The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

St Andrews University student’s heartache over Syria crisis

As the refugee crisis deepens, Michael Alexander meets a St Andrews University-based Syrian student whose family have been forced to flee the barrel bombs of the regime and the terror of ISIS

- Malexander@thecourier.co.uk

Haian Dukhan was overwhelme­d when he saw the picture of three-year-old Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi washed up on a Turkish beach. It breaks his heart that more than 200,000 lives have been lost since the war in Syria started in 2011 and millions of ordinary people have been displaced.

As a Syrian himself, he understand­s the desperatio­n that drove the child’s family, and millions of other ordinary people, to leave their homes and seek a new life somewhere, anywhere, where they might be safe.

And he fears the situation is only going to get worse before it gets better.

Growing up in the ancient city of Palmyra, the 34-year-old had first-hand experience of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, which suppressed freedom of speech and bred resentment through economic poverty.

When widespread discontent at similar economic hardship, autocratic rule and corruption led to the toppling of Tunisia’s President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011, Haian celebrated the dawn of the pro-democracy “Arab Spring” and quietly welcomed the rebellion, which began in the rural lands around his hometown.

While the regime kept tribalism and sectariani­sm in check, anger had been boiling among the suppressed population for years and all that was needed was a “spark” to awaken the masses. At the same time he was scared, as he knew what brutality the Assad regime was capable of.

But since he left Syria in 2012 to study for his Phd at St Andrews University, millions of Haian’s own peace-loving country-folk have found themselves caught between Assad’s rebel-crushing regime and the rise of ISIS, which has brought in its own level of brutality.

In an interview with The Courier, he said: “It’s sad to see Syria, my country once so peaceful, that used to host refugees, now in this state. But people should know millions are fleeing to escape death. They are the victims. The ordinary people who do not want to carry arms, who do not want to fight.”

It was the ISIS takeover of Palmyra earlier this year that resulted in his own family being forced out. The city was pummelled by government barrel bombs, which have indiscrimi­nately targeted schools, bakeries and markets.

In May, his family of “moderate Muslims” escaped with their lives after experienci­ng one of the fiercest battles between ISIS and the Syrian regime. They fled the family home one hour before it was bombed to rubble by the government. They then joined a cara- van of refugees leaving Syria and managed to reach Southern Turkey, where they are now trying to settle.

With the help of St Andrews University staff and students who supported his online campaign, Haian has raised £10,000 for his father and mother, sister and two brothers, one of whom is married and has two young children.

Haian, a wheelchair user since childhood due to a physical disability, describes the opposing Syrian forces as “two evils”. But he said some Syrians had joined ISIS because they thought the internatio­nal community was hypocritic­al.

He said: “Because the internatio­nal community did nothing to stop Assad, those who have joined ISIS in Syria think the whole world is against them because Assad has killed thousands of them and the internatio­nal community has done nothing.”

And yet, life under ISIS was “suffocatin­g”. He added: “I give you the example of my mother. She was director of the school and a teacher for 30 years. She lived a life where she mixed with men. Suddenly, she had to cover her face completely and wear gloves. Even going to the parks was suddenly segregated. Then there are the beheadings, the murders.

“My family don’t want to live under the dictatorsh­ip of Assad or ISIS control. Of course they love Syria, they miss home, they want to go home – but not under these conditions.”

Haian believes military interventi­on from western government­s could have been useful in the early days of the uprising. But with the rise of ISIS and the fighting of a “proxy“regional war between the Russia/Iran-backed Assad regime on one side and the Saudi Arabia/Turkey-backed rebels on the other, he said it was now “complicate­d”.

He said: “Who do you want to intervene against? If you intervene against the regime, you are strengthen­ing the factions. The best thing would be to push for a peaceful solution with Russia.

“There is no solution so long as Assad is in power. The Russians – rather than propping up Assad – need to be persuaded that he should be removed. A transition­al government should be created to fight ISIS.”

Haian says Europe is generally doing well by taking in refugees. But he believes the internatio­nal community should do more. He said vast countries such as Russia, the USA, Canada and Australia should be doing their bit – as should the oil-rich Arab nations, which have helped radicalise the conflict.

Those who have joined ISIS in Syria think the whole world is against them HAIAN DUKHAN.

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 ?? Picture: Getty Images. ?? Right: hundreds of migrants and refugees crossing the border from Serbia into Hungary.
Picture: Getty Images. Right: hundreds of migrants and refugees crossing the border from Serbia into Hungary.
 ??  ?? Left: Haian Dukhan at Kinkell Braes, St Andrews. Above: a rescue team search for victims after a Syrian regime attack in Ariha neighbourh­ood in Idib.
Left: Haian Dukhan at Kinkell Braes, St Andrews. Above: a rescue team search for victims after a Syrian regime attack in Ariha neighbourh­ood in Idib.
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