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Bewildered, elated prisoners pour out as Assad’s jails flung open

A person gestures as individuals, reportedly freed prisoners, run in the streets of Damascus, Syria, December 8, 2024, in this picture obtained from social media video. (Reuters)
A person gestures as individuals, reportedly freed prisoners, run in the streets of Damascus, Syria, December 8, 2024, in this picture obtained from social media video. (Reuters)
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Updated 08 December 2024

Bewildered, elated prisoners pour out as Assad’s jails flung open

A person gestures as individuals, reportedly freed prisoners, run in the streets of Damascus, Syria, December 8, 2024. (Reuters)
  • Throughout the civil war that began in 2011, security forces held hundreds of thousands of people seized in detention camps

DAMASCUS: Bewildered and elated prisoners poured out of Syrian jails on Sunday, shouting with joy as they emerged from one of the world’s most notorious detention systems and walked to freedom following the collapse of Bashar Assad’s government.
All across Syria, families wept as they were reunited with children, siblings, spouses and parents who vanished years ago into the impregnable gulag of the Assad dynasty’s five-decade rule.
A video verified by Reuters showed newly freed prisoners ran through the Damascus streets, holding up the fingers of both hands to show how many years they had been in prison, asking passers-by what had happened, not immediately understanding that Assad had fallen.
“We toppled the regime!” a voice shouted and a prisoner yelled and skipped with delight in the same video. A man watching the prisoners rush through the dawn streets put his hands to head, exclaiming with wonder: “Oh my god, the prisoners!“
Throughout the civil war that began in 2011, security forces held hundreds of thousands of people seized in detention camps where international human rights organizations say torture was universal practice. Families were often told nothing of the fate of their loved ones.
As insurgents seized one city after another in a dizzying eight-day campaign, prisons were often among their first objectives. The most notorious prisons in and around Damascus itself were finally opened on the uprising’s final night and the early hours of Sunday.
When they reached Sednaya prison, militants shot the lock off the gate, a video showed, using more gunfire to open closed doors leading to cells. Men poured out into corridors and a courtyard, cheering and helping them open more cells.
In a video uploaded by Step News Agency, a grey-haired man leapt into the arms of relatives in a sudden, disbelieving hug, the three men clasping each other and sobbing with joy before one fell to his knees, still clutching the freed man’s legs.
The pan-Arab Al Arabiya news channel showed a family arriving in Damascus by car from Jordan to meet their newly released son, the elderly mother’s voice breaking with emotion as she told the interviewer he had been freed after 14 years.
Reuters was not immediately able to verify the locations of some of the videos, though no one disputed that prisons were opened across the country.
Relief and terror
In what was purported to be the women’s block at Sednaya prison on the Damascus outskirts, perhaps the most notorious in the country, a militant recorded the moment he reached cells and pulled open the doors for prisoners who seemed to have had little idea they were about to be freed.
“May God honor you!” a woman shouted to the men freeing her. As they left their cells a toddler could be seen walking the corridor, having apparently been held in the prison along with his mother.
“He (Assad) has fallen. Don’t be scared,” a voice shouts, trying to reassure the prisoners that they faced no more danger.
In another video, a deafening roar erupted as militants marched down a corridor, said to be in the prison at Mezzeh air base southwest of the old center of Damascus. Prisoners leaned through the bars at the top of doors and banged on the sides of their cells as shouts of joy echoed all around.
One video showed a shaven-headed man squatting on his heels, trembling and barely able to answer the militants asking his name and where he was from.
Over the years, thousands of Syrians were brusquely informed by authorities that their relatives had been executed, sometimes years earlier.
The United States said in 2017 it had evidence of a new crematorium built at Sednaya especially to dispose of bodies of thousands of inmates hanged during the war.
Some of the most disturbing information about Assad’s prison system came with thousands of photographs smuggled out of Syria by a military photographer codenamed Caesar who defected to the West in 2013.
His photographs of thousands of killed detainees showed clear marks of torture and starvation and for many families provided the first evidence that imprisoned relatives were dead.
A few miles from Sednaya early on Sunday, a stream of freed prisoners was recorded walking toward Damascus, many lugging sacks of belongings on their backs, and chanting “God is great!”


