Syria's Assad to Stand again for President

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Syrian President Bashar Assad has registered to run in next month's presidential vote, which is expected to return him to power despite the grinding conflict, the parliament speaker announced Monday.

The election will be Syria's first multi-candidate presidential vote, after changes to the constitution, but it has already been criticized by the opposition and much of the international community as a "farce".

The government has not explained how it will hold the vote in a country gripped by a brutal war that has killed more than 150,000 people and left large swathes of territory beyond regime control.

Speaking at a session of parliament, speaker Mohamed al-Lahham read a letter from Assad announcing his candidacy.

"I, citizen Bashar Hafez Assad, wish to present my candidacy for the post of president of the republic," the document said.

A posting on the presidency's official Facebook page quoted Assad as calling on supporters of different candidates to express themselves through the ballot box.

"Those who wish to express their joy and support for any candidate for the presidency should do so in a responsible, patriotic way, first, and secondly, through the ballot box in a timely fashion," he said.

"I call on all Syrian citizens to refrain from firing in the air in joy, whatever the occasion might be, especially as Syria will be having its first election in modern history."

In Damascus, as children left school, dozens of young girls and boys chanted their approval of his candidacy, shouting "God, Bashar, and that's all".

Assad is expected to sail to victory against the six other candidates who have so far announced their runs, one of them a woman.

They are all largely unknown, except for one member of parliament, and it remains unclear how they will angle their campaigns against Assad.

Assad became president after his father Hafez died in 2000 and will be competing in the first multi-candidate elections for the post, after a constitutional amendment did away with a referendum system.

Electoral rules prevent those who have lived outside Syria for the past decade from competing, effectively ruling out participation by the opposition-in-exile.

With nearly half the population displaced, inside and outside the country, it is unclear how many Syrians will be able to vote.

The head of the electoral commission also said Monday that Syrians who left the country "illegally" would not be allowed to vote.

Many of the approximately three million Syrians who have fled the country did so through by being smuggled across the border into neighboring countries, or crossing through rebel-held border posts.

The main opposition National Coalition has criticized the elections as a "farce" and Washington said the vote would be a "parody of democracy".

Elsewhere in the country, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said opposition fighters had announced they would restore electricity to regime-held parts of Aleppo city.

The western part of the city has been without power for more than a week, after the opposition cut high-tension power lines to try to pressure the regime to end aerial raids on the rebel-held east of the city.

But the Observatory, a Britain-based monitor, said Monday that a statement from the Al-Nusra Front jihadist group promised to "restore electricity to all of Aleppo to end the suffering of our people."

Earlier, the Observatory reported that regime helicopters had dropped barrel bombs on the rebel-held Masaken Hanano district of eastern Aleppo.

Rights group have decried the use of the highly destructive, improvised bombs saying they cause indiscriminate civilian casualties.

The Assad regime has increasingly employed them over rebel-held parts of Aleppo, where fighting between the government and rebels has stepped up in recent weeks.

Hundreds of people, mainly civilians, have been killed in a nearly five-month aerial offensive against Aleppo.

More than 150,000 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict since March 2011, according to the Observatory.

Comments 35
Thumb popeye 28 April 2014, 13:00

oh.... what a surprise! I fancy his chances:)

Missing cedars 28 April 2014, 14:00

Yes we were waiting for this day, inshallah he will get 99.98 as usual, it is called new world hegemony democracy or else you and your family will disappear at night then found dead the day after because you were struck by a car.

Thumb ibinherathreik 28 April 2014, 18:36

"I call on all Syrian citizens to refrain from firing in the air in joy, whatever the occasion might be, especially as Syria will be having its first election in modern history."

Assad and 3asheerit 8 zi3raan have a lot in common especially firing in air for their thug leaders! And how funny that terrorist assad admitting that this is first time in ages that syria has elections 3 years into the uprising and hundreds of thousands of people killed!

Missing -samy 28 April 2014, 13:02

praise the lord, allah akbar

Missing cedars 28 April 2014, 14:04

His day still has not come yet.

Thumb ex-fpm 28 April 2014, 13:38

lol

Missing cedars 28 April 2014, 13:56

Do you swallow?

Thumb EagleDawn 28 April 2014, 14:14

a lot

Missing helicopter 28 April 2014, 15:16

FT.,
You do not do not Support Gaegae because of his past, but you support Bashar despite of his present. No need to explain, I understand you fully.

Thumb thepatriot 28 April 2014, 15:26

"I call on all Syrian citizens to refrain from firing in the air in joy"

... seriously...!?!

Thumb Mystic 28 April 2014, 15:27

Good luck Dr. Assad.

Default-user-icon Elias Mohammad Ya3koub (Guest) 28 April 2014, 16:31

Shias(12ers, alawites, ismailis and their offshots) are not Muslim. Their religion is shiaism.

