Let op! Om diverse redenen kan de voorraad die hier op de website wordt getoond soms niet overeenkomen met de werkelijk aanwezige voorraad in de winkel.

Syria

24.00

Syria is one of the world’s great police states. After the death of President Hafez al-Assad in mid-2000 hopes were high that his son and successor, Bashar, might succeed in reforming a system that had become a byword for repression. For six months, and for the first time in decades, Syrians were able to speak freely, without fear of the hated secret police, or mukhabarat. Political discussion groups mushroomed.The press started carrying articles openly demanding democracy, and pro-democracy petitions were circulated. Alarmed at the potential threat, regime hardliners struck back, closing down discussion and staging show trials at which pro-democracy activists were sentenced to years in jail. As justification, the regime cynically cited the need for “national unity” at a time when Israel under Ariel Sharon and the United States under George W. Bush were subjecting the region to onslaughts that many Middle Easterners saw as new manifestations of an old imperialism. Here, Alan George recounts the drama of the “Damascus Spring” and its repression, and reveals what happens in a state like Syria to the institutions that occupy the political space between government and governed.

Artikelnummer: 19656 Categorie: Tag:
Subtitel: Neither bread nor freedom
Auteur: George, Alan
Jaar: 2003
ISBN: 1842772120
Pagina's: 206
Taal: English
Uitgever: Zed Books
Uitgever stad: London
Verschijningsdatum:
Winkelwagen
Scroll naar boven