Assad Forms Dialogue Committee as Hundreds of Political Prisoners Freed‎

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Syrian President Bashar al-Assad Wednesday launched a "national dialogue" while freeing hundreds of political prisoners in an amnesty opposition groups and Washington say does not go far enough.

State television said Assad had set up a committee and charged it with "formulating general principles of dialogue that will open the way for the creation of an appropriate climate in which the different elements can express themselves and present their proposals."

The committee will include Syrian Vice President Farouq al-Sharaa, senior members of the ruling Baath Party and the National Progressive Front (NPF, a coalition of parties led by Baath), as well as one author and one teacher.

"All parties should contribute to widening participation (in the political process), to the development of an electoral law and to a law on political parties," Assad said.

The opposition has previously dismissed calls for dialogue, saying that this can take place only once the violence ends, political prisoners are freed and reforms adopted.

The demand that prisoners be freed was partially met on Wednesday when, according to a rights activist, hundreds of detainees were released from prisons across the country under an amnesty declared by Assad on Tuesday.

"Hundreds of people have been released," said Rami Abdul Rahman, head of the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"Fifty of them are from Banias, including the 76-year-old poet Ali Derbak," he added, but "thousands of political prisoners remain in jail and are to be released at any time."

Leaders of the communist Labor Party were unable to benefit from the amnesty as the decree excluded people convicted of joining "an organization to change the social and economic status of the state," said Rahman, reached by telephone.

He also claimed that a civilian was killed Wednesday in Rastan, near Homs, where 20 corpses had been taken to hospital.

More than 1,100 civilians have been killed and at least 10,000 arrested since protests against Assad's autocratic government erupted in mid-March, human rights organizations say.

Washington, which has been upping the pressure by slapping sanctions on key regime members, said the release of "100 or so political prisoners does not go far enough."

"We need to see all political prisoners released. We need to see meaningful movement toward reform," State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner told reporters.

Syrian opposition groups meeting in Turkey on Wednesday to plan for Assad's demise too snubbed the amnesty offer.

The three-day gathering -- titled "Conference for Change in Syria" -- opened with the Syrian national anthem and a minute of silence for "the martyrs" killed in bloody crackdowns on street protests simmering in Syria.

"The Syrian people are calling for the fall of the regime," said Melhem al-Durubi, the head of the Muslim Brotherhood delegation in the coastal resort of Antalya.

"He should simply leave," he said, adding that Assad "should be tried for his crimes."

Speakers said Assad's amnesty offer did not go far enough and came too late.

"We demanded this amnesty several years ago," said Abdul Razak Eid, an activist from the Damascus Declaration, a reformist group launched in 2005 to demand democratic change, "but it's late in coming."

Other international response to Tuesday's presidential decree was tepid at best.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe demanded "more ambitious and bolder" action from Syria. "I fear that it might already be too late," he told France Culture radio.

Turkey, while not dismissing the decree outright, also asked for deeper change.

Meanwhile, in Aleppo's central prison, a mutiny by its 7,000 inmates was quashed by security forces and the army Wednesday morning, according to Germany-based rights group Syrian Center for the Defense of Prisoners of Conscience.

And Syria denied that a boy aged 13, whom opposition activists say died under torture, had been abused by security forces, labeling the accusations as lies.

A medical report published by Syrian official media said three bullets killed teenager Hamza al-Khatib and that other apparent wounds on his body were due to decomposition, not security force brutality.

"The report closes the door on the lies and allegations and shows the truth," said the official news agency SANA.

The activists said the boy had disappeared since taking part in a demonstration in the southern region of Daraa on April 29, which he decided to join after police killed his cousin.

The U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF) has said that at least 30 children have been killed by gunfire since the revolt began.

The U.S.-based Human Rights Watch meanwhile prepared to release a report detailing a raft of abuses in Daraa.

HRW said its report showed abuses in the flashpoint region were "not only systematic but implemented as part of a state policy" and likely to "qualify as crimes against humanity."

The government insists the unrest is the work of "armed terrorist gangs" backed by Islamists and foreign agitators.

Comments 5
Thumb Marc almost 13 years

Too little, too late

Default-user-icon JNM Synthesis (Guest) almost 13 years

Goodbye Bashar. it's time to move your money to Tehran, the only place you may spend the rest of your life. The sunnis are coming, the sunnis are coming. His tory repeats itself and your boys will be chopped to pieces and fed to the vultures and the fish. This is the end, beautiful friend.

Default-user-icon Gebran Sons for Cedar Revolution II in 2013 (Guest) almost 13 years

Another tyrant performing his last act. He didn't coordinate with his orchestra in Lebanon and they are sad to see him go... they are acting foolishly making irrational speeches knowing as the tyrant falls they'll fall too making room for a bright Spring to take hold in Lebanon.

Default-user-icon BOULOS 1 (Guest) almost 13 years

...and today Assad shelled and destroyed 20 homes, several mosques and killed dosens, 43 since sunday alone.

Default-user-icon Nonreligious (Guest) almost 13 years

WA LA ZALIMON ILLA WA SA YOUBLA BEAZLAMOU. There is no way . I say no way that you can kill steal lie and yet not pay for it.
Bashar its pay time now. The blood of all the innocent people that you drank is turning into poison and will eat you from the inside out. You are the biggest liar in the world. I see your face transforming little by litte and your mask has fallen.
Your ugliness showed up . Go to hell bashar .... hahahhaah soon.