By Robert Fisk
""People are looking for security forces who will not treat the people like animals." So said Daeiri el-Eiti last night, a Syrian activist, summing up the thoughts of his country. He was right. In Banias, in Latakia, in Homs, in Aleppo, in Deraa, even in Damascus itself, it is the same thing. As a friend of Bashar al-Assad, the President, said last night, "Bashar is like Fukushima. He is irradiated."
Is this true? Can this be the end for the Ba'ath party of Syria, the very end of the "Renaissance Party" of the country which Bashar's father Hafez supported? Is this the end of the Syrian security forces? It seems incredible, but it looks as if all Bashar's dutiful offers of generosity – an end to the state of emergency, for example – have failed. There are those in Syria who say it is over, that there is nothing Bashar al-Assad can do to save his regime. We shall see.....
""People are looking for security forces who will not treat the people like animals." So said Daeiri el-Eiti last night, a Syrian activist, summing up the thoughts of his country. He was right. In Banias, in Latakia, in Homs, in Aleppo, in Deraa, even in Damascus itself, it is the same thing. As a friend of Bashar al-Assad, the President, said last night, "Bashar is like Fukushima. He is irradiated."
Is this true? Can this be the end for the Ba'ath party of Syria, the very end of the "Renaissance Party" of the country which Bashar's father Hafez supported? Is this the end of the Syrian security forces? It seems incredible, but it looks as if all Bashar's dutiful offers of generosity – an end to the state of emergency, for example – have failed. There are those in Syria who say it is over, that there is nothing Bashar al-Assad can do to save his regime. We shall see.....
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