Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad denied media reports on May 27 that his ally Russia had drawn up a new
constitution for his country and presented it to his government as part of
international efforts to end the long conflict.
Lebanese daily al-Akhbar had reported on May 24 that Russia had finished drafting a constitution which would remove many of the president’s powers and set up a more de-centralized government, both possible concessions to rebel groups fighting Assad, while also removing the “Arab” part from the country’s official Syrian Arab Republic name.
“No draft
constitution has been shown to the Syrian Arab Republic. Everything which has
been said in the media about this subject is totally untrue,” a statement on
the Syrian Presidency’s official Facebook page said. Lebanese daily al-Akhbar had reported on May 24 that Russia had finished drafting a constitution which would remove many of the president’s powers and set up a more de-centralized government, both possible concessions to rebel groups fighting Assad, while also removing the “Arab” part from the country’s official Syrian Arab Republic name.
“Any new future constitution for Syria will not be presented from abroad, but will be entirely Syrian: discussed and agreed upon by Syrians themselves and after that put to a referendum. Anything else would be worthless and meaningless,” the statement added.
Bloomberg reported last month that Russia, which supports Assad, and the United States, which mediates on behalf of the Syrian opposition, were working on a draft constitution together.
A peace plan endorsed by the U.N. Security Council last December called for a Syrian-led transition process that establishes “credible, inclusive and non-sectarian governance”, a new constitution, and free, fair elections within 18 months.
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