The National - News

Assad sets his sights on ‘every inch’ of Syria

President says recovery of territory is his goal and rejects ‘biased’ Amnesty report of mass killings at prison complex

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A fifth round of talks on Syria is set to take place in Geneva next week

President Bashar al-Assad yesterday said his goal is to take back not only Raqqa but “every inch” of Syrian territory.

“Raqqa is a symbol,” Mr Assad said. It was “the duty of any government” to retake all of Syria, he added.

“Everywhere is a priority depending on the developmen­t of the battle. You have ISIL close to Damascus, you have them everywhere,” he said. “They are in Palmyra now and in the eastern part of Syria.

“For us it is all the same, Raqqa, Palmyra, Idlib – it’s all the same.”

After a string of major losses, ISIL’s two main stronghold­s of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa are both under attack from forces backed by a US-led coalition. An Arab- Kurd alliance, the Syrian Democratic Forces, has started an advance on Raqqa. Mr Assad denied that his government uses torture and repeated his rejection of allegation­s by Amnesty Internatio­nal of killings and violence perpetrate­d on prisoners at a complex near Damascus.

He called the Amnesty report “childish” with “not a single fact (or) evidence” to support allegation­s that about 13,000 people were hanged at the Saydnaya prison between 2011 and 2015.

“They said they interviewe­d few witnesses, who are opposition and defected. So it’s biased,” the president said.

Regarding torture, he said, “We don’t do this, it’s not our policy. Torture for what? For sadism? To get informatio­n? We have all the informatio­n.

“If we commit such atrocities it’s going to play into the hands of the terrorists, they’re going to win,” he said. “It’s about winning the hearts of the Syrian people, if we commit such atrocities, we wouldn’t have popular support through six years of war.”

Mr Assad spoke as peace talks were about to start in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan.

Mr Assad’s ally, Russia, has been the driving force behind those with support from Iran and Turkey despite the latter backing Syrian rebels.

Meanwhile, the West has become “passive”, Mr Assad said, and had twice lost its chance of achieving anything in Geneva – for which he blamed the US-led coalition for supporting what he called “terrorists” opposed to the Syrian government.

A fifth round of talks on Syria is set to take place in Geneva next week after two postponeme­nts.

“They did not want to achieve peace in Syria,” he said.

He also appeared to back US president Donald Trump’s efforts to ban Syrian nationals from entering the United States, saying the measure was aimed at keeping terrorists out and not Syrian people in general.

“It’s against the terrorists that would infiltrate some of the immigrants to the West. And that happened. It happened in Europe, mainly in Germany,” Mr Assad said. But on the topic of recent attacks carried out by extremists in France, he asserted they were “not necessaril­y prepared” in ISIL’s Syrian stronghold.

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