Syria’s new leaders zero in on Assad’s business barons
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The executive led by Syrian president Ahmed al-Sharaa has set up a committee tasked with dissecting the corporate interests of high-profile Assad-linked tycoons.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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DAMASCUS – Syria’s new rulers are combing through the billion-dollar corporate empires of ousted president Bashar al-Assad’s allies, and have held talks with some of these tycoons, in what they say is a campaign to root out corruption and illegal activity.
After seizing power in December 2024, the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS)
To do so, the executive led by new president Ahmed al-Sharaa has set up a committee tasked with dissecting the sprawling corporate interests of high-profile Assad-linked tycoons, including Mr Samer Foz and Mohammad Hamsho, three sources told Reuters.
Days after taking Damascus, the new administration issued orders to freeze companies and bank accounts of Assad-linked businesses and individuals, and later specifically included those on US sanctions lists, according to correspondence between the Syrian central bank and commercial banks reviewed by Reuters.
Mr Hamsho and Mr Foz, targeted by US sanctions since 2011 and 2019 respectively, returned to Syria from abroad and met senior HTS figures in Damascus in January, according to a government official and two Syrians with direct knowledge of the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The two men, who are reviled by many ordinary Syrians for their close ties to Mr Assad, pledged to cooperate with the new leadership's fact-finding efforts, the three sources said.
Accused by the US Treasury of getting rich off Syria’s war, Mr Foz’s sprawling Aman Holding conglomerate has interests in pharmaceuticals, sugar refining, trading and transport.
Mr Hamsho’s interests, grouped under the Hamsho International Group, are similarly wide-ranging, from petrochemicals and metal products to television production.
Mr Hamsho, whom the US Treasury has accused of being a front for Mr Assad and his brother Maher, did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Mr Foz could not be reached.
The establishment of the committee, whose members are not public, and the conversations between Syria’s new government and two of the Assad government’s closest tycoons who control large parts of Syria’s economy have not been previously reported.
The new Syrian government’s approach towards powerful Assad-linked businesses, yet to be fully clarified, will be key in determining the fate of the economy as the administration struggles to convince Washington and its allies to remove sanctions, Syrian analysts and businessmen say.
Trade Minister Maher Khalil Al-Hasan and Syrian investment chief Ayman Hamawiye both confirmed to Reuters that the government had been in contact with some Assad-linked businessmen, but did not identify them or provide further details.
Mr Khaldoun Zoubi, a long-term partner of Mr Foz, confirmed his associate had held talks with Syrian authorities but did not confirm if he had been in the country.
“Foz told them he is ready to cooperate with the new administration and provide all the support to the Syrian people and the new state,” Mr Zoubi said from the gilded lobby of the Four Seasons hotel in central Damascus, which Mr Foz’s group majority owns. “He is ready to do anything asked of him.”
The two Syrian sources said Mr Foz, who holds a Turkish citizenship, had left Damascus after the talks. Reuters could not ascertain Mr Hamsho’s whereabouts.
Economy in their hands
The US has sanctioned Mr Foz, Mr Hamsho and others with a prominent economic role, including Mr Yasser Ibrahim, Mr Assad’s most trusted adviser.
Syrian analysts say around a dozen men make up the close ring of business barons tied to the former regime. HTS-appointed government officials consider all of them to be persons of interest.
Syrian authorities have ordered companies and factories belonging or linked to the tycoons to keep working, under supervision of HTS authorities, while the committee investigates their various businesses.
“Our policy is to allow for their employees to continue working and supplying goods to the market while freezing their money movements now,” Trade Minister Hasan told Reuters in an interview early in January.
“It’s a huge file. (Assad’s business allies) have the economy of a state in their hands. You can’t just tell them to leave,” he added, explaining the new government could not avoid engaging with the tycoons.
Hamsho International Group is among those put under HTS supervision, according to the sources with direct knowledge.
A Reuters visit in late January showed little work was being carried out at its modern multi-storey headquarters in Damascus, where some offices had been looted in the wake of Assad’s fall.
Staff have been instructed to cooperate fully with the new Syrian administration, members of whom regularly visit the company seeking information, said one employee, who asked not to be identified by name.
Some economists say the country’s dire economic situation required major domestic corporations to continue to operate regardless of who they may be affiliated with.
The UN says 90 per cent of Syrians live below the poverty line.
While basic goods shortages have eased after strict trade controls dissolved in the aftermath of Mr Assad’s fall, many Syrians still struggle to afford them.
“Syrian authorities need to be wary of a harsh crackdown on former regime cronies because this could create significant shortages (of goods),” said Dr Karam Shaar, director of a Syria-focused economic consultancy bearing his name.
Total justice
Mr Assad’s rapid fall, culminating with his Dec 8 escape to Russia,
But a lack of transparency by HTS authorities in dealing with the tycoons and their businesses risks backlash.
“The overall approach to these Assad regime cronies is not clear and it might depend on the actor and also how much backing they have,” said Dr Shaar, who advocates following a strict legal path.
Mr Hamawiye, who has been appointed to deal with potential foreign investors and advises the new ruling authorities on economic policy, acknowledged public concerns over the future of regime-linked businesses, which vary in size and importance.
He said ordinary businessmen who were forced to pay bribes or work with the regime so they could function were not under the new administration's microscope.
But the process would be different for a few who partnered with Mr Assad and made fortunes at the expense of the state and engaged in illegal activities, he said.
For example, Mr Assad’s brother Maher, whom the US says had links with Mr Hamsho, ran the Fourth Division of the Syrian army that was later linked to the production of the amphetamine-like drug captagon.
“If you beat one of (the business tycoons) or throw them in jail, who will benefit? You need to work slowly, with committees and information and investigations, so that you get as much justice as possible,” Mr Hamawiye said.
Meanwhile Mr Zoubi, who maintained links to some Syrian opposition groups alongside his partnership with Mr Foz, said he had understood from his dealings with the new rulers that they sought a “conciliatory” approach.
“I’m optimistic the new administration is not personalising matters,” he said. REUTERS

