Syria opposition leader discusses ‘transfer of power’ after al-Assad’s fall
Syria’s opposition leader on Monday began discussions on transferring power, a day after anti-government forces dramatically unseated president Bashar al-Assad following decades of brutal rule.
Al-Assad fled Syria as opposition forces swept into the capital, bringing a spectacular end on Sunday to five decades of brutal rule by his clan.
He oversaw a crackdown on a democracy movement that erupted in 2011, sparking a war that killed 500,000 people and forced half the country to flee their homes, millions of them finding refuge abroad.
Opposition leader Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, now using his real name Ahmed al-Sharaa, met with Prime Minister Mohammed al-Jalali “to coordinate a transfer of power that guarantees the provision of services” to Syria’s people, said a statement posted on the opposition groups’ Telegram channels.
At the core of the system of rule that al-Assad inherited from his father Hafez was a brutal complex of prisons and detention centers used to eliminate dissent by jailing those suspected of stepping out of the ruling Baath party’s line.
Thousands of Syrians gathered on Monday outside a jail synonymous with the worst atrocities of Assad’s rule to search for relatives, many of whom have spent years in the Saydnaya facility outside Damascus.
Rescuers from the Syrian White Helmets group had earlier said they were looking for potential secret doors or basements in Saydnaya.
“We are working with all our energy to reach a new hope, and we must be prepared for the worst,” the organization said in a statement, urging families of the missing to have “patience.”
Aida Taha, 65, said she had been “roaming the streets like a madwoman” in search of her brother, who was arrested in 2012.
“We’ve been oppressed long enough. We want our children back,” she said.
While Syria has been at war for over 13 years, the government’s collapse came in a matter of days, with a lightning offensive led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS). Rooted in Syria’s branch of Al-Qaeda, HTS is proscribed by Western governments as a terrorist group but has sought to soften its image in recent years.
‘Nightmare’
In central Damascus on Monday, despite all the uncertainty over the future, the joy was palpable.
“It’s indescribable. We never thought this nightmare would end. We are reborn,” Rim Ramadan, 49, a civil servant at the finance ministry, said.
“We were afraid for 55 years of speaking, even at home. We used to say the walls had ears,” Ramadan said, as people honked car horns and opposition forces fired their guns into the air.
“We feel like we’re living a dream,” she added.
Syria’s parliament, formerly pro-al-Assad like the prime minister, said it supports “the will of the people to build a new Syria towards a better future governed by law and justice.”
During the offensive launched on November 27, opposition forces met little resistance as they wrested city after city from al-Assad’s control, opening the gates of prisons along the way and freeing thousands of people, many of them held on political charges.
Social media groups were alight with Syrians sharing images of detainees reportedly brought out from the dungeons, in a collective effort to reunite families with their newly released loved ones.
Others, like Fadwa Mahmoud, whose husband and son are missing, posted calls for help.
“Where are you, Maher and Abdel Aziz? it’s time for me to hear your news. Oh God, please come back. Let my joy become complete,” wrote Mahmoud, herself a former detainee.
US President Joe Biden was among leaders cautioning that hardline groups within the victorious opposition force alliance would face scrutiny.
“Some of the (opposition) groups that took down al-Assad have their own grim record of terrorism and human right abuses,” Biden said.
“We will assess not just their words, but their actions,” Biden said.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, in Saudi Arabia on Monday, said HTS must reject “terrorism and violence” before Britain can engage with the group designated “terrorist” by Britain.
Israeli, Turkish strikes
The United Nations said that whoever ends up in power in Syria must hold the al-Assad regime to account. But how al-Assad might face justice remains unclear, especially after the Kremlin refused on Monday to confirm reports by Russian news agencies that he had fled to Moscow.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov however said that if Russia granted asylum to al-Assad and his family, this would be a decision taken by President Vladimir Putin.
The Syrian embassy in Moscow raised the flag of the opposition, and the Kremlin said it would discuss the status of its bases in Syria with the new authorities.
Russia played an instrumental role in keeping al-Assad in power, directly intervening in the war starting in 2015 and providing air cover to the army during the rebellion.
Iran, another key ally of al-Assad, said it expected its “friendly” ties with Syria to continue, with its foreign minister saying the ousted president “never asked” for Tehran’s help against the opposition offensive.
Turkey, historically a backer of the opposition, called for an “inclusive” new government in Syria, as the sheer unpredictability of the situation began to settle in.
Israel, which borders Syria, sent troops into a buffer zone on the east of the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights after al-Assad’s fall, in what Foreign Minister Gideon Saar described as a “limited and temporary step” for “security reasons.”
Saar also said his country had struck “chemical weapons” in Syria, “in order that they will not fall in the hands of extremists.”
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor also said Israeli strikes targeted military sites of the deposed government’s army, “including weapons depots housing anti-tank missiles and anti-aircraft weapons” in areas including Damascus, the south and the coast.
In northern Syria, a Turkish drone strike on a Kurdish-held area killed 11 civilians, six of them children, according to the Britain-based Observatory.