What the Lebanon-Israel diplomatic deadlock means for regional stability and peace

What the Lebanon-Israel diplomatic deadlock means for regional stability and peace
Updated 8 sec ago

What the Lebanon-Israel diplomatic deadlock means for regional stability and peace

What the Lebanon-Israel diplomatic deadlock means for regional stability and peace
  • Rejection of Lebanese President Aoun’s call for border and security talks dashes hopes of renewed dialogue
  • Analysts say the objectives of Lebanon and Israel remain irreconcilable as of now

Web headline:

INNUMBERS:

*950 Projectiles fired from Israel into Lebanon since Nov. 27, 2024.

*100 Israeli airstrikes documented during the same period.

(Source: UNIFIL)

ANAN TELLO

LONDON: As the US-brokered ceasefire in Gaza tenuously holds, attention is now shifting north to Lebanon. There, a proposal from President Joseph Aoun for talks to resolve long-standing disputes has been rejected by Israel.

With Israel still occupying five hilltops in Lebanon, airstrikes continuing in the south, and Hezbollah’s disarmament unresolved, the question looms: Are the two countries ready to bury the hatchet?

On Oct. 13, at the Sharm El-Sheikh Peace Summit where US President Donald Trump unveiled the Gaza ceasefire deal, Aoun struck a conciliatory tone. “Today, the general atmosphere is one of compromise, and it is necessary to negotiate,” he said.

Citing the 2022 US- and UN-mediated maritime border agreement between Lebanon and Israel, Aoun said: “Lebanon negotiated in the past with Israel … What prevents repeating the same thing to find solutions to pending matters, especially that war did not lead to results?”

Israel’s response came about a week later. US envoy Tom Barrack conveyed Israel’s rejection of Aoun’s proposal, which called for a two-month halt to Israeli military operations, withdrawal from occupied Lebanese territory, and subsequent border and security talks.

Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat on Oct. 20 that the proposed negotiations had collapsed.

Barrack, writing on X the same day, warned that unless Lebanon disarms the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia, Israel “may act unilaterally — and the consequences would be grave.”

He added that several US-backed initiatives meant to nudge Lebanon toward peace “have stalled.”

The Lebanese government now finds itself caught between US pressure to disarm Hezbollah and the militia’s firm refusal to do so.

In late September, a year after Israel killed his predecessor Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem reaffirmed the group’s stance.

“We will never abandon our weapons, nor will we relinquish them,” he said, vowing to “confront any project that serves Israel.”

Israel has already escalated its attacks, claiming it is targeting Hezbollah military sites. Hezbollah, meanwhile, has continued to launch sporadic attacks on Israel, though mostly in response to Israeli strikes.

Since October, Lebanon has accused Israel of carrying out multiple strikes in southern Lebanon, despite the ceasefire agreement reached between Israel and Hezbollah in November last year.

On Oct. 17, UN experts said Israeli strikes were causing civilian casualties and “seriously undermining” Lebanon’s efforts to disarm Hezbollah in the south.

These developments leave observers questioning whether Lebanon and Israel could ever achieve sustainable peace.

“In Lebanon, the idea of making peace with Israel has long been a taboo for many people,” David Wood, senior analyst on Lebanon at the International Crisis Group, told Arab News.

“Many Lebanese still resent Israel’s history of repeatedly occupying and attacking Lebanon, which stretches back decades. In addition, plenty in Lebanon denounce Israel’s brutal treatment of Palestinians, especially in Gaza recently.”

That resentment is rooted in decades of conflict. Israel first invaded southern Lebanon in 1978 to drive out Palestinian militants and establish a buffer zone. A larger invasion followed in 1982, when Israeli forces reached Beirut and occupied much of the south until 2000.

Another war followed in the summer of 2006 after a Hezbollah cross-border raid, sparking a month-long conflict in which Israel invaded Lebanon.

New cycles of cross-border violence reignited on Oct. 8, 2023, after the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel triggered Tel Aviv’s war on Gaza.

Cross-border fire between Hezbollah and Israel escalated in September last year, with Israeli airstrikes decimating Hezbollah’s leadership and killing around 4,000 of its fighters.

