Syrians cheer end of 50 years of Assad rule at first Friday prayers
since government fell
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[December 14, 2024]
By ALBERT AJI and MATTHEW LEE
DAMASCUS (AP) — Exuberant Syrians observed the first Friday prayers
since the ouster of President Bashar Assad, gathering in the capital's
historic main mosque, its largest square and around the country to
celebrate the end of half a century of authoritarian rule.
The newly installed interim prime minister delivered the sermon at the
Umayyad Mosque, declaring that a new era of “freedom, dignity and
justice” was dawning for Syria.
The gatherings illustrated the dramatic changes that have swept over
Syria less than a week after insurgents marched into Damascus and
toppled Assad. Amid the jubilation, U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken met with allies around the region and called for an “inclusive
and non-sectarian” interim government.
Blinken arrived in Iraq on a previously unannounced stop after talks in
Jordan and Turkey, which backs some of the Syrian insurgent factions. So
far, U.S. officials have not talked of direct meetings with Syria's new
rulers.
The main insurgent force, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, has worked to establish
security and start a political transition after seizing Damascus early
Sunday. The group has tried to reassure a public both stunned by Assad's
fall and concerned about extremist jihadis among the rebels.
Insurgent leaders say the group has broken with its extremist past,
though HTS is still labeled a terrorist group by the United States and
European countries.
HTS's leader, Ahmad al-Sharaa, formerly known as Abu Mohammed al-Golani,
appeared in a video message Friday congratulating “the great Syrian
people for the victory of the blessed revolution.”
“I invite them to head to the squares to show their happiness without
shooting bullets and scaring people,” he said. “And then after, we will
work to build this country, and as I said in the beginning, we will be
victorious by the help of God.”
Syrians celebrate in the historic heart of Damascus
Huge crowds, including some insurgents, packed the historic Umayyad
Mosque in the capital's old city, many waving the rebel opposition flag
— with its three red stars — which has swiftly replaced the Assad-era
flag with with its two green stars.
Syrian state television reported that the sermon was delivered by
Mohammed al-Bashir, the interim prime minister installed by HTS this
week.
The scene resonated on multiple levels. The mosque, one of the world's
oldest dating back some 1,200 years, is a beloved symbol of Syria, and
sermons there like all mosque sermons across Syria were tightly
controlled under Assad's rule.
Also, in the early days of the anti-government uprising in 2011,
protesters would leave Friday prayers to march in rallies against Assad
before he launched a brutal crackdown that turned the uprising into a
long and bloody civil war.
“I didn’t step foot in Umayyad Mosque since 2011," because of the tight
security controls around it, said one worshipper, Ibrahim al-Araby.
“Since 11 or 12 years, I haven’t been this happy.”
Another worshipper, Khair Taha, said there was “fear and trepidation for
what’s to come. But there is also a lot of hope that now we have a say
and we can try to build.”
Blocks away in Damascus' biggest roundabout, named Umayyad Square,
thousands gathered, including many families with small children — a sign
of how, so far at least, the country's transformation has not caused
violent instability.
“Unified Syria to build Syria,” the crowd chanted. Some shouted slurs
against Assad and his late father, calling them pigs, an insult that
would have previously led to offenders being hauled off to one of the
feared detention centers of Assad’s security forces.
One man in the crowd, 51-year-old Khaled Abu Chahine — originally from
the southern province of Daraa, where the 2011 uprising first erupted —
said he hoped for “freedom and coexistence between all Syrians, Alawites,
Sunnis, Shiites and Druze.”
The interim prime minister, al-Bashir, had been the head of a de facto
administration created by HTS in Idlib, the opposition's enclave in
northwest Syria. The rebels were bottled up in Idlib for years before
fighters broke out in a shock offensive and marched across Syria in 10
days.
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Syrians chant slogans and wave the new Syrian flag as they gather
for Friday prayers at the Umayyad mosque in Damascus, Syria, Friday,
Dec. 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
Similar scenes of joy unfolded in other major cities, including in
Aleppo, Homs, Hama, Latakia and Raqqa.
US and its allies try to shape a rapidly changing Syria
Al-Sharaa, HTS' leader, has promised to bring a pluralistic
government to Syria, seeking to dispel fears among many Syrians —
especially its many minority communities — that the insurgents will
impose a hard-line, extremist rule.
Another key factor will be winning international recognition for a
new government in a country where multiple foreign powers have their
hands in the mix.
The Sunni Arab insurgents who overthrew Assad did so with vital help
from Turkey, a longtime foe of the U.S.-backed Kurds. Turkey
controls a strip of Syrian territory along the shared border and
backs an insurgent faction uneasily allied to HTS — and is deeply
opposed to any gains by Syria's Kurds.
In other developments, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said
Turkey’s Embassy in Damascus would reopen Saturday for the first
time since 2012, when it closed due to the Syrian civil war.
The U.S. has troops in eastern Syria to combat remnants of the
Islamic State group and supports Kurdish-led fighters who rule most
of the east. Since Assad's fall, Israel has bombed sites all over
Syria, saying it is trying to prevent weapons from falling into
extremist hands. It has also seized a swath of southern Syria along
the border with the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, calling it a
buffer zone.
After talks with Fidan, Blinken said there was “broad agreement”
between Turkey and the U.S. on what they would like to see in Syria.
That starts with an "interim government in Syria, one that is
inclusive and non-sectarian and one that protects the rights of
minorities and women” and does not “pose any kind of threat to any
of Syria’s neighbors,” Blinken said.
Fidan said the priority was “establishing stability in Syria as soon
as possible, preventing terrorism from gaining ground, and ensuring
that IS and the PKK aren’t dominant” — referring to the Islamic
State group and the Kurdistan Workers Party.
Ankara considers the PKK within Turkey's borders a terrorist group,
as it does the Kurdish-backed forces in Syria backed by the U.S.
A U.S. official said that in Ankara, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
and Fidan both told Blinken that Kurdish attacks on Turkish
positions would require a response. The official spoke to reporters
on condition of anonymity to discuss private diplomatic talks.
The U.S. has been trying to limit such incidents in recent days and
had helped organize an agreement to prevent confrontations around
the northern Syrian town of Manbij, which was taken by Turkey-backed
opposition fighters from the U.S.-backed Kurdish forces earlier this
week.
In Baghdad, Blinken met with Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed al-Sudani,
saying both countries wanted to ensure the Islamic State group —
also known by its Arabic acronym Daesh — doesn't exploit Syria's
transition to re-emerge.
“Having put Daesh back in its box, we can’t let it out, and we’re
determined to make sure that that doesn’t happen," Blinken said.
The U.S. official who briefed reporters said that Blinken had
impressed upon al-Sudani the importance of Iraq exercising its full
sovereignty over its territory and airspace to stop Iran from
transporting weapons and equipment to Syria, either for Assad
supporters or onward to the militant Hezbollah group in Lebanon.
___
Lee reported from Ankara, Turkey. Associated Press writers Suzan
Fraser in Ankara and Sally Abou AlJoud in Beirut contributed to this
report.
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