Berliner Boersenzeitung - For the first time, Syrians 'not afraid' to talk politics

EUR -
AED 3.794216
AFN 72.524105
ALL 96.99852
AMD 409.646236
ANG 1.86053
AOA 942.095216
ARS 1065.016935
AUD 1.662334
AWG 1.859398
AZN 1.754368
BAM 1.932461
BBD 2.084426
BDT 123.369433
BGN 1.953438
BHD 0.389458
BIF 3052.830052
BMD 1.032999
BND 1.399498
BOB 7.159635
BRL 6.389001
BSD 1.032332
BTN 88.310448
BWP 14.378348
BYN 3.378398
BYR 20246.783499
BZD 2.073656
CAD 1.489668
CDF 2964.707279
CHF 0.937473
CLF 0.037313
CLP 1029.569662
CNY 7.54038
CNH 7.579125
COP 4550.919111
CRC 525.849161
CUC 1.032999
CUP 27.374478
CVE 108.948667
CZK 25.159518
DJF 183.584391
DKK 7.457965
DOP 62.860811
DZD 140.500288
EGP 52.429902
ERN 15.494987
ETB 131.862951
FJD 2.402394
FKP 0.818117
GBP 0.829571
GEL 2.903203
GGP 0.818117
GHS 15.175936
GIP 0.818117
GMD 74.375772
GNF 8923.188772
GTQ 7.959866
GYD 215.984625
HKD 8.033552
HNL 26.229222
HRK 7.409606
HTG 134.900763
HUF 411.481769
IDR 16753.180346
ILS 3.769308
IMP 0.818117
INR 88.576734
IQD 1352.367056
IRR 43476.350669
ISK 143.88654
JEP 0.818117
JMD 160.688538
JOD 0.732703
JPY 162.287781
KES 133.515719
KGS 89.87071
KHR 4153.892507
KMF 481.506756
KPW 929.698665
KRW 1516.520243
KWD 0.318618
KYD 0.860322
KZT 541.737276
LAK 22565.470023
LBP 92450.588858
LKR 301.95322
LRD 188.918376
LSL 19.36443
LTL 3.050177
LVL 0.624851
LYD 5.072711
MAD 10.422277
MDL 18.994869
MGA 4820.778012
MKD 61.598755
MMK 3355.140971
MNT 3510.131005
MOP 8.252156
MRU 41.127097
MUR 48.499393
MVR 15.900848
MWK 1790.080657
MXN 21.377246
MYR 4.626289
MZN 66.012499
NAD 19.36443
NGN 1595.033185
NIO 37.991169
NOK 11.729442
NPR 141.296519
NZD 1.840551
OMR 0.397676
PAB 1.032332
PEN 3.869171
PGK 4.193336
PHP 59.842156
PKR 287.478733
PLN 4.274189
PYG 8068.553648
QAR 3.765011
RON 4.973789
RSD 117.010933
RUB 114.145872
RWF 1432.379917
SAR 3.879562
SBD 8.660205
SCR 14.625325
SDG 621.344218
SEK 11.428116
SGD 1.409869
SHP 0.818117
SLE 23.555642
SLL 21661.478974
SOS 589.974698
SRD 36.43805
STD 21380.996956
SVC 9.032864
SYP 2595.441626
SZL 19.349313
THB 35.400467
TJS 11.25224
TMT 3.625827
TND 3.278603
TOP 2.419384
TRY 36.484699
TTD 7.016262
TWD 33.969245
TZS 2515.352921
UAH 43.444695
UGX 3792.200453
USD 1.032999
UYU 45.282886
UZS 13322.041214
VES 53.68667
VND 26297.576067
VUV 122.639729
WST 2.853957
XAF 648.129347
XAG 0.035128
XAU 0.000391
XCD 2.791732
XDR 0.79154
XOF 648.126247
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.637124
ZAR 19.33268
ZMK 9298.234392
ZMW 28.750768
ZWL 332.625307
  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.13

