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Pro-Assad Syrians Lay Low In Turkey

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  • Pro-Assad Syrians Lay Low In Turkey

    PRO-ASSAD SYRIANS LAY LOW IN TURKEY

    Alaska Dispatch
    June 3 2014

    Dominique Soguel from The Christian Science Monitor

    In a ramshackle market in Turkey's Hatay Province, Masrura sells
    ceramic cups and rugs bearing the stoic face of Syrian President
    Bashar al-Assad.

    Her clients, she says, mirror the political divide of neighboring
    Syria.

    "Some Syrians buy the carpets to put it on the bathroom floor and
    stomp on Assad's face, while others hang it up on their wall with
    pride to soothe their souls," she says.

    Events in Syria have long had a ripple effect in Hatay, with its mix
    of Turkish Sunnis, Christians, and Alawites, a Shiite sect to which
    Assad belongs. Families here have relatives on both sides of the Syrian
    conflict, and the province's population has swelled with refugees.

    Once a strong commercial ally of Damascus, Ankara has turned its back
    on the Assad regime, hosting the opposition Syrian National Coalition
    and largely turning a blind eye to rebels operating along Turkey's
    porous border with Syria.

    In this mountainous area streaming with anti-Assad activists, rebels,
    and their relatives, Syrians who support Assad are outnumbered. They
    keep a low profile, settling in pro-regime areas like the Alawite
    town of Harbiye. The mood is tense as Assad seeks a third term in
    today's widely criticized presidential election.

    "Syrians are scared. If they speak in favor of the regime, there could
    be reprisals from the opposition, and vice versa," says Suleyman Ezzer,
    a Turk who rents out apartments in Harbiye to Syrians.

    Concerned that one wrong word could put them in danger, Syrians living
    in the town tend to keep their doors locked and stay quiet about their
    political views. But two young women sitting at an outdoor cafe were
    keen to be heard.

    "Even if rebels block the roads and hit polling stations so that people
    can't vote, Assad will win because everyone loves him," says Maryam
    Yahya, a young hairdresser from Aleppo who followed her husband to
    Turkey in search of work.

    Her friend Nasreen Sakit introduces herself as a Sunni Muslim whose
    father is serving in the Syrian Air Force. She believes that Assad,
    [a member of the Shiite Alawite sect,] is the only one who can prevent
    the country from collapsing along sectarian lines.

    While "terrorists fight for freedom and kill in the name of Islam,"
    Ms. Sakit says, "Assad is defending the nation. Anyone in his place
    would have done far worse in this situation. His father (Hafez)
    would have killed everyone. Bashar showed mercy."

    Assad the protector

    Like the Assad clan, which has been in power for more than four
    decades, the two women frame the conflict as an existential war pitting
    a secular regime against hardline extremists who want to veil women,
    impose Islamic law, and slaughter minorities.

    When faced with mostly peaceful antigovernment protests in March 2011,
    Assad unleashed a brutal crackdown, claiming his country was the target
    of a foreign conspiracy. Today, that narrative has been bolstered by
    an influx of foreign jihadists, some backed by Sunni powers.

    Yessay, an elderly Christian Armenian shepherd from Kassab, Syria,
    stands with the Assad regime even though he was detained and beaten
    by its security services five times.

    At least under Assad, Christians worshipped freely, he says. He warns
    this won't be the case if Syria is overrun by "Islamists with beards
    so long and thick that they look like buffalos. Better the devil you
    know, than the devil you don't."

    Disgruntled supporters

    While the West and the Syrian opposition see today's election as a
    farce, Assad's supporters say he is giving democracy a genuine chance.

    No one doubts that he will be victorious at the polls.

    Asaad Arab and his wife Fatma, who live in a cramped apartment with
    their seven children, say they would return to their home in Syria
    and vote for Assad if the border wasn't controlled by "terrorists."

    Although they take pride in their relatives serving in the Syrian
    Army, they long for the comforts of peacetime in Syria: security,
    quiet nights without bombs, and uninterrupted access to water and
    electricity.

    "We hope elections help calm things down and that we can go home,"
    says Mr. Arab.

    Mrs. Arab doesn't mince her words. "We were okay under Assad, we loved
    him and all that. But his army dropped barrel bombs on us. Assad should
    have at least offered us safe zones in his war against terrorists,"
    she says.

    http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/20140603/pro-assad-syrians-lay-low-turkey

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