the citizens to have
opinions that go against the political line and ideological of the
government. Throughout the period of Hafez Assad, only the
newspapers of the Baas Party were authorized.
Today the Syrian authorities
grant these types of authorizations to only party members in power.
That being, the censorship is
not limited to the ministry for information. Often, the security
services took on this role. They arrested known writers,
intellectuals and thinkers, in order to them question on interviews,
conferences or debates, which they gave. The ministry for
information often pushes the writers of official journals to defame
certain writers and intellectuals for their view. It is the case in
the attacks orchestrated against the people of the forum of the
renaissance of civil society (Ihia al-mujtama al-madani).
The following categories of
nationals are exempt from having to obtain exit visas or any other
type of authorization:
1. Persons over the age of 50.
2. Persons who have performed military service or paid a fee in lieu
thereof or who are exempt there from on health grounds or because
they have performed military service in a foreign army.
3. Women over the age of 18, with the exception of those between the ages
of 18 and 35 travelling to certain countries.
4. Persons whose passports were issued less than three months previously.
5. Citizens living outside the country and holding valid foreign residence
permits and citizens holding foreign passports who leave the country
less than three months after entry.
Persons leaving to perform the pilgrimage, and holding special hajj travel
documents.
(180 OFFICIAL
REPORT)
The continued interference the
intellectuals undergo by the authorities prevents the publication of
their cultural works. Of my 21 books, only one is authorized: «The
Universe of Sleep ». Even the Short Universal Encyclopedia of Human
Rights is prohibited in Syria). Let us not forget that the
government requires its citizens, whether they are Syrian or
Palestinian, to obtain an authorization from the security forces for
an exit visa from the country. This visa became a weapon in the
hands of the government enabling it to punish persona non grata,
intellectuals or politicians. The last ruling from the chair
concerning the right of each citizen to a passport does not concern
the political opponents and their families. Mrs. Najah Shara, wife
of an ex-political prisoner and mother of a human rights defender is
not entitled to a passport for medical reasons. One can quote a
hundred names of members of families of the political opposition who
have been denied a passport.
These extra legal practices
often exceed the framework of the individuals to include whole
groups and cultural institutions.
The official report
confirms that: Syrian law in no way restricts the exercise of this
right except where necessary in order to protect public safety,
national security, public order, the rights of others, public health
or public morals. In Syria, the right of citizens to assemble and
demonstrate is denied only if the assemblage or demonstration in
question is likely to become riotous and disturb public peace, etc.
(paragraph 282). However, in reality we note another thing:
These last years, the
authorities tightened their control on the intellectuals so much so
that any work, manuscript, article, and even the short speech given
in the mosque on Friday must be reviewed by the security forces to
obtain their consent, if not, prohibition will be guaranteed for
them. As we started to have a respite after the death of General
Assad, there has been a multiplication of spontaneous meetings
organized in private homes and the appeal of 99 intellectuals
followed by an appeal by 1000 intellectuals for democratic reform in
the country. However a counterattack was organized by the Baas
Party and the security forces in order to take the upper hand and
paralyze any initiative of free expression. The National Command of
the Baas Party published the circular 1075, which was republished by
the internal newspaper of the party «al-Munadhel ») and
classified all the reformers in terms of the past colonial era and
unstable period in Syria. They focused particularly on the
independent deputy Riad Seef, founder of the unauthorized Movement
of Civil Peace, the Committee of Rebirth of the Civil Company and
the intellectuals of the opposition, as well those in exile inside
or outside the country. It considers «The Baas Party, the guide of
state and society that is the only force entitled to take
initiatives and to determine the prospects of the future».
Since
19/02/2001, five conditions were imposed for the organization of
cultural meeting in a private house:
An
application for authorization presented to the governor 2 weeks
before the date of the meeting.
Obtain
authorization for the person who speaks.
3) The list
of names of the people who will have to take part in the debate.
4) Formulating an idea on the
envisioned debate.
5) The place and the duration
of the meeting Mountada.
Here is the
testimony of Habib Saleh after having presented a request of this
kind:
« Irequested from the governor
of Tartous, Aram Saliba, there is 2 weeks an authorization which
answers the required conditions, the night of Wednesday 14/03/2001
two agents of political Security had given a negative answer. Just
after, an officer and 3 elements of the police force came at home
wondering to sign a promise not to take part in the meetings ever
again. Was it not Dr Bashshar Assad who declared on Saturday the
17/3/2001, that the heritage of his father is an untouchable
subject?
Occupied Syrian territories
June 5 2000 was the 33rd
anniversary of the occupation of Golan by Israel. This occupation
obliged more than 82 thousand Syrians to take refuge in the camps
close to Damas and Dara. (Today, they are 400 thousands refugees).
Contrary to international law, Israel destroyed 139 villages after
the military confrontation ended. It builds 33 colonies inhabited
by 13160 Israelis. Nearly 16000 Syrians live under the occupation.
