He attacked the ambassador of the ousted Syrian regime in Russia Bashar Al-Jaafariall of Bashar Lion And his regime, which fell after the armed opposition factions entered the capital, Damascus.
Al-Jaafari said in his first statement after the fall of the regime: Syria Today, it is for all its Syrian children, praising the great confidence in the ability of the Syrian people to overcome adversity and challenges.
He added that Syria is entering a new phase today in which it will be for all its people, calling for cooperation and extending a helping hand to protect the dignity of the wounded nation and heal the pain of the Syrians, away from revenge, division and bloodshed.
He stressed the importance of overcoming adversity and challenges and working together to move the country to safety, and building a future that reflects the true belonging to Syria after many years of suffering.
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He pointed out that many patriotic Syrians suffered from injustice and marginalization due to the corruption system that wreaked havoc on the country’s capabilities and institutions, and forced the people to be displaced, take refuge, and flee to a painful fate. He considered that the collapse of this system within days reflects its lack of popularity and the lack of an incubator to support it in society or among the ranks of the army.
He added that the humiliating flight of the regime’s head reinforces hope for real change and the reconstruction of Syria, both in person and in stone, after decades of injustice, the fight against competencies, and the expulsion of the intellectual and political elite. He called for focusing on hope for peaceful change, stressing that Syria is rich in goodness and can rise again despite all the challenges.
A desperate defender of crimes
During his career, Bashar al-Jaafari held several diplomatic positions and responsibilities in the Syrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and worked in Syrian embassies in several countries. He also served in his country’s missions to United NationsHe became Syria’s permanent representative to its headquarters in New York in 2006.
Al-Jaafari played a prominent role in defending the Syrian regime on the podiums of the United Nations and the UN Security Council, where he regularly described the revolutionary forces as “terrorist groups” in an attempt to justify the violations committed by the regime against them.
This role made him the regime’s choice to represent him as “chief negotiator” at the Geneva 2 conference with the Syrian opposition in early 2014, and he also participated in the subsequent negotiating rounds held in 2015 and 2016.
As part of his continued defense of the Bashar al-Assad regime, Al-Jaafari denied that the regime had committed any violations or massacres against human rights in Syria. Among the most prominent of these denials was his denial of the use