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We
are
prisoners of conscience and opinion in Damascus
Central Prison, lawyer
Anwar
Al Bunni, writer Michel Kilo, physician
Kamal
Labwani,
political activists Mahmoud
Issa,
and Faek
Al Mir, and Professor of economy
Aref
Dalila who could not be reached as he spends his
sixth year in solitary confinement. After the
sentencing of lawyer
Anwar
Al Bunni on 24 April 2007, we would like to say
thank you and greet our families, friends, and
all the people, groups, committees,
organizations, associations, parties and
political assemblies of Arabs, Kurds and
Assyrians in Syria and the Arab world. We thank
and greet the official representatives,
countries, media and websites that support us by
protesting our trials and arrests, and denying
the accusations against our colleague
Anwar
Al Bunni.
We would
like to send our heartfelt greetings and thanks
to all of you and hope that your noble and brave
attitude will not stop only with denying these
accusations and supporting our cause. Our case
as prisoners of conscience is part of the
continuing crisis of basic freedoms and human
rights in Syria that began with the Emergency
Law 44 years ago. This crisis reached its height
in the 1980s and again today by an increase in
repression, arrests and the confiscation of
fundamental freedoms.
Tens of thousands of Syrians have paid a
horrible price, some with their lives, others
with the loss of years and youth from inhumane
prison conditions and cruel torture. Still more
have suffered by being forced to escape the
repression or enter into ‘voluntary’ exile,
another difficult experience. Other Syrians
stayed, throwing salt on their wounds and
binding their tongues to save themselves pain.
Those that
couldn’t live with their tongues tied
faced a future in prison, homeless and alone.
For the few people that climbed to the top of
the authoritarian aptitude and darkened Syrian
society, they have contributed to the
corruption, theft and poverty that have
strangled the necks of the people.
The
denial of fundamental human rights in Syria is
the main case that we work for and your support
for prisoners of conscience is part of this
fight. Fighting for the release of these
prisoners is a duty, not only to decrease their
suffering and their families’ pain, but also to
encourage others by knowing they are not alone.
We must give society hope, making sure its doors
and streets are not closed. With the power of
hope it is possible to fight the crisis of
freedom and human rights in Syria in a peaceful
way.
The lack
of freedom means of expression, political
participation and accountability leads to the
growth of corruption, despotism, looting of
public funds, rampant poverty and the collapse
of moral values.
The real
fight against terrorism must not only be on
combating extremist ideas. These ideas have
existed throughout history, though they will
always remain marginal, isolated and shunned,
unless they find fertile soil to take root and
grow. If they are allowed to develop in the soil
of society, they will spread like toxic plants,
poisoning communities and innocent people.
Addressing the root causes of terrorism requires
opening up pathways to free expression and the
peaceful exchange of ideas. By giving people
unfettered freedom we can blunt the sword of
injustice, oppression and domination to grant
full political participation, a hand in future
decision-making, accountability, the
preservation of equality and a life of dignity.
This would make the world a safer place and
improve international security.
Syrians
have paid a high price for their rights and
freedom and we hope to be the last group forced
to pay this price to help the great Syrian
people. To do this we need more than your
solidarity and denunciations. We need constant
and tireless efforts to compel Syrian
authorities to respect human rights,
international law and the treaties and
agreements it has signed which demand freedom of
expression and opinion. The release of political
prisoners is a necessary first step, including
the abolition of the State Emergency Law and
other such laws like Decree 49 signed in 1980 or
the Hasakah
Accountability Decree of 1962. Syria must
abolish the State Security Court, compensate
those that have suffered, create an independent
judiciary, end torture and hold perpetrators
responsible. They must stop political arrests
and ensure the freedom of the press, allowing
political participation and the formation of
parties, organizations and civil society.
They
must stop the looting of public funds and
policies of impoverishment and domination.
However, these steps are just the beginning
necessary to put Syria on the path to security
and move towards development, progress and the
protection of national unity that now suffers
from division and tension. These rifts and
divisions are now impossible to conceal, despite
the dancing and celebrations and empty rhetoric
about a healthy society that in reality is sick
and suffering. As prisoners of conscience and
opinion we are apprehensive about the future of
our homeland, our children and our very decision
to shape Syria’s future. However, we will not be
deterred by threats, intimidation, and the
repression of long years of imprisonment that we
face to save our country and ourselves.
Adra
Prison. 28-4-2007 |