Syrians split over regime’s readmission into Arab League
Syrian factions have given mixed reactions to an Arab League decision to lift the suspension on Syria’s membership after more than a decade of isolation, underscoring the deep rifts cut into the country by years of bloodshed.
The decision on Sunday by foreign ministers of Arab League countries consolidates a regional push to normalize ties with President Bashar Assad, whose country was suspended from the body in 2011.
Readmitting Syria into the Arab League was a “shock” for Syrians and would “kill the political process,” said Bader Jamous, the head of the opposition’s negotiating team in stalled UN peace talks.
The opposition was for years backed by countries now supporting normalization.
Writing on Twitter, Jamous said Assad’s opponents had “not been consulted” about the Arab League decisions.
Swaths of northern Syria are still held by Turkiye-backed rebel groups and protests against normalization with Assad have flared up there in recent months.
The Syria Campaign, which campaigns for victims of rights abuses in Syria, said Sunday’s move “sends a chilling message” and drilled “a final nail in the coffin of the hopes for freedom and democracy of the Arab Spring.”
Others were more positive.
The Syrian Democratic Council, the political body that governs the semi-autonomous regions of northeast Syria, said it “welcomed” the decision to lift Syria’s suspension in a statement on Monday.
Some Syrian political activists with ties to the regime — including former Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil — cautiously encouraged the move in an online statement.
They said it allowed for a regional Arab role, which could lead to “a positive outcome within the Syrian file.”
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