Hundreds of Lebanese civilians were also killed and towns and villages devastated. Israel reported the deaths of 75 soldiers and 45 civilians from Hezbollah rocket and drone attacks, sniper fire, and cross-border infiltrations.

Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced on both sides of the border.

Although a ceasefire was reached in November last year, there have been repeated violations by both sides.

The Lebanese Army Command reported more than 4,500 Israeli breaches as of September this year. Meanwhile, Hezbollah has claimed one attack since the truce, AFP reported, although Israel accuses the militia of many more.

Lebanon’s Health Ministry says Israeli actions have killed more than 270 people and wounded about 850 since the truce began. As of Oct. 9, the UN human rights office had verified 107 civilian deaths, including 16 children.

Even so, a number of Lebanese, tired of this cycle of violence, are starting to question the long-standing taboo on seeking peace.

“Some Lebanese do call for their country to reach a peace deal with Israel,” Wood said. “These people argue that Lebanon must prioritize its own national interest and avoid becoming entangled in conflict with Israel, as most recently happened following the Oct. 7 attacks.”

He added: “This week, a widely watched Lebanese talk show host — Marcel Ghanem — spoke of the need to break the taboo over Lebanon making peace with Israel.”

Others, however, see little room for optimism.

Lebanese economist and political adviser Nadim Shehadi believes Beirut should “pick up where it left off in the May 17, 1983, agreement,” which parliament annulled after Israel added conditions not in the original text.

That US-brokered deal sought to end hostilities and secure an Israeli withdrawal, contingent on a simultaneous Syrian pullout that never occurred at the time. The deal collapsed within a year amid Syrian opposition and internal divisions, and parliament annulled it in 1984.

“The Lebanese state should take the initiative,” Shehadi told Arab News. “At the moment, it is implementing an agreement it did not negotiate, for a war it did not participate in, and with conditions it cannot deliver.”

He added that the government’s position is “weak,” saying it “seems to be acting on behalf of Israel and the US.”

The November 2024 agreement between Lebanon and Israel mandates that Israel withdraw from southern Lebanon and that Hezbollah retreat north of the Litani River within 60 days, with the Lebanese army deploying to the border region.

It also reaffirmed both sides’ commitment to UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which calls for an area in southern Lebanon free of armed forces other than the Lebanese army.

Shehadi argues that for now, “the maximum achievable under UNSCR 1701 is a ‘cessation of hostilities,’ not even a ceasefire — it is far below the minimum requirement, which is an end of state of war.”

Meanwhile, Lebanese security and political analyst Ali Rizk believes that direct talks between Lebanon and Israel “are out of the question.”

Indirect negotiations over land border demarcation — similar to the US-brokered maritime talks — are the most that can be expected as long as “Israel continues to occupy Lebanese territory and carry out nearly daily aggressions on Lebanon,” Rizk told Arab News.

Even if that changed, Rizk said, direct talks would remain unlikely. “The Shiites form the majority in Lebanon and at the same time would overwhelmingly reject such talks, owing to the fact that the Shiites have borne the brunt of Israeli aggressions, not least since Oct. 7, 2023.”

He added: “The assassination of former Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah makes it even more difficult, given how he was an icon for many Lebanese Shiites — and non-Shiites — and not just for Hezbollah members.”

Southern Lebanon has long been a Hezbollah stronghold and is predominantly Shiite, with smaller Christian and mixed communities found mainly along the coast and in certain enclaves.

“Given these realities, engaging directly with Israel will be a risky gamble that President Aoun will likely not be willing to take as this would alienate Lebanon’s largest religious sect,” said Rizk.

IN NUMBERS:

• 950 Projectiles fired from Israel into Lebanon since Nov. 27, 2024.

•100 Israeli airstrikes documented during the same period.

(Source: UNIFIL)

Recent reports suggest that Aoun and Berri are instead preparing for indirect negotiations, he added.

Indeed, Berri told Asharq Al-Awsat that the present course relies on representatives of the nations that brokered the November 2024 ceasefire.

Beirut-based policy expert Hussein Chokr said the two sides’ objectives remain “fundamentally irreconcilable.”

“A vast gap separates them, making negotiations unlikely unless Israel were to accept Lebanon’s conditions — an improbable scenario at present — or unless the Lebanese presidency were to yield to external pressure, risking a dangerous internal rupture,” he told Arab News.

