Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Muslim Brotherhood offers new hope to Syria's rebels, first meeting in 30 years

Tiny Klout Flag15John Bruni ‏@phalanx55
How a meeting of the Muslim Brotherhood offers new hope to Syria'srebels 

How a meeting of the Muslim Brotherhood offers new hope to Syria's rebels



In an unremarkable building near Istanbul this week took place an extraordinary meeting. For the first time in 30 years Syria's Muslim Brotherhood gathered together. One hundred and fifty leading members were in Turkey for two days, they claimed, to help the revolution against Bashar al-Assad.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is determined to cling onto power even after 16 months of bloodshed
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is determined to cling onto power even after 16 months of bloodshed

Others believe they were also preparing the ground to be the next leaders of Syria.
It was an astonishing display of confidence from an organisation that was not only banned by the Assads, but virtually wiped out.

Amid the latest reports of massacres, Damascus street fighting and defections, this unheralded meeting could turn out to be the most important event of the past few weeks.

At the beginning of the social upheavals in the MIddle East, the revolutions were portrayed as a triumph of multimedia such as Twitter and Facebook to mobilise millions.

But as in Egypt, Tunisia - and Morocco to a lesser extent - so it is in Syria that the old guard in the form of the Muslim Brotherhood has put itself at the forefront of the fight against dictatorship.

y
An anti-Syrian president placard is seen outside the Syrian Embassy in London. Britain has expelled the ambassador of Syria from the UK in protest at the alleged massacre by security forces of more than 100 people in Houla

And when the rotten regime of Assad finally crumbles, picking up the pieces in the form of the next government will almost certainly be the Brotherhood.

The unlamented Assads will not be missed; a grisly mini-dynasty that will be swept into the dustbin of history.

In the 42 years since they began their murderous grip on Syria - before Bashar, his father Hafez ruled between 1970 and 2000 - this family have been responsible for the deaths of around 40,000 of their own people. So far.
The body count does not stop within its own borders, alas.

Assad Snr was instrumental starting the Yom Kippur war and began a 30-year occupation of Lebanon in 1976, which continues to leave the country on the edge of further conflict to this day.

It is not just Syrians who want to see the end of this family.

But as a weary world looks on and an impotent UN tries to broker some sort of peace, which could see Assad Jnr and his fragrant British wife Asma forced to see out their days shopping in Geneva or Moscow's designer stores, there seems only one group in a position to take over.

Syria's version of the Brotherhood did not lay dormant like that in Egypt or spring to life later on as in Tunisia.
The Sunni Muslim organisation has played a role in Syrian political life since the 1940s and even won seats at a General Election in the early 1960s.

Hafez Assad dealt with the organisation during the last major uprising in 1982, when tens of thousands were killed.
Those leaders of the Brotherhood who avoided death did so only by fleeing abroad.
Then the organisation was seen as a spent force. Far from it.

Instead it has built itself up to become the most dominant aspect of an increasingly fragmented Syrian opposition.

Demonstrators protest against Assad in Dael, near Deraa last month


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2175295/How-meeting-Muslim-Brotherhood-offers-new-hope-Syrias-rebels.html#ixzz2126PlsYr