Assad offers amnesty to Syrian opponents

Assad offers amnesty to Syrian opponents

Bashar al-Assad has announced a general amnesty for prisoners, less than a week after he was re-elected to another seven-year term as Syria's president, state media reported.

Assad's decree, released on Monday, said pardons will be offered to those accused of "terrorist acts" or those who "set up a group aimed at changing the economic or social nature of the state".

Al Jazeera's Rula Amin, reporting from neighboring Lebanon, said the amnesty offers reduced sentences and full pardons for a number of crimes.

Assad has issued several amnesties since protests against his rule erupted in March 2011. Previous declarations have not been fully implemented and rights groups have cautioned that many people still languish in prison as a result.

The decree also promised a pardon to those who "plotted to carry out any crime" as listed under Syrian anti-terrorism law, as well as those accused of joining "a terrorist organization or of forcing someone to join a terrorist organization".

The amnesty also covers those accused of "weakening national sentiment", and people accused of "inciting an armed rebellion against the authorities".

The text says also that those who defected from the army will be extended a full pardon if they hand themselves in within three months of the decree.

It is also the first amnesty that offers clemency to foreign fighters, as long as they hand themselves in within a month.

State television cited Justice Minister Najem al-Ahmad as saying the decree was issued in the context of "social forgiveness, national cohesion calls for coexistence, as the army secures several military victories".

PHOTO CAPTION

Syrians wave their national flag and hold picture of re-elected Syrian President Bashar al-Assad after he was announced as the winner of the country's presidential elections on June 4, 2014.


Aljazeera

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