Chokr said Lebanon views negotiations as a way to halt Israeli aggression and bring about its withdrawal.

He added that Israel has three goals: formal recognition, the dismantling of Hezbollah’s military capacity, and a peace process “on its own unilateral terms — one that does not aim for a just or balanced peace, but rather seeks to impose a new reality through force.”

“This is not peace; it is a demand for submission,” he added.

Chokr argued that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “is not seeking a just or reciprocal peace but rather aims to cement a new balance of power with Lebanon where Israel holds the upper hand, capitalizing on what he perceives as strategic gains after inflicting significant damage on Hezbollah.

“His implicit message to Lebanon is: accept peace on my terms or face continued devastation.”

Lebanon, by contrast, insists “any real peace with Israel must be comprehensive and just, anchored in the Arab Peace Initiative launched in Beirut in 2002,” Chokr said.

The 2002 Arab Peace Initiative offers normalization in exchange for Israel’s full withdrawal from Arab territories occupied in 1967 and a Palestinian state along the pre-1967 borders.

But the current Israeli administration “recognizes no such formula of land and rights in exchange for peace,” Chokr said. “It treats ‘peace’ as a concession it grants in return for the other side’s survival — peace in exchange for being spared destruction.”

He warned that entering talks aimed at disarming Hezbollah could deepen Lebanon’s internal divisions and push the country “into a dangerous internal spiral.”

Still, some observers see potential for limited progress.

Wood of the International Crisis Group said Lebanon “is more likely to reach some kind of limited security arrangement with Israel, rather than a deal for peace and full normalization.”

Aoun’s remarks on Oct. 13, he added, “referred to the need for Lebanon to address its immediate problems with Israel.”

“At present, they are Israel’s ongoing occupation and near-daily military attacks, which are directly denying the hopes of displaced Lebanese that they can start rebuilding their communities after the disastrous war.”
 

 


First domestic flight lands in Sudan’s capital Khartoum since war began

First domestic flight lands in Sudan’s capital Khartoum since war began
Updated 39 min 52 sec ago

First domestic flight lands in Sudan’s capital Khartoum since war began

First domestic flight lands in Sudan’s capital Khartoum since war began
  • It’s unclear how many airlines would use Khartoum airport

CAIRO: A domestic passenger flight landed at Khartoum International Airport in Sudan’s capital on Wednesday for the first time since the war broke out over two years ago, potentially marking the gradual reopening of air traffic.
Sudan’s media and culture ministry confirmed a Badr Airlines flight from Port Sudan landed. The airport previously received flights carrying Sudanese military leader Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan at least twice this year.
The army in March captured the airport from the rival Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group. The war broke out when the military and the RSF turned against each other in a struggle for power. Although the military holds the capital, the RSF still controls parts of the western Darfur region and other areas.
The fighting has killed at least 40,000 people, according to the World Health Organization, and displaced as many as 12 million others. Over 24 million people are facing acute food insecurity, UN says.
The RSF fired drones at the airport at dawn Tuesday but the military intercepted them, according to an army statement.
RSF leader Mohammad Hamdan Dagalo Mousa, also known as Hemedti, later on Tuesday night threatened in a video speech that his forces would continue targeting the airport.
“Any airplane that takes off from any neighboring country, any airplane that is dropping supplies, bombing or killing, any drone that takes off from any airport, will be a legitimate target for us,” he said.
Burhan toured the airport on Tuesday ahead of its scheduled reopening and delivered a speech vowing to protect citizens from the RSF.
The Sudan Civil Aviation Authority this week confirmed that domestic flights would resume on Wednesday after necessary operational and technical procedures were completed, according to Sudan News Agency.
It’s unclear how many airlines would use Khartoum airport. Sudanese officials were not immediately available for comment.