Thumb Mystic 28 April 2014, 16:43

Yet thats what you said 3 years ago Mr. Takfiri

Thumb ex-fpm 28 April 2014, 16:45

I did not know you were posting here 3 years ago

Missing mohammad_ca 28 April 2014, 17:01

are you for real? lol

Thumb cedre 28 April 2014, 17:12

veritas, syria is thousands years old, it will survive the alawite tyrant...

Thumb Mystic 28 April 2014, 18:42

Ottoman empire ya cedre, they were the real tyrants, your beloved ottoman empire, that slaughtered all minorities, Alawi muslims are saints, compared to any of your Ibn Taymiyah figures.

Thumb cedre 28 April 2014, 18:58

Ottoman empire killed minorities ? probably why there were albanian, christians, bosniaks, jewish, kurdish, arab, caucasian, slav vizirs...
Ibn Taymiya defeated the Mongols, he could have killed all minorities if he had wanted to. But his religion forbids it. Same with ottomans or Saladin. Btw, our confessionalism is inspired from ottoman millet system...

Thumb Mystic 28 April 2014, 19:18

Armenian Genocide 1915? Ring any bells Mr. Euro Takfiri? Ottoman Empire did countless of massacres against minorities, anyone that wouldn't accept Salafi law, were beheaded, or even worse, became their slaves. Ibn Taymiyah were a cruel tyrant, that took Christian, Shia women as his toys. We both know what is true.

Thumb cedre 28 April 2014, 19:48

1- stricto sensu, it was not genocide
2- it was perpertrated by secularist young turks not ottomans
3- russians and armenians also massacred turkish, azeris and caucasians muslims...
4- young turks also massacred pious muslims, arabs, kurds, greeks,..
5- ottomans were no salafis, mainly sufi orders
6- ottomans didn't massacre minorities, they instaured millet and massacred however went against their rule, sunnis, christians, shias, etc...
7- lebanese druze and maronites were more crual to each others than ottomans
8- ottomans didnt wipe out alawite and shias, however safavids killed millions of sunni persians, converting them by force to their evil beliefs...
9- armenians were welcomed by sunnis in syria, among them salafis. But u have probably never been to Deir to understand this...

Thumb Abubakr 28 April 2014, 19:53

Thanks for recalling the facts cedre

Thumb shab 28 April 2014, 20:41

Bravo cedre

Thumb Maxx 28 April 2014, 20:48

Baschar to stand for president on all four hooves.

Thumb freedomarch 28 April 2014, 20:51

Well said Cedre!!!

Default-user-icon MankoushehExtra (Guest) 28 April 2014, 20:57

Is Assad running for presidency in Syria, Lebanon, or both? I guess it doesn't matter anyway. I'm sure the election process in Syria will be as transparent as Assad's neck.

Missing _karim 28 April 2014, 21:38

I wonder if someone can challenge the terrorist Saudi king to the throne. Oh wait, of course not.

Thumb freedomarch 28 April 2014, 22:45

Karim, it seems you have alot of going on in your head. IT MUST BE FROM A TRAUMA. Can be delt wheather emotional or phycal. Please take some of the pills that you iranian loyalists produce here, I am sure you be fine ... infact everything will be fine after that. Why keep worreing any more.

Thumb cedre 29 April 2014, 02:05

because u can prove that KSA did spaw alqaeda or ram passenger planes in world trade centers...

Thumb Mystic 28 April 2014, 22:30

Ottoman empire did actually almost wipe out the whole Alawi religion, just like they did with most other minorities, that now ceased to exist. It's about time you salafis know what it feels to be stepped upon. Better late than never

Thumb Mystic 28 April 2014, 22:32

Armenians were welcomed by normal Syrians, not salafis. They mostly live in the Alawi enclave Latakia, so whatever salafi stories you've heard, you are the least human of all sects.

Thumb smarty 28 April 2014, 22:36

Mystic, 25% of today's Turkey are halevi, = alawites. If they massacred them as you claim, where did the 20.000.000 halevis come from?

Thumb Mystic 28 April 2014, 22:53

I don't think you've read history smarty/sultan, these minorities lived like slaves under the Ottoman Empire. Slaves to harvest and women to rape for the soldiers.

Thumb kanaandian 29 April 2014, 01:10

must be really embarrassing to say that you are syrian these days... even before the war, they were calling themselves lebanese abroad.

Thumb cedre 29 April 2014, 02:04

'And Ibn Taymiyah raped many shi3a women cedre.'

you're a liar Mastic...

'Ottoman empire did actually almost wipe out the whole Alawi religion, just like they did with most other minorities, that now ceased to exist.'

prove ur BS masctic....

Thumb Tony.Farris 29 April 2014, 03:04

It would be preposterous to think a vote could reflect a real choice. It would be impossible to hold polls in areas controlled by rebels. In areas under government control, many would not dare vote for anyone but ASSad for fear of secret police. ASSad has Obama's red line and Kerry talking out of turn to thank for his continued hold on power.