Damascus: President Bashar al-Assad declared a “general amnesty” on Tuesday that was full of exemptions and sniffed at by Washington, as the conflict ravaging Syria showed no signs of abating.
Under the latest decree, troops who deserted but did not fight against the regime may be pardoned if they surrender within a month, state news agency SANA reported.
“President Assad has issued decree number 23, granting a general amnesty for crimes committed before April 16, 2013,” SANA said.
But there were important exceptions to the types of crime it covers.
The amnesty is applicable to just one crime classified under the Terrorism Act, namely failing to inform the authorities about rebel activity.
Other acts such as possessing leaflets that encourage “terrorism” and taking up arms against the regime are not covered.
“Army deserters may be pardoned, if those still in Syria hand themselves in within 30 days, and those outside Syria hand themselves in within 90 days,” said the decree.
“The death penalty will be replaced with a life sentence of hard labour,” said SANA, stipulating that “those who financed terrorist groups or who committed terrorist acts that led to death and destruction are not covered”.
“Those who conspired to carry out a terrorist act have their sentence reduced by a quarter, and those who knew about such an act and did not inform the authorities are covered by the amnesty,” said the decree.
The regime describes Assad’s opponents and rebels fighting his troops as “terrorists”.
Other acts such as possessing leaflets that encourage “terrorism” and taking up arms against the regime are not covered.
“Army deserters may be pardoned, if those still in Syria hand themselves in within 30 days, and those outside Syria hand themselves in within 90 days,” said the decree.
“The death penalty will be replaced with a life sentence of hard labour,” said SANA, stipulating that “those who financed terrorist groups or who committed terrorist acts that led to death and destruction are not covered”.
“Those who conspired to carry out a terrorist act have their sentence reduced by a quarter, and those who knew about such an act and did not inform the authorities are covered by the amnesty,” said the decree.
The regime describes Assad’s opponents and rebels fighting his troops as “terrorists”.
“This is something that the regime has said they’d do in the past, but again, there’s tens of thousands of political prisoners that remain in Syrian jails,” Ventrell told reporters.
And Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP: “It is not the first time Assad passes an amnesty, and this will not lead to the release of tens of thousands of detainees.
“A real amnesty would involve the liberation of all prisoners of conscience and the revolutionaries. An amnesty would mean putting an end to detention.”
Assad’s latest declaration comes a day before pro-regime television channel Al-Ikhbariya is to broadcast an interview with him.
Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Muqdad said in an interview with Britain’s Guardian newspaper that “there will be no Syria if President Assad steps down.
“If he leaves now before we agree on a political plan among all Syrians, Syria will no longer be on the map.”
Assad’s regime has been fighting an insurgency that erupted after his forces unleashed a brutal crackdown on peaceful, Arab Spring-inspired democracy protests in March 2011.
The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people and driven more than five million from their homes, including more than one million refugees.
Beirut said Tuesday it will ask for an urgent meeting of the UN Security Council to ask for aid to help it cope with the influx of refugees from Syria, estimated to number 400,000 people.
On the ground, the Observatory said 49 people were killed on Tuesday, adding that the bodies of 31 people shot by snipers were found in the northern city of Aleppo.
In Belgium, police staged early morning raids targeting individuals suspected of sending foreign fighters to fight for radical Islamist groups in Syria.
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