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d-35322House OversightOther

Le Monde diplomatique article on the early Syrian uprising (May 2011)

The passage provides a general historical narrative of the Syrian protests and government response, without new specific allegations, names, financial transactions, or actionable leads involving high‑ Describes the trigger of the Syrian uprising in Daraa in March 2011. Notes the Syrian security forces’ use of live fire and siege tactics. Mentions estimated casualty and arrest figures, though uncer

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #024962
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a general historical narrative of the Syrian protests and government response, without new specific allegations, names, financial transactions, or actionable leads involving high‑ Describes the trigger of the Syrian uprising in Daraa in March 2011. Notes the Syrian security forces’ use of live fire and siege tactics. Mentions estimated casualty and arrest figures, though uncer

Tags

government-repressionprotestssyriapolitical-repressionarab-springhuman-rights-violationshuman-rightshouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Article 2. Le Monde diplomatique Is This the End of the Assad Dynasty? Patrick Seale 2011-05-06 -- The disturbances started in mid-March in Daraa, a southern city on the border with Jordan, when a dozen children were manhandled, arrested and carried off to Damascus for scribbling hostile graffiti on a wall. Distraught parents came down into the street to vent their anger at such heavy-handed brutality. They were soon joined by others. The uprising had begun and soon spread across the country. No doubt it was inspired, in part at least, by the display of people power which has leapt with contagious speed from one country to another, shaking the foundations of Arab autocracy and giving a great jolt to the immobile political order in the Middle East. In Syria, the authorities then made what may prove to be a fatal mistake. In a move that looked like panic, the security forces used live fire against the protesters -- and have continued to do so. By the end of April, over 550 people had been killed in different locations around the country, while many more were wounded and possibly two thousand arrested. With little reliable information coming out of Syria it is impossible to be certain of the figures. The state used particular violence against Daraa, a poor city in an agricultural region which has suffered from government neglect and crippling drought in recent years. As if to punish it for initiating the troubles, tank fire was used to quell the protests and something like a siege put in place. Electricity and water were cut off and food became scarce. The deaths in Daraa and elsewhere -- and the emotional funeral processions that followed -- have clearly aroused great rage in the population and a thirst for revenge. President Bashar al-Assad’s legitimacy has been eroded. A strident call is ringing out increasingly

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