Maternal deaths in Gaza soar; UN warns effects of starvation, trauma will take ‘generations to heal’

Maternal deaths in Gaza soar; UN warns effects of starvation, trauma will take ‘generations to heal’
Updated 22 October 2025

Maternal deaths in Gaza soar; UN warns effects of starvation, trauma will take ‘generations to heal’

Maternal deaths in Gaza soar; UN warns effects of starvation, trauma will take ‘generations to heal’
  • Senior Population Fund official highlights ‘generational threats to health and development’ as 11,500 pregnant women face starvation and 1 in 3 pregnancies is ‘high-risk’
  • With most hospitals damaged or destroyed, 70% of babies are premature or low weight, newborns share incubators, and women give birth in rubble by the side of the road
  • Gender-based violence has soared in Gaza, and up to 70% of youths and 40% of adults are believed to be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder

NEW YORK CITY: The reproductive health crisis in Gaza and the West Bank will take “generations” to overcome, a senior UN official warned on Wednesday, citing soaring numbers of maternal deaths, mass malnutrition among pregnant women, and widespread psychological trauma affecting the youth of the territories.

Andrew Saberton, deputy executive director of the UN Population Fund, said after a visit to the region that the scale of the devastation women and girls face is “far worse than expected,” with critical services shattered and entire communities pushed beyond survival.

“Gaza has been flattened, mile upon mile of rubble and dust with few buildings left intact,” Saberton told reporters in New York. “This is not collateral damage and I cannot unsee what I saw. This is going to take generations to heal.”

Saberton painted a dire picture of the conditions for women and girls in Gaza, where one in four people are facing starvation, including 11,500 pregnant women, and 70 percent of newborns are now premature or of low birth weight. One in three pregnancies is considered high-risk.

“These are not isolated medical issues, these are generational threats to health and development,” he said.

Women are unable to access even the most basic menstrual hygiene products, Saberton added. Some resort to cutting up old pieces of cloth, supplies of which have themselves run out, while sheltering in tents or damaged buildings. The Population Fund estimates 700,000 women and girls require menstrual supplies.

With 94 percent of hospitals in Gaza damaged or destroyed, maternal deaths are increasing as a result of lack of drugs, equipment and fuel. Several newborns have to share each available incubator. Ambulance services are “basically non-existent” and some women are forced to give birth in rubble by the side of the road, Saberton said.

The fund delivered a small shipment of medical supplies, including incubators and fetal monitors, last week through the Kerem Shalom border crossing, but Saberton warned this was a “trickle” compared to what is needed.

It has more aid supplies ready for delivery at border crossings, including 200,000 menstrual pads, more incubators, hospital beds and hygiene kits, but access to Gaza remains heavily restricted.

“All crossings must be opened and all impediments removed to allow full, safe and sustained humanitarian access,” Saberton said.

There are an estimated 130 births every day in Gaza but most maternity wards have been destroyed or shut down. The Population Fund plans to help rebuild maternity hospitals, establish new emergency birthing centers, deploy networks of midwives, and provide post-partum kits and medications.

Meanwhile, gender-based violence has “soared” in Gaza, as it does in every conflict, Saberton said. He called for immediate investment in safe spaces and mental health services. The mental toll on the population is immense: up to 70 percent of youths and 40 percent of adults are believed to be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

“This trauma will not be resolved in months or years. This will take generations,” Saberton said.

In the West Bank, he told how movement restrictions and military checkpoints continue to severely disrupt daily life, especially for the estimated 73,000 pregnant women in the territory.

“Pregnant women and their partners are often held for hours and then denied onward travel,” he said. “That can mean life-threatening consequences for both mother and child.”

The fund operates mobile clinics and has established 19 emergency centers to provide support for women unable to reach a hospital to give birth.

Saberton also underscored the wider human toll of the conflict between Israel and Hamas. In Gaza, which has a population of 2.1 million people living in an area of just 363 sq. km, about 250,000 people have been killed or injured, which represents almost 12 percent of the total population.

“To put that in perspective, that would be like 39 million people in the United States dead or injured,” he said.

He also warned of an increase in the number of unsafe abortions as a result of lack of contraception, and said an estimated 170,000 people have urinary or reproductive tract infections, which are preventable and treatable under normal circumstances.

The Population Fund’s humanitarian appeal is currently only about one-third funded, Saberton said, after key donors, including the US, pulled back last year leaving critical gaps.

“Donors are stepping up again but the needs are huge,” he added. “If we don’t act quickly … it’s going to be too late.”

Saberton appealed for sustained international engagement with the crisis: “The world can no longer afford to turn away; not from Gaza and not from the West Bank.

