Havana.
October 5, 2012
|
|
It is illusory
to believe that Syria
can be broken • Interview with Ammar Bagdach, general secretary of the Syrian Communist Party Aida Calviac Mora
IN the midst of disinformation
campaigns on the crisis in Syria – largely based on
nameless witnesses giving indeterminate figures –
Ammar Bagdach, general secretary of the Syrian
Communist Party, shared with Granma a reality
at a far remove from many of the biased media
versions.
What have been the Syrian CP’s
principal tasks since the crisis erupted?
In the first place, the struggle to
preserve Syria’s national independence, sovereignty
and anti-imperialist patriotic line, and for the
interests and demands of the most disfavored popular
masses.
There is another very important task,
above all given the situation imposed on us, the
defense of national production. We always implement
the great slogan held high by the historic leader of
the Party, Khaled Bagdach: defense of the homeland
and defense of the bread of the people.
Our Party is undertaking a very
important mobilizing role with the people in order
to expose the nature of the conspiracy mounted
against us. The initial mass mobilizations which
took place last year outside the embassies of the
major powers, were organized by and had the key
participation of our Party. Outside the diplomatic
headquarters of France, the people made it clear
that they have not forgotten the crimes committed
against our country by French colonialism. We held
up a placard with General de Gaulle’s phrase, "It is
illusory to believe that Syria can be broken."
What has been the impact on the
country of the measures adopted by the government in
the wake of the crisis?
Many measures have been adopted to
guarantee the extension of democratic liberties, the
most important being the one which repealed martial
law. Moreover, the [political] parties law was
proclaimed and very advanced press legislation. Our
Party has fought for many years for the restoration
of Syrian nationality to those Kurds deprived of it
as the result of the exceptional census undertaken
by the reactionary government in 1962. There are
close to one million Kurds in Syria and the majority
of them have their nationality, but it was restored
to 136,000 Kurds who didn’t have it. A new
Constitution was declared and some analysts consider
that the most significant aspect of it is the
modification of Article 8, which established that
the head of state had to belong to the Ba’ath Party.
The majority of the democratic
measures adopted and reforms undertaken were
included in the Syrian CP program, which strongly
called for their adoption.
The Human Rights Council passed a
resolution containing a censure motion against
Damascus for the Houla tragedy and has extended by
six months the mandate of the Investigative
Commission in Syria. What is your assessment of this
and the role of Russia, China and the UN in this
conflict?
In relation to the Houla massacre,
the information in the hands of the Communist Party
in the region is that it was not perpetrated by
government forces, but by insurgents, and they did
it three days before the issue was discussed in the
Security Council in order to put pressure on the
organization.
The role of Russia and China has
been positive in relation to the Syrian crisis; they
are defending their geostrategic interests, taking
into account the tremendous pressure the United
States is exerting on them, and for that reason, the
interests of these two countries converge with the
interests of the Syrian people in defense of their
homeland and national sovereignty.
In relation to the UN role, given
the positions adopted by the Secretary General, it
is clear that he is responding in a disciplined
manner to the instructions of the United States. In
terms of the activity of its special representatives
Kofi Annan and now Lakdar Brahimi, as a political
party we are against this initiative because its
essence has been to strip the Syrian government of
the instruments its has to assume the defense of the
country’s sovereignty.
Looking ahead, what does the
Communist Party consider the outcome of the crisis
in Syria should be?
In the first place, a firm, severe
posture has to be maintained in the face of the
subversive actions and sabotage of the insurgents.
Those who perpetrate acts of terrorism have to be
confronted with the same measures to which they
resort, but from other points of view and approaches.
Subversion, killings and terrorist operations have
to be confronted by implementing the law.
The fundamental guarantee of Syria’s
firmness lies in meeting the needs of people, this
means that many economic and social laws have to be
reviewed. Any attempt to reach a solution of
compromise between patriotic and non-patriotic
forces signifies retracting from patriotic interests,
a regression. We do not support that.
WHAT MAKES A COUNTRY BEAUTIFUL IS
ITS PEOPLE
Although it is Ammar Bagdach’s first
visit to Cuba, he does not feel like an outsider, as
"all revolutionaries and communists in the world
have always closely followed news about Cuba and,
since I was very young, my formation was very much
influenced by the Cuban Revolution.
"Naturally, knowing something and
seeing it all with one’s own eyes is different, my
meetings with the country’s leaders, especially
those with the Central Committee have been very
useful. I had the opportunity to visit Cienfuegos,
Santa Clara and also to celebrate the 52nd
anniversary of the CDR’s [Committees for the Defense
of the Revolution] with them. We have been to places
linked to our culture in the country, like the Arab
Casa in Old Havana. There are many beautiful
countries, but what makes a country beautiful is its
people, and these two characteristics come together
in Cuba: a very beautiful country and people."
|
Sunday, October 7, 2012
PolEco: A column from Granma International, Cuba's National Daily Newspaper, on Syrian Communist Party
Labels:
cuba,
imperialism,
Islam,
syrian communist party,
US imperialism
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment