Khaleej Times

Embattled Assad regime putting up a business as usual show in Damascus

Hopes that Syria will survive under Al Assad seem misplaced as donor nations are unlikely to come forth until leadership question is settled

- ANCHAL VOHRA

On August 9, after waiting for months in Lebanon and years in India, I finally had a visa to travel to Syria, a country at war since March 2011, an outbreak of violence that has left 330,000 people dead, flattened entire neighbourh­oods in many cities, and crippled the economy for decades to come.

In Damascus, from every check point and almost every building, Bashar Al Assad watches you. Dressed either in a Western suit and bearing a mild smile or in army fatigues with a beret on his head and aviators on his eyes, the president’s posters portray him both as a ‘soft doctor’ and a ‘protector of the realm’. In such depictions, he is often supported by his paternal lineage, lest anyone forgets he is the son of Hafez Al Assad, the former pilot who took control of Syria in a coup in 1970. The president’s younger brother Maher Al Assad also makes appearance­s, equipped with an appropriat­ely stern look for the commander of the Fourth Armored Division — which, together with Syria’s powerful secret police, forms the core of the regime’s security apparatus.

Despite its strength in Damascus, the government doesn’t control all of it. Just a few kilometres from a safe zone in the capital, a fierce battle between the Syrian army and anti-regime forces is being fought in Jobar, an eastern part of the city. At Armitage Hotel, located in a relatively safe area, at 2am I heard the thudding of explosions and from the window of my room saw fire light up the sky as planes whistled and dropped bombs on a rebel stronghold. During the day, the streets had the usual traffic jams as people went about their daily business.

I had spent my evening with three young Syrians on Pub Street in the old city. “It’s a mess,” is the assessment of a twenty-something in jeans and a tshirt, his hair in a knot. “The rockets, the barrel, the AK, we hear it all,” he says, “and then we come and drink, because what else is there to do?” He wants to be a filmmaker once the war ends, but for now he and his friends come to Bab Sharqi, the Christian quarter of the old city. “The rebels are fighting the government, the rebels are also fundamenta­lists, and the fundamenta­lists are also fighting among themselves,” he says, “do you know?”

Jobar is held by an assortment of rebel groups with varying foreign patrons. The Faylaq Al Rahman brigade, which was formed by a Syrian army defector and claimed to be a part of the Free Syrian Army, took support from an Al Qaeda affiliate now known as Tahrir Al Sham. The Tahrir was earlier known as Jabhat Al Nusra, and is reportedly backed by Qatar, as is the Ahrar Al Sham, which has shown gratitude to Qatar and Turkey in public statements. There is also the Jaish Al Islam. Over the years, these groups have fought one another for dominance of East Damascus. Subject to equations among warlords but mainly dependent on the agendas of patrons, alliances on the ground have been in constant flux.

The aspiring filmmaker and his friends are bewildered about who to blame and who to support. As if resigned to fate, he says, “Daesh, first we need to finish them. There will be another day to fight for political reforms.” What began six years ago as a popular agitation for a shift to democratic rule was hijacked soon after by extremists and sundry fundamenta­list. Today, political freedom is not in sight and Syrians like the young men at Bab Sharqi are asking if they weren’t better off before the uprising.

Besides the Assads, the city streets also have hoardings welcoming visitors to the ‘Damascus Internatio­nal Trade Fair’, an annual event that is returning to the capital after a hiatus of six years. At the venue, just off the airport road, preparatio­ns are in full swing amidst the heavy presence of security personnel, though the rest of the arrangemen­ts seem a bit haphazard. Dancers in embroidere­d traditiona­l costumes are to be seen practising their performanc­e of Dabke, a folk dance of the Levant. The stage for it has been set with instrument­s suggestive of an opera, and it makes me wonder if it’s enough to drown out the sound of bombs. Overall, the atmosphere seems hopeful, exuding a youthful energy and the promise that ‘Syria will survive’.

Mohammad Samer Al Khalil, the country’s minister of economy and foreign trade, is moving around the venue with a retinue of a dozen odd people, making last minute checks. He may not have a clear idea of what Syria specifical­ly needs, but is vocal about what it doesn’t want. “We will not accept investors from any country which imposes conditions,” he says. By this, he means that anyone who demands the ouster of Assad will stay out of the reconstruc­tion money game. According to the World Bank, Syria needs $200 billion to rebuild its destroyed cities, but some of the biggest donors, like the US, UK, Japan and France, are unlikely to come forth until the question of leadership is settled. So where will the regime get the money from? “We are relying on the Brics nations, Russia, China, and of course, Indian companies are very efficient. Iran will also play a major role,” he replies.

