Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06DAMASCUS1054
2006-03-09 14:17:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Damascus
Cable title:  

CIVIL SOCIETY ACTIVISTS PROTESTING 43 YEARS OF

Tags:  PGOV PHUM SY 
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VZCZCXYZ0012
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHDM #1054/01 0681417
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 091417Z MAR 06
FM AMEMBASSY DAMASCUS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 7621
INFO RUEHXK/ARAB ISRAELI COLLECTIVE
RUEHGB/AMEMBASSY BAGHDAD 0687
C O N F I D E N T I A L DAMASCUS 001054 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

LONDON FOR TSOU, PARIS FOR ZEYA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/09/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM SY
SUBJECT: CIVIL SOCIETY ACTIVISTS PROTESTING 43 YEARS OF
EMERGENCY LAW FACE WELL-ORGANIZED COUNTERDEMONSTRATION

Classified By: Charge d'Affaires Stephen A. Seche for reasons 1.4(b)/(d
)

C O N F I D E N T I A L DAMASCUS 001054

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

LONDON FOR TSOU, PARIS FOR ZEYA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/09/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM SY
SUBJECT: CIVIL SOCIETY ACTIVISTS PROTESTING 43 YEARS OF
EMERGENCY LAW FACE WELL-ORGANIZED COUNTERDEMONSTRATION

Classified By: Charge d'Affaires Stephen A. Seche for reasons 1.4(b)/(d
)


1. (C) SUMMARY: A group of approximately fifty civil-society
activists staged a protest against 43 years of Emergency Law
at the Palace of Justice in downtown Damascus on March 9.
There was little visible uniformed security in the area, one
of Damascus's main pedestrian thoroughfares. A
well-outfitted but rowdy group of about 300 young people,
many university and high school students, marched to the
Palace of Justice and staged a pro-regime
counterdemonstration, seizing placards from the civil society
protesters and chanting pro-Syrian and pro-Bashar al-Asad
slogans. As both protests began to wane, pro-regime
demonstrators began to attack small groups of remaining civil
society protesters, beating them with sticks used to carry
the Syrian flag. Early information from human rights
organizations indicate about ten to fifteen injured
protesters, but no arrests. END SUMMARY.


2. (C) Approximately fifty protesters staged a peaceful
demonstration to express their opposition to the existence of
Emergency Law in Syria, still in force after forty-three
years of Ba'th Party rule, at the Palace of Justice in
downtown Damascus, which serves as a main criminal courthouse
for the city. The demonstration, reportedly organized by the
Damascus Declaration group, was publicly announced on the
reformist website arraee.com and by word of mouth among
activists. Participants included members of the Human Rights
Association of Syria and the Atassi Forum, as well as
individual activists and rights lawyers. Another thirty to
forty human rights and opposition activists, as well as
Poloff and representatives from the Norwegian and Canadian
embassies, were also present as observers. The protesters
gathered quietly in front of the main gate of the Palace of
Justice, and at precisely 1:00 p.m., brought out placards
with a variety of slogans protesting the continuation of
Emergency Law and shouted slogans.


3. (C) Nearly simultaneously, a counterdemonstration of
young people appeared, marching towards the Palace of
Justice, with many bearing large, brand-new Syrian flags,

mounted posters of Bashar al-Asad, and wearing brand-new
white baseball caps bearing the Syrian flag. Led by a
30-something organizer who directed both the movements and
chants of the students throughout the event, the
counterdemonstrators chanted pro-Bashar and pro-Syrian
slogans, such as "Allah, Bashar, and Syria only" and
"Traitors Get Out." They created a semi-circle around the
civil society protesters, and began swarming forward, pushing
and eventually displacing the civil society protesters from
the locked gate of the Palace. They also seized the placards
out of the hands of the civil society protesters, and at one
point gathered all the ripped-up posters together and threw
them in the air. When asked by Poloff why they had come, a
group of counterdemonstrating university students answered
"because of March 8" and "to beat the 'enemy'." Another
group of 17- and 18-year old high school students said they
had been given the afternoon off. Indeed, after about 20
minutes, many of the students could be seen drifting off
towards the nearby Hamadiya bazaar.


4. (C) However, a core group of about 150 aggressive males
remained and began to split off into groups and, at the
direction of the protest organizer, charged towards the
remaining civil society activists, using flagpoles and sticks
as weapons. Poloff witnessed one individual (it is unclear
whether he was an activist) being chased by a group of about
fifteen students, as well as the assault of one activist, who
was swarmed by students and hit atop the head. Other
observers reported similar beatings. No action to prevent
the assaults was taken by the small number of police officers
present. (NOTE: The only obvious increase in police presence
was the stationing of five uniformed officers in front of the
Palace's main entrance, behind the locked main gate, and the
addition of a paddywagon. END NOTE) According to human
rights activist Anwar al-Bunni, at least ten to fifteen
protesters (including prominent activists Hassan Abdulazeem,
Ali Abdullah, and the head of an Assyrian organization) were
beaten, as was a female journalist who identified herself as
such to her assailants. Bunni noted that the assailants were
a mixture of security service thugs and students.


5. (C) COMMENT: As with the March 10 demonstration last
year, also against the Emergency Law, the SARG succeeded in
breaking up the assembly without having to bring out
uniformed security forces or, as it currently stands,
arresting anyone. The SARG continues to summon genuine
students as protesters, some of them aggressive Ba'th Party

activists all-too-willing to beat up on outnumbered civil
society activists. The usual core group of aggressive
security service agents helped out where they could. END
COMMENT.
SECHE