For the first time, Syrians ‘not afraid’ to talk politics

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Cafes in Damascus are alive and buzzing with the voices of patrons speaking freely about their country for the first time.

Cafes in Damascus are alive and buzzing with the voices of patrons speaking freely about their country for the first time.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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For decades, any Syrian daring to broach political topics got used to speaking in hushed tones and with a watchful eye trained for a listener among the crowd.

“There were spies everywhere,” Mr Mohannad al-Katee said in Al-Rawda cafe in Damascus. He added almost in disbelief: “It’s the first time that I sit in a cafe and I can talk about politics.”

Mr Katee, a researcher in political and social history, said: “It was a dream for Syrians.”

Until now, the 42-year-old, like thousands of others, had grown accustomed to watching for the proverbial flies on the walls of Damascus’ renowned cafes.

Today, those same cafes are alive and buzzing with the voices of patrons speaking freely about their country for the first time.

Such discussions “were banned under the previous regime, then there was a relative opening during the Damascus Spring”, Mr Katee said.

He was referring to the year 2000, when President Bashar al-Assad took over from his late father Hafez al-Assad and slightly loosened the reins on political life in Syria.

Initially, the young Mr Assad had opened up an unprecedented space, allowing for political salons to flourish alongside calls for reform in a country that had long grown accustomed to fear and silence.

“But it didn’t last,” Mr Katee said.

A few months after his succession, Mr Assad rolled back those gains, putting an end to the short-lived “Damascus Spring”.

In the subsequent years, according to Mr Katee, informants were ubiquitous, from “the hookah waiter, to the man at the till, it could have been anyone”.

‘The walls have ears’

Politically active since 1998, he fled to Saudi Arabia in 2012, a year after the outbreak of Arab Spring protests whose violent repression led to the eruption of the nearly 14-year civil war.

“Political life consisted of secret meetings,” he said. “We were always taught that the walls have ears.”

Today, “Syrians can never go back to obscurantism and dictatorship, to accepting single-party rule”, he added.

People sitting at a cafe in Aleppo, Syria, on Dec 11.

PHOTO: REUTERS

A little further on, in the Havana cafe once known as a meeting point for intellectuals and activists in a distant past, Mr Fuad Obeid, 64, is chatting with a friend.

The former owner of a cafe, he said he had to shut down: “The intelligence services spent their time at my place. They drank for free as though they owned the place.”

For more than 50 years, the Assads maintained their vice-like grip on society, in large part through the countless informants that walked among the population.

On Dec 28, Syria’s new intelligence chief, Mr Anas Khattab, announced that the service’s various branches would be dissolved.

Mr Obeid said: “I used to keep a low profile so they wouldn’t know I was the owner. I told customers not to talk politics for fear of reprisals.”

Now, he noted, in Havana cafe as in others, the difference is like “night and day”.

‘Truly free’

Back in Al-Rawda, discussions are in full swing over hookahs and games of backgammon.

Mr Ahmad Kozorosh, the owner, still cannot believe his eyes, having witnessed numerous arrests in his own cafe over the years.

“I am now seeing almost exclusively new faces,” he said. “People who had been sentenced to death, imprisoned.”

To celebrate the new era, he is holding weekly symposiums in the cafe and will even launch a new political party to be named after it.

Real estate agent Nesrine Shouban, 42, had spent three years in prison for carrying US dollars, a punishable offence in Mr Assad’s Syria.

Alongside thousands of others who found freedom when the doors of prisons were flung open, she was released on Dec 8 from the notorious Adra prison.

“They had dangled in front of us the possibility of an amnesty” from Mr Assad’s administration, she said. “Thankfully, the amnesty came from God.”

She added: “At cafes, we didn’t dare say anything. We were even afraid that our phones were bugged.”

Now, for the first time, she said she felt “truly free”.

Despite concerns over the radical Islamist background of Syria’s new rulers, a breath of freedom has washed over the country for the first time, with public demonstrations being organised – an unthinkable prospect just one month earlier.

“We are not afraid anymore,” Ms Shouban said. “If Jolani makes mistakes, we will denounce them,” she added, referring to new Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, known by his nom de guerre Abu Mohammad al-Jolani.

“In all cases, it can’t be worse than Bashar al-Assad.” AFP

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