Syrian President Ahmad Al Shara was forced to defend his past on stage at the Doha Forum on Saturday after being introduced as a former terrorist, insisting he has βnever harmed a civilianβ during more than two decades of fighting.
In a tense exchange with CNNβs Christiane Amanpour, in front of officials, media and forum participants, he argued that the term βterroristβ has been used and abused for decades without a coherent definition.
βSaying that I was a terrorist and judging me as a terrorist is politicised,β he said. βJudging people as terrorists needs to be proven. Terrorists, in my opinion, are those who kill innocent people β children and women β and who use illegitimate means to harm people.β
Mr Al Shara cited Gaza, Afghanistan, Iraq and the former Syrian regime under Bashar Al Assad as examples of state or military actors causing mass civilian casualties yet avoiding the label themselves.
βIn Gaza, 60,000 people have been killed, most of them innocent,β he said. βThe Syrian regime, over 14 years, killed more than one million people, and 250,000 remain disappeared β yet that regime is not called a terrorist.β
On a personal level, he claimed to βhave never harmed a civilian,β adding that he fought on several fronts for more than 20 years βwith honourβ.
Mr Al Shara described last yearβs lightning offensive on Damascus as βa merciful battleβ.
Syrian President Ahmed Al Shara and CNNβs Chief International Anchor Christiane Amanpour at the Doha Forum. Reuters
βHave you ever seen a terrorist planning for 11 days to enter major cities like Aleppo, Raqqa, Damascus, Latakia and Sweida without one civilian being harmed?β he asked. βWe broke prison doors with our own hands. We liberated people from Sednaya prison, where bodies were burnt with acid.β
He said βdouble standardsβ had long shaped perceptions of his movement, but βreality has prevailedβ, adding that he is no longer listed as a terrorist by the UN Security Council.
Beyond the rapprochement
Beyond the defence of his past, Mr Al Shara used the forum in Qatar to argue that Syria has fulfilled every promise made to neighbours and global partners since he seized power a year ago.
He said his administration had βgone beyond the rapprochement phaseβ and restored a wide range of regional and international ties.
A year earlier, at the same forum, Qatari, Iranian, Turkish and other regional officials held round-the-clock consultations as rebels led by Mr Al Shara advanced on Damascus.
βThis time last year, you were at the Doha Forum and we were getting ready to storm Damascus,β he said. βWe probably changed the agenda of the forum back then.β
Syrians wave flags during celebrations mar
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