“Women and girls’ lives must transcend mere survival. True peace must guarantee safety, support and agency for every woman and girl to heal and to live their lives in dignity.”


Iraq bans US gaming platform Roblox over child safety concerns

Iraq bans US gaming platform Roblox over child safety concerns
Updated 22 October 2025

Iraq bans US gaming platform Roblox over child safety concerns

Iraq bans US gaming platform Roblox over child safety concerns
  • The move places Iraq among several Middle East countries tightening regulation of online gaming and interactive platforms over child safety and moral concerns

BAGHDAD: Iraq has banned US user-generated videogame platform Roblox due to concerns over child safety, the government said, joining other countries in cracking down on virtual worlds.
The government said late on Sunday that the ban was motivated by concerns that the game allowed direct communication between users in ways that exposed children and adolescents to attempts of exploitation or cyber-extortion, and that its content was “incompatible with social values and traditions.”
Roblox Corp. said safety was its top priority and it wanted to work with the government to restore access.
“We strongly contest recent claims made by the Iraqi authorities, which we believe to be based on an outdated understanding of our platform,” a Roblox spokesperson said.
Earlier this year, Roblox temporarily suspended certain communication features such as in-game chat for users in Arabic speaking countries, including Iraq, the spokesperson added.
The Iraqi communications ministry said the nationwide ban was based on a comprehensive study and field monitoring which found that “the game involves several security, social, and behavioral risks.”
The move places Iraq among several Middle East countries tightening regulation of online gaming and interactive platforms over child safety and moral concerns. Turkiye blocked access to Roblox in August 2024, also citing child abuse risks.


US urges UN security council to ease sanctions on Syria amid push for more inclusive transition

US urges UN security council to ease sanctions on Syria amid push for more inclusive transition
Updated 54 min 59 sec ago

US urges UN security council to ease sanctions on Syria amid push for more inclusive transition

US urges UN security council to ease sanctions on Syria amid push for more inclusive transition
  • Envoy Mike Waltz acknowledges there are ‘many challenges ahead’ after the fall of the Assad regime, and ‘further relief is critical to giving Syria a chance’
  • UN deputy special envoy for Syria backs sanctions relief, but warns the political transition risks falling short of public expectations, particularly among women and minorities
  • Syria’s representative says the nation is ‘present, active, listening, engaging in dialogue and taking decisions,’ calls for international support to ensure sustainable peace and recovery