    +0.41%

  • BCE

    0.6500

    23.18

    +2.8%

  • RBGPF

    59.0200

    59.02

    +100%

  • RIO

    0.2200

    58.81

    +0.37%

  • BCC

    0.0700

    118.86

    +0.06%

  • CMSC

    -0.0128

    22.93

    -0.06%

  • SCS

    0.1200

    11.82

    +1.02%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    45.42

    +0.04%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.13

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    0.2100

    59.42

    +0.35%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.05

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    33.82

    +0.5%

  • AZN

    -0.0500

    65.52

    -0.08%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    36.32

    +0.72%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    8.49

    +0.82%

  • BP

    0.4700

    29.56

    +1.59%

For the first time, Syrians 'not afraid' to talk politics
For the first time, Syrians 'not afraid' to talk politics / Photo: ANWAR AMRO - AFP

For the first time, Syrians 'not afraid' to talk politics

For decades, any Syrian daring to broach political topics got used to speaking in hushed tones and with a watchful eye trained for a listener among the crowd.

Text size:

"There were spies everywhere," Mohannad al-Katee said in Al-Rawda cafe in Damascus, adding almost in disbelief: "It's the first time that I sit in a cafe and I can talk about politics.

"It was a dream for Syrians," said Katee, 42, a researcher in political and social history.

Until now, he like thousands of others had grown accustomed to watching for the proverbial flies on the walls of Damascus's renowned cafes.

Today, those same cafes are alive and buzzing with the voices of patrons speaking freely about their country for the first time.

Such discussions "were banned under the previous regime, then there was a relative opening during the Damascus Spring", Katee said.

He was referring to the year 2000, when Bashar al-Assad took over from his late father Hafez and slightly loosened the reins on political life in Syria.

Initially, the young Assad had opened up an unprecedented space, allowing for political salons to flourish alongside calls for reform in a country that had long grown accustomed to fear and silence.

"But it didn't last," said Katee.

A few months after his succession, Assad rolled back those gains, putting an end to the short-lived "Damascus Spring".

In the subsequent years, according to Katee, informants were ubiquitous, from "the hookah waiter to the man at the till, it could have been anyone".

- 'The walls have ears' -

Politically active since 1998, he fled to Saudi Arabia in 2012, a year after the outbreak of Arab Spring protests whose violent repression led to the eruption of the nearly 14-year civil war.

"Political life consisted of secret meetings," he said. "We were always taught that the walls have ears."

Today, "Syrians can never go back to obscurantism and dictatorship, to accepting single-party rule," he said.

A little further on, in the Havana cafe once known as a meeting point for intellectuals and activists in a distant past, Fuad Obeid is chatting with a friend.

Himself a former owner of a cafe he had to shut down, the 64-year-old said: "The intelligence services spent their time at my place. They drank for free as though they owned the place."

For over 50 years, the Assads maintained their vice grip on society, in large part through the countless informants that walked among the population.

On Saturday, Syria's new intelligence chief, Anas Khattab, announced that the service's various branches would be dissolved.

Obeid said: "I used to keep a low profile so they wouldn't know I was the owner. I told customers not to talk politics for fear of reprisals."

Now, he noted, in Havana cafe as in others, the difference is like "night and day".

- 'Truly free' -

Back in Al-Rawda, discussions are in full swing over hookahs and games of backgammon.

The owner Ahmad Kozorosh still can't believe his eyes, having himself witnessed numerous arrests in his own cafe over the years.

"I am now seeing almost exclusively new faces," he said. "People who had been sentenced to death, imprisoned."

To celebrate the new era, he is holding weekly symposiums in the cafe, and will even launch a new political party to be named after it.

Real estate agent Nesrine Shouban, 42, had spent three years in prison for carrying US dollars, a punishable offence in Assad's Syria.

Alongside thousands of others who found freedom when the doors of prisons were flung open, she was released on December 8 from the notorious Adra prison.

"They had dangled in front of us the possibility of an amnesty" from Assad's administration, she said. "Thankfully, the amnesty came from God."

"At cafes, we didn't dare say anything. We were even afraid that our phones were bugged," she said.

Now, for the first time, she said she felt "truly free".

Despite concerns over the radical Islamist background of Syria's new rulers, a breath of freedom has washed over the country for the first time, with public demonstrations being organised -- an unthinkable prospect just one month earlier.

"We are not afraid anymore," said Shouban. "If Jolani makes mistakes, we will denounce them," she added, referring to Syria's new leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, known by his nom de guerre Abu Mohammad al-Jolani.

"In all cases, it can't be worse than Bashar al-Assad."

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)