Syrian Media Hails Referendum 'Victory'

W460

State media on Tuesday hailed as a "victory for Syria" the adoption by referendum of a new constitution that ends the ruling Baath party's monopoly on power but which leaves extensive powers in the president's hands.

"The success of the referendum on the constitution represents a victory for Syria, and not for any party, government or political movement, as some are trying to claim," said the official daily al-Baath.

The new law fundamentally "opens the way to an era of political consensus and the consolidation of liberties and the concept of citizenship," said the mouthpiece of the ruling Baath party.

Syrians' voted on Sunday for a new constitution brought in by President Bashar Assad after 11 months of anti-regime protests, with 89.4 percent of voters backing the charter and a turnout of 57.4 percent, according to Interior Minister Mohammed al-Shaar.

The constitution ends the legal basis for the five-decade stranglehold on power of Assad's Baath party but still leaves huge powers in his hands.

The opposition said the changes were cosmetic after nearly a year of repression by Assad's security forces that human rights groups say have left more than 7,600 people dead.

"The opinions of 750,000 (no) voters and of the six million who abstained will be respected, since the goal is to overcome the current (crisis), al-Baath newspaper said.

"Those who drafted the constitution do not claim that it is perfect and that it cannot be subject to amendment."

The official Tishrin newspaper Tishrin said the vote amounted to a "defeat" inflicted on "states which incite violence by urging the opposition to refuse all dialogue or through their support for armed groups."

Those states "have delivered diatribes and have made threats such as those of (Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh) Hamad bin Jassem (al-Thani), who advocates arming the opposition to make the blood of Syrians flow."

The Qatari premier on Monday called for the arming of Syrian rebels.

"We should do whatever necessary to help them, including giving them weapons to defend themselves," he said during an official visit to Norway.

Comments 3
Missing sergio 28 February 2012, 15:24

what is constructive about this, let him resign or finish his term & that's it. why he wants to stay until in power until 2028 enough of sucking people's blood.

Default-user-icon Murad (Guest) 28 February 2012, 17:14

No no you guys got it all wrong. The 100-year-old Gulf Arab family monarchies are all democratic and bastions of freedom. If you'd read the western media, you'd know that by now. Syria is the last remaining dictatorship in the Arab world, even though now the president can be challenged in open elections.

Missing peace 28 February 2012, 18:27

remember when dahiye was full of posters saying "thank you Qatar"? :)