NEW YORK CITY: The US on Wednesday urged the UN Security Council to ease sanctions on Syria, saying this would be a crucial step in efforts to help stabilize the country and support its political transition.
The US permanent representative to the UN, Mike Waltz, told council members the Syrian government must seize the “historic opportunity” created by President Donald Trump’s decision to pursue sanctions relief for the country.
Trump signed an Executive Order in June formally ending Washington’s broader sanctions program on Syria. However, targeted sanctions remain in place against individuals and entities linked to the former Assad regime, human rights violations or narcotics trafficking, as well as other designated groups. The order also mandates a review of specific listings, and authorizes the easing of export controls on certain goods
“We call on this council to support efforts to ease UN sanctions on Syria, including the removal of restrictions on certain members of Syria’s leadership” imposed under prior Security Council resolutions, Waltz told the council members. “Further relief is critical to giving Syria a chance.”
He thanked member states for their “constructive engagement” on the issue and acknowledged the “many challenges ahead” as Syria seeks to emerge from decades of authoritarian rule under the Assad regime. He reiterated that the US supports a Syria that is “stable, sovereign and vibrant,” but warned that political inclusion and accountability will be essential elements of any meaningful progress.
“All Syrians should have a meaningful stake in the country’s governance,” he said. “There can be no progress without this assurance.”
Najat Rochdi, the UN’s deputy special envoy for Syria, also emphasized the importance of lifting economic sanctions, alongside domestic reforms, as an essential step for the success of the political transition.
“Sanctions must be lifted, at a larger and quicker scale, to give this transition a chance,” she said, speaking from Damascus.
Rochdi welcomed US efforts to repeal the Caesar Act, which was put in place by Washington in 2019 and imposed sweeping sanctions on the former Syrian government under President Bashar Assad for crimes against the Syrian people.
However, she warned that the country’s political transition risks falling short of public expectations, particularly among women and minority communities. Only six women were elected to Syria’s new transitional People’s Assembly, out of 119 contested seats, and they were not adequately represented at all levels of the electoral process.
“Women were consistently underrepresented,” Rochdi said, as she called for future elections to better safeguard their rights and representation.
The transitional process in Syria, initiated after a peace agreement this year, is intended to culminate in free and fair national elections. However, Rochdi expressed concern about rushed procedures, low public engagement and weak inclusion of minorities.
The US, Waltz said, continues to support a Syrian-led process for reconciliation, including efforts in the southern region of Sweida, where violence this year prompted the development of a joint road map with Jordan. He also welcomed Syria’s cooperation with the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, and recent US-facilitated talks between Syria and Israel to help ease tensions.
Syria’s permanent representative to the UN, Ibrahim Olabi, offered a sweeping defense of his government’s domestic reform efforts and international engagement. He described recent developments in the nation as “unprecedented” and called for international support to help ensure sustainable peace and recovery.
He presented what he described as a list of Syria’s “achievements since the liberation” in December last year, highlighting political reforms, anti-drug efforts, and cooperation with international organizations.
Syria is “present, active, listening, engaging in dialogue and taking decisions,” Olabi said.
He hailed the recent parliamentary elections in the country as a landmark moment that represented “the beginning of a new era of freedom,” adding: “More than 1,500 Syrian citizens ran for 119 seats with feelings of joy, hope, support and criticism. Their diverse voices and opinions were broadcast live on official TV channels.”
Olabi also highlighted Syria’s cooperation with international mechanisms for accountability, citing in particular the case of Suwayda region. “We have kept our promise, granting the International Commission of Inquiry unrestricted access and ensuring accountability,” he said, noting a grassroots campaign had raised more than $14 million to support local recovery.
The Syrian government was making “every effort to end the scourge of drugs,” he said, adding that narcotics had been used “as a tool to target the peoples of the region” under the Assad regime. In addition, he reiterated Syria’s cooperation with international counterterrorism efforts, particularly against Daesh.
“Today, we are writing our history with our own hands,” Olabi said. “This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the international community to continue to be a positive partner in this history that is being written in one of the most ancient places on Earth.”
Oman, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group at the UN, offered strong political backing for the new Syrian authorities.
“We express our full solidarity with the government and people of the Syrian Arab Republic,” the Omani delegate said. “We welcome the national efforts made by the Syrian government to establish security and stability and restore state institutions.”
The Arab Group condemned repeated Israeli strikes on Syrian territory. It accusing Israel of exploiting humanitarian crises and called on the Security Council to act.
“We reject the prevarications that are made by Israel to justify such aggression,” the group said as it called for a “complete withdrawal from the occupied Syrian Golan.”
The group also called for the lifting of sanctions on Syria, describing it as a “humanitarian and economic necessity,” and urged the international community to increase its support for development and reconstruction programs in the country.
“The group stresses that the political process, that is Syrian-led and Syrian-owned, is the only means of achieving sustainable peace,” the Omani representative said, calling for the depoliticization of humanitarian aid, and additional international support for the host countries that continue to aid Syrian refugees.
The group also welcomed the recent elections in Syria, which it said had helped “entrench constitutional life” and marked a step forward on Syria’s “path toward peace, stability, and development.”
The calls for sanctions relief come as the humanitarian situation in Syria remains dire. Ramesh Rajasingham, speaking on behalf of the UN’s humanitarian chief, said more than 70 percent of Syrians need assistance. Drought, displacement and the explosive remnants of war are compounding widespread hardship, he added.
The UN reaches an average of 3.4 million Syrians in need of aid each month, but funding for relief efforts is rapidly drying up. The humanitarian response plan for Syria is only 19 percent funded and various programs, including water deliveries and services that address gender-based violence, face imminent cuts.
“We can do more to help the people of Syria if three conditions are met: deescalation, more funding, and tangible investments in reconstruction,” Rajasingham told the Security Council.
Waltz, the US envoy, expressed optimism for the future, citing Syria’s improving regional ties and increasing interest in reconstruction.
“Syria has before it a historic opportunity,” he said. “The time to act is now.”