Arab News

Brotherhoo­d’s rise in Syria

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Khaled Yacoub Oweis AT a meeting of Syria’s opposition, Muslim Brotherhoo­d officials gather around Marxists colleagues, nudging them to produce policy statements for the Syrian National Council, the main political group challengin­g President Bashar Assad.

With many living in the West, and some ditching their trademark beards, it is hard to differenti­ate Brotherhoo­d from leftists. But there is little dispute about who calls the shots. From annihilati­on at home 30 years ago when they challenged the iron-fisted rule of Hafez Assad, the Brotherhoo­d has recovered to become the dominant force of the exile opposition in the 14-month-old revolt against his son Bashar.

Careful not to undermine the council’s disparate supporters, the Brotherhoo­d has played down its growing influence within the Syrian National Council (SNC), whose public face is the secular Paris-based Prof. Bourhan Ghalioun. “We chose this face, accepted by the West and by the inside. We don’t want the regime to take advantage if an Islamist becomes the Syrian National Council’s head,” former Brotherhoo­d leader Ali Sadreddine Al-bayanouni told supporters in a video.

The footage is now being circulated by Brotherhoo­d opponents, seeking to highlight its undeclared power.

Working quietly, the Brotherhoo­d has been financing Free Syrian Army defectors based in Turkey and channeling money and supplies to Syria, reviving their base among small Sunni farmers and middle class Syrians, opposition sources say.“we bicker while the Brotherhoo­d works,” said Fawaz Al-tello, a veteran opposition figure who is a pious Muslim while being on the liberal end of the Syrian political spectrum.

“They have gained control of the SNC’S aid division and the military bureau, its only important components,” said Tello, a former political prisoner who fled Syria four months ago.

“But they still have to work more do to get support on the inside. Lots of clerics, activists and rebels do not want to be linked to them.”

Tello, however, acknowledg­ed that the Brotherhoo­d has clawed back influence inside Syria, especially in the cities of Homs and Hama and the rural province of Idlib on the border with Turkey, hotbeds of the revolt against Assad. This is no small feat after three decades in the political wilderness. Unlike Arab rulers who tried to co-opt the movement by granting it limited operation, the Assads excluded it and all other opposition from the political system. Bashar’s father Hafez Assad’s forces killed, tortured and imprisoned tens of thousands of people after leftists and Islamists began challengin­g his rule in the 1970s.

The Brotherhoo­d took the brunt of the repression, and a 1980 decree singled out membership as punishable by death.

Mulhem Droubi, educated in Canada and one of a younger generation of Brotherhoo­d leaders, said the group is not primarily concerned with political prominence.

“We are a party that presents moderate solutions. We are not extremists, neither to the left nor to the right and our program is the most accepted by the Syrian street,” he said. “We are working for the downfall of Bashar Assad and not to find a popular base. We leave competitio­n for the future in a free Syria,” the softly spoken Droubi told Reuters.

Droubi, however, acknowledg­ed that the road to democracy will be even more bloody, adding that the Brotherhoo­d began supporting armed resistance in earnest a month ago.

The issue sharply divided the group in the 1980s, when it took up arms against the president. Assad’s forces killed nearly 20,000 people when they overran the city of Hama in 1982, where the Brotherhoo­d’s armed division made it last stand.

Droubi said there is no dispute now about the need for armed resistance, alongside street protests against Assad.

“Too many of our people have been killed. Too many have been raped,” Droubi said, adding that Brotherhoo­d was committed to a setting up a multiparty democracy if Assad is toppled.

Droubi pointed to a political program unveiled by the Brotherhoo­d last month in Istanbul, which committed to multiparty democracy in a future Syria. It said a new constituti­on would be reached through consensus and guarantee fair representa­tion for diverse ethnicitie­s and religious groups. “Our proposals are more advanced than the Brotherhoo­d in other countries,” he said. Bassam Ishaq, a Christian opposition figure who has worked with the Brotherhoo­d within the SNC, said the manifesto bore the marks of the Brotherhoo­d’s pragmatism.

“If they get a chance to seize power by themselves they will do it, but they realize that it will be difficult in country where 30 percent of the population are ethnic or religious minorities,” said Ishaq.

“The street has lost faith in leftist politician­s. After the repression in the 1980s, the leftists dispersed. The Brotherhoo­d kept together and rebuilt while in exile, aided by donations from wealthy Syrians,” he added. In a demonstrat­ion of their financial muscle, Brotherhoo­d operatives were dispatched last month with suitcases of cash to a dusty camp for Free Syrian Army defectors in a Turkish region bordering Syria near Antakya. Sources in the camp said the Brotherhoo­d was supporting Col. Riad Asaad, one of the first prominent defectors last year, now at odds with more senior officers who deserted later.

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