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Kemalisté
04-07-2014, 11:24 PM
The "project of political Islam has failed," Syria's President Bashar al-Assad said on Monday, calling for the separation of religion from politics, state television said.

Assad's regime has been battling an uprising that has come to be dominated by Islamists, ranging from moderates to radicals, who want to see Syria run as an Islamic state.

"The project of political Islam has failed, and there should be no mixing between political and religious work," he said in comments on the 67th anniversary of the founding of his Baath party.

Assad refers to all those fighting against him as "terrorists" and has said that he is battling extremists with retrograde ideas.

The president has repeatedly stressed the need for all parts of Syrian society to challenge "extremism".

Assad said his government was also "continuing with the process of reconciliation, because what concerns us is ending the bloodshed and the destruction of infrastructure".

In recent months, Assad's government has negotiated limited ceasefires with rebels who agree to raise the government's flag in their neighbourhoods, and in many cases turn over their weapons.

The deals usually follow months-long sieges by the army, which have contributed to humanitarian crises in parts of the country.

Syria's conflict, which began in March 2011, has left more than 150,000 people dead.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/syrias-assad-says-political-islam-project-has-failed.aspx?pageID=238&nID=64682&NewsCatID=352

Kemalisté
04-07-2014, 11:34 PM
Assad's resistance against the political islam project which was designed by the US government as a tool to confront extremism became a turning point for the fate of the region. Mass protests and popular uprisings took place in these countries where political moderate islamic governments had been installed following the Arab Spring. Morsi overthrown. Ennahda in Tunisia likely to be defeated in upcoming elections. The US will go for a policy change and might give a chance for left-leaning secular movements in the region. That's why they didn't harshly react to the Egyptian coup, and isn't being too hard on Assad anymore.