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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria jails four dissidents
2007-06-05
DAMASCUS: Syria has jailed four more dissidents, one for 12 years, matching the heaviest sentence handed down since President Bashar 'Pencilneck' Assad took power seven years ago, a human rights group said Monday. "The state security court in Damascus sentenced Abdel-Jabbar Allawi to death, commuted to 12 years' imprisonment, for membership in the Muslim Brotherhood," said Ammar Qorabi, head of the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria.

Syria's regime has long regarded the Muslim Brotherhood as its most serious threat and membership of the group has been outlawed on pain of death since 1980, although in recent years the penalty has always been commuted to prison terms.

Qorabi said two other dissidents - Ahmad Sheikho and Faisal Ballani - were jailed for five years, while Kurdish activist Ziad Ismail was jailed for three. The three were convicted of "belonging to organizations seeking to change the economic and social basis of the regime," he said.
For the better, it should be noted.
Sheikho and Ballani were also found guilty of "weakening national sentiment." The court adjourned the case of a fifth dissident - Ali Zein al-Abidine - accused of "actions forbidden by the state" until September 23. It remanded two more - Mohammad al-Albi and Rami Saeed - in custody for further questioning, Qorabi added.

He said all the judgments came from the state security court - a tribunal of exception under the state of emergency in force ever since Assad's Baath party seized power in 1963.
That's a long state of emergency. Sucks to live in a dictatorship, huh.
The new jail terms came despite mounting international criticism of Syria's human-rights record following a spate of tough sentences handed down against dissidents in recent months.

Last month, Kamal Labwani was jailed for 12 years in what was then the longest sentence leveled against an opposition activist since Assad took power. He was convicted of having "contacts with a foreign country aimed at encouraging it to attack Syria," after being arrested on his return to Damascus from talks with White House officials in November 2005.
I'm guessing he wasn't talking to Nancy Pelosi.
Also in May, prominent opposition activists Michel Kilo and Mahmoud Issa were sentenced to three years behind bars, while the previous month human-rights lawyer Anwar Bunni was jailed for five years.

Washington said the earlier jail terms were "evidence of the Syrian regime's continued contempt for human rights." "We call on President Assad to unconditionally release all prisoners of conscience," State Department spokesman Tom Casey said in May.
Posted by:Steve White

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