After Fall of Assad, "Struggle from Below" Needed to Build a Free & Democratic Syria
The fall of the Assad regime in Syria continues to reshape the country and the greater Middle East. In Damascus, leaders of the armed group HTS have retained most services of the civilian government but vowed to dissolve Assad's security forces and shut down Assad's notorious prisons. "People have this sense of regained freedom," says Syrian architect and writer Marwa al-Sabouni in Homs. Still, she warns oppression in the country has left the populace weakened and vulnerable. "Syria is up for grabs now.
We are completely disarmed." In northeast Syria, more than 100,000 people have been displaced due to fighting between Turkish-backed forces and U.S.-backed Kurdish forces. Israel continues to seize more land in the Golan Heights and has carried out over 480 airstrikes on Syria since Sunday. Swiss Syrian left-wing activist and scholar Joseph Daher explains how civil society is attempting to rebuild democracy through "struggle from below," and how that could unleash popular support for Palestine. "Israel wanted a weak Assad and is not happy with the fall of this regime," says Daher. "A democratization process in the Middle East is the biggest threat for Israel."
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