@Julian Dalrimple-sikes
des nouvelles de Syrie,
Joolani nomme directement 70 parlementaires , puis 140 indirectement, les Syriens ne sont pas autorisés à voter..
ils font vraiment du bon boulot ces rebelles ...
Free
Syria. Many Syrians remain unaware that the country’s first
parliamentary elections since the fall of Bashar al-Assad are set to
take place, as the public has been barred from voting, AP reported on
October 4th. Streets in Damascus lacked campaign posters or rallies, and
some residents only learned of the vote by chance. “I didn’t know — now
by chance I found out there are elections,” said Elias al-Qudsi, a
shopkeeper in the old city.
Sunday’s
parliamentary vote will not include the general public. Sharaa will
directly appoint 70 of 210 seats, while the remaining members will be
chosen by committees he created, prompting criticism from Syrian
activists over his tightening authoritarian control.
Assad
was ousted in December 2024 after a US- and NATO-backed operation that
installed former Al-Qaeda commander Ahmad al-Sharaa, known as Abu
Mohammed al-Julani, in power. Since then, Sharaa has ruled through an
extremist religious framework, appointing clerics to lead ministries and
military units.