Before the opening ceremony, I steal some time to visit the pavilion of internatio­nal companies. By the minister’s claim, more than a thousand firms are to attend the fair. By my count, of the 35 to 40 foreign companies that have marked their presence, about half are from Iran — with pictures of Ayatollah Khomeini and Ali Khamenei put up at stalls offering products that range from buses and tyres to banking solutions and packaged juices.

Tehran has been a firm backer of the Assad regime, both militarily and diplomatic­ally. Not only has the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard fought alongside the Syrian army, the Hezbollah—its proxy militia in Lebanon—has sent hordes of men to fight in Syria. Assad’s near victory is the final push for Iran’s ambitious ‘arc of influence’ stretching from its eastern border through Iraq and Syria to the Mediterran­ean coast in Lebanon. The ‘arc’ is expected to bring prestige and economic dividends to Iran, which was seen until recently as a pariah state by the West and has only just begun to profit from the lifting of US-imposed sanctions.

For financial support, Damascus is looking to China. Xi Jinping’s ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ initiative, aimed at setting up infrastruc­ture to boost internatio­nal trade, includes Syria as part of an envisioned revival of the old Silk Route that once passed through Palmyra and Damascus before turning towards Beirut and Istanbul. By Chinese calculatio­ns, the project will eventually generate enough money for the reconstruc­tion of Syrian cities.

At the fair, the Chinese bay has pamphlets of companies in the businesses of oil, air conditione­rs, modular homes, cement, marble and granite production and a few others. He Weiping, a manager of Sino-Syrian Kawkab Oil Company, a SyrianChin­ese joint venture to develop an old oil field in northeast Syria some 600 km away from Damascus, has been in the country since 2015. “My daughter is in Spain and family in China,” he says, “I visit them sometimes.” He is looking forward to retirement by the end of this year, but that doesn’t stop him from selling technology to digitise oil fields even to me. “We are creating the future,” he enthuses, drawing out a phone to explain not just how an app can control machines at home and in industry, but how a click is all it would take to block the extraction of oil from a well taken over by a terrorist group.

Daesh had infamously funded its expansion by selling Syrian oil; before coalition strikes stopped it, the group was earning an estimated $1.5 million a day through illegal sales. Weiping is concerned about Kurdish rebels who control the Al Hasakah province where the joint venture’s oil field lies. “First, there was a fear of Daesh, now there are (Kurdish groups), but with our super technology, the oil will be secure,” he says, “no one would be able to steal it.”

The Chinese are eyeing more oil contracts, apart from constructi­on projects in places that the war has left in rubble. A Syrian presence also lets Beijing monitor activities of the East Turkistan Movement in the Middle East, a group that poses a terror threat in China’s Xinjiang region and reportedly sent thousands of fighters to join extremists in Syria.

The areas retaken by the regime are safer than others for business, but the conflict still engulfs a large part of the country. According to the World Bank, Syria has suffered estimated losses of $226 billion — four times the size of its economy in 2010 — so far. But far from the darkness of east Aleppo, here in Damascus, the trade fair glitters with fancy lights and resounds with upbeat words. It’s not only about investment, it’s also a show choreograp­hed to instil Syrian nationalis­m.

Visuals of soldiers on the frontline form the background of the stage as the national anthem is sung for a gathering of notables. “Beautiful,” says a young Syrian sitting next to me. What about those caught in the war, I ask. “First we need peace, but President Assad will have to make changes,” is the reply, “I think he will. He is a doctor, you know.” — Open magazine

Dancers in embroidere­d traditiona­l costumes are to be seen practising their performanc­e of Dabke, a folk dance of the Levant. The stage for it has been set with instrument­s suggestive of an opera, and it makes me wonder if it’s enough to drown out the sound of bombs. Overall, the atmosphere seems hopeful, exuding a youthful energy and the promise that ‘Syria will survive’

 ?? —AFP photos ?? Dancers perform on stage during the opening ceremony of the Damascus Internatio­nal Fair on August 17. The fair is an annual event which returned to the capital after a hiatus of six years.
—AFP photos Dancers perform on stage during the opening ceremony of the Damascus Internatio­nal Fair on August 17. The fair is an annual event which returned to the capital after a hiatus of six years.
 ??  ?? Fighters from the Syrian Democratic Forces walk through rubble in the embattled city of Raqqa.
Fighters from the Syrian Democratic Forces walk through rubble in the embattled city of Raqqa.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates