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Syrians vote in election with foregone conclusion: Another win for Bashar Assad

A grinning Bashar Assad casts his ballot surrounded by a crowd and his wife, Asma.
Syrian President Bashar Assad and his wife, Asma, cast their ballots at a polling station in Douma.
(Hassan Ammar / Associated Press)
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Syrians in government-held areas of the war-torn country cast their ballots Wednesday in a presidential election guaranteed to give President Bashar Assad a fourth seven-year term.

The vote is the second presidential election since the country’s civil war began 10 years ago and has been dismissed as a sham by the opposition and Western countries, including the U.S. The presidency has been held by members of the Assad family for five decades.

“The Assad regime’s so-called presidential election is neither free nor fair,” Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said in a tweet Wednesday. “The U.S. joins France, Germany, Italy, and the U.K. in calling for the rejection of the regime’s attempts to regain legitimacy without respecting the Syrian people’s human rights and freedoms.”

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Assad blasted countries that have dismissed the vote as illegitimate, saying most of those nations “have colonial history” and “we as a state are not concerned about such statements.”

He spoke Wednesday morning after casting his ballot in the Damascus suburb of Duma. The area was one of the main rebel strongholds in the country until it was retaken by government forces in 2018. It was the scene of an alleged poison gas attack in April 2018 that triggered strikes by the U.S., Britain and France.

“The vote that we are performing today would not have happened had it not been for the thousands of martyrs that fell while defending the land and people,” Assad said.

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Ten years later, Syria’s civil war, with its untold numbers of dead, serves as a bleak example of possibility and hope crushed by conflict and chaos.

The 55-year-old Assad arrived at the polling station with his wife, Asma, driving his own car.

Assad has been in power since 2000, when he took over from his father, Hafez, who ruled before that for 30 years. Despite the war, which seemed at one point to threaten his rule, Assad has remained in power supported by regional powerhouse Iran and Russia, which sent in military advisors and air power to push back the armed opposition.

Two other little-known figures, Abdullah Salloum Abdullah and Mahmoud Ahmad Marie, are also running for the country’s top post. But competition with Assad is largely seen as symbolic in a country where election results are known in advance.

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Starting at 7 a.m., thousands began arriving at polling stations in Damascus, thronging streets festooned with giant posters of Assad and banners praising his rule. Most were not wearing masks, despite a coronavirus outbreak in the country.

Faten Ali Nahar, 50, of Damascus has nominated herself for the post. The largely symbolic election is certain to be won by President Bashar Assad.

“I am here to vote because it is a national duty to choose a president who will lead us in the coming period,” said civil servant Muhannad Helou, 38, who said he voted for Assad.

No vote will be held in northeast Syria, which is controlled by U.S.-backed Kurdish-led fighters, or in the northwestern province of Idlib, the last major rebel stronghold in the country.

Still, in some parts of government-held areas, including the southern provinces of Dara and Sweida, many have rejected the vote, calling it “illegitimate.”

Activists and opposition media platforms reported a general strike for the second day Wednesday in a number of villages and towns in Dara province, to protest against holding the elections and placing ballot boxes in the area, where government security agencies are deployed.

“Roundabout of Death,” Syrian author Faysal Khartash’s first book translated into English, plumbs the pain and monotony of a devastating civil war.

The Syrian Democratic Council, which runs daily affairs in northeast Syria, said in a statement it would not take part in the vote “before political solutions in accordance with U.N. Security Council resolutions, release of detainees, return of displaced [people] and putting the basis for a political structure far away from tyranny.”

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In the rebel-held city of Idlib, thousands took to the streets in a boisterous rally in which they chanted songs against Assad and revived slogans used in the early days of the uprising against him. The rally was organized to denounce the elections.

“I woke up this morning to find Bashar Assad electing himself. What a farce!” said Salwa Abdel-Rahman, who wore a revolution flag around her neck and a headband that read: “No to racism and tyranny.” She was displaced from war-devastated Aleppo in 2012.

The vote this year comes as Syria’s economy is in free fall as a result of a decade of war, Western sanctions, government corruption and the financial crisis in Lebanon, Syria’s main link with the outside world.

The Biden administration has said it will not recognize the result of the election unless the voting is free, fair, supervised by the United Nations and represents all of Syrian society.

“We are not involved in these elections ... in any way, and we, of course, have no mandate to be,” Stephane Dujarric, a spokesman in the U.N. secretary-general’s office, told reporters Tuesday.

Syrian Interior Minister Mohammad Rahmoun said 12,102 polling stations were set up in all the Syrian governorates. He said there were more than 18 million eligible voters in Syria and abroad. Syrians living abroad voted last week.

Syria had a population of 23 million before the conflict broke out a decade ago. The fighting has left nearly half a million dead and half the country’s population displaced, more than 5 million of them refugees outside Syria.

The civil war broke out in 2011 when Arab Spring-inspired protests against Assad family rule turned into an armed insurgency in response to a brutal military crackdown.

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