Gulf Today

Assad says Syria facing ‘economic siege’

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President Bashar Al-assad said on Sunday Syria was suffering an “economic siege” as his regime faces a rat of internatio­nal sanctions over the eight-year civil war.

“The war on Syria has taken on a new form that is basically siege and economic war,” he said, according to a statement released by the presidency.

“Internatio­nal political tools have changed,” he said, as he met Chinese assistant foreign minister Chen Xiaodong in Damascus.

Instead of dialogue, foreign powers have adopted “a different approach consisting of boycot, ambassador withdrawal, economic siege, and the use of terrorism”, he said.

The president describes both rebels and jihadists as “terrorists”.

The United States and the European Union have slapped a series of sanctions on Syrian officials since the war started in 2011.

Many foreign nations closed their embassies in Damascus while others scaled down their representa­tion, and Syria was suspended from the Arab League in 2011.

As the war enters its ninth year this month, the country is gripped by a fuel crisis that has seen price hikes and long queues for cooking gas.

The United States has moved to stem petroleum shipping to Syria, and major oil and gas fields remain out of the government’s control in the northeast of the country.

Syria’s conflict has killed 360,000 people and displaced millions since it started with the repression of anti-government protests.

But the war is also estimated to have set Syria’s economy back by three decades, destroying infrastruc­ture and paralysing the production of electricit­y and oil.

Ater a series of victories against rebels and extremists since a Russia military interventi­on in 2015, the regime now controls almost twothirds of Syria.

It also appears to be making a timid comeback on the regional stage.

In December, Sudan’s President Omar Albashir made the first visit by any Arab leader to the Syrian capital since 2011, and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain reopened their embassies in Damascus.

Countries including Lebanon and Tunisia have called for it to be readmited to the Arab League.

On the domed roof of a historical market in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo, architect Bassel al-daher moves between workers painstakin­gly working to erase the scars of war.

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