Israel continues to violate all the resolutions concerning its
occupation of the Arab territories. The Arab Commission of Human
Rights asks all the IGOs to have a clear-cut position on the
occupation by Israel of the Arab territories. It takes this
occasion to demand the release of all Syrian prisoners in the
Israeli prisons:
1 . Wiam Mahmoud Amasheh
2 . Amal Ewadat
3 . Hayl Hasan Abu-Zaid
4 . Asam Mahmoud Al-Weli
5 . Basheer Soulayman Al-Maqet
6 . Soudqi Soulayman Al-Maqet
7 . Zikan Nemer
Al-Wadi
8 . Yasser Khanjar
9 . Radwan Jamil
Jawhari
10 . Imad Sami Ewedat
11 .
Zahio Nayf Awadf
WOMEN RIGHTS
There is no significant
difference between the two sexes regarding health, while a large
chasm separates them in connection with illiteracy. 84% of men are
able to read and write, but only 50 % of women are literate. On
the level of the primary school, 11% separate the two sexes. At the
university level, the percentage of the women is 20,75 %. Those
occupy 18 % of the whole work force of the country with nearly 500
000 women in economic activities. Syria did not sign the
International Convention against any form of discrimination between
the two sexes. Several laws or jurisprudences are in contradiction
with the provisions of convention, here some examples: The law No
134 of the 31/12/1975 deprives, in its article 5, the woman of the
maintenance (nafaqa) as soon as she works without the
authorization of her husband. Article 197, relating to the
heritage, gives to the man 2 times the share of the woman who is
located in the same degree of relationship. The wages of women are
several sectors lower than those of the men. Syria did not sign
either the conventions of ILO N 100 or 111.
The QUESTION OF BIDOUN
)persons
without nationality(
On August 23, 1962, the Syrian
government promulgated an Order in Council (n.93) authorizing a
special census of the population in the province of Djazira. On
October 5th of the same year, some 60 000 Kurdish were reclassified
as foreigners. The plan of the "Belt Arabe" (Al-Hizam Al-Arabi)
envisioned the expulsion of the Kurdish population established
throughout the border with Turkey. After the declaration of a state
of emergency on the 8th of March 1963, successive governments
continued this policy of discrimination.
The arrival of the Assad
General to the capacity in 1970 slows down the project of the Arab
Belt without repealing it. The seats of Kurdish at the assembly of
the people will be decided from the top to slow down democratic
political mobility in the area. The policy which will prevail will
be to support those which work against the social opposition and
political arabo-Kurdish, and the successive governments will not
hesitate to play the chart of naturalization for Bidoun
(Kurds without indentity card) in order to exert pressure over the
Kurdish political movement. November 11, 1986, the Al-Hassaka
governor published the decree n.1012/SAD/25, which prohibited the
use of the Kurdish language in the workplace. On December 3, 1989,
Mr. Mohamed Mustafa Miro, the actual Prime Minister, the Al-Hassaka
governor, promulgated order n-1865/SAD/25, which reiterated this
prohibition and banned non-Arab songs during marriages and
festivals, which is in contradiction with the Syrian constitution.
(the Voice of the Democracy, newspaper of the C.D.F, published this
order in its November 1990 issue).
At the same time the ministry
of the interior issues decision n-122, which binds any Kurdish child
to register with the appropriate authorities, and since October 1992
dozens of Kurdish children were not registered because their parents
gave them first names of Kurdish origin.
The Syrian
government agreed, for the first time, to answer the questions of a
ONG about the Kurds. It sent on12/07/1997 a detailed response to
the American organization Human Rights Watch in which it describes
how those of Kurdish nationality are treated like foreigners. It
gives figures very close to our estimates (142465 according to the
government). The legal part of the answer does not even deserve to
be approached for one does not even find there the traces of
international engagements of Syria. On the other hand, in the
current report a sentence draws our attention: « Any person born in
the country which, with the birth, did not have the right to acquire
a foreign nationality by way of affiliation. (a child born in the
country to a father who has lost his nationality of origin for an
unspecified reason is Arab Syrian.) ». This sentence touches more
than 2 / 3 of Kurds who have no nationality, is it a legal
recognition of the right of the bidoun children to a Syrian
nationality? We would like your committee to put this question to
the Syrian government.
The second category of those
without nationality made up of those in political exile outside
Syria. This category touches more than 27 thousands people (the
figure does not take into account their children and their little
children).
The ACHR is counting the exact
number of those in exile without nationality. We ask your committee
to intervene to solve the problem of the Kurds and exiled Syrians,
for each Syrian is entitled to nationality.
CLAIMS
-
End of the arbitrary arrests and release of all the political
prisoners Syrian, Lebanese and Palestinian. The right of return of
all exiled people with legal guarantees within the frame of a
general amnesty.
- Abolition of the state of
emergency and martial law and the democratic reform of the
Constitution.
-
Promulgation of a modern law, which authorizes and organizes the
activity of the parties, associations and the press, by guaranteeing
real pluralism.
-
Ratification by Syria of the Convention of the UN convention against
torture and CIDAW.
- Official Recognition of the
legality of all the ONG for defense of the civil society, human
rights and fundamental freedoms, while granting the right of
observing the condition of human rights and violations of public and
democratic freedoms in the country.
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