Posted in Notes Urban
The world left, very busy Israel, not ignored us when we asked to send a flotilla of Freedom for Syria. Yes, in July 2010, we quoted a Palestinian journalist who said, rightly:
Gaza has no mud classrooms, like those in many Syrian provinces. Gaza has 60 students in one classroom. Even after Gaza was besieged [besieged in original], food is not scarce and Syria, where many food products do not reach the market except those smuggled across the Syrian-Lebanon border. Internet services in Gaza are vastly superior to the regrettable Internet services in Syria. West Bank and Gaza do not have lists of hundreds of sites Web prohibited. Until Hamas took power, water and electricity situation in Gaza was better than that of Syria. The average income of the Strip is higher than that of Syria. So who needs more freedom flotilla? Do the residents of Gaza, or the Syrians?
seems that the Syrian Arab cousins \u200b\u200bare succeeding alone, shaking the worst of a dictatorship that lasted more than 40 years with the complicity of the world progressives:
DAMASCUS .- Cornered by a growing wave of protests, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, pledged yesterday that next week will put an end to emergency rule, which since 1963 funciona como el instrumento legal que habilita la represión del régimen y cuya abolición es uno de los principales reclamos de los manifestantes. (...)
La ley de emergencia prohíbe las reuniones de más de cinco personas y ha servido para desmantelar cualquier disenso público hasta que los sirios comenzaron a salir a las calles hace un mes, inspirados en los levantamientos populares que derrocaron a líderes autocráticos en Egipto y Túnez. (...)
Pese a esta concesión, el presidente no hizo mención de otras demandas de los manifestantes, que quieren terminar con el poder de los servicios secretos en la vida cotidiana y exigen la liberación de presos políticos encarcelados desde hace long time and most were not prosecuted.
Al-Assad said that a law that allows the existence of political parties remained in the study, but that the matter was complicated because it may lead "to a breakdown in society."
"The reforms must be built on the basis of internal stability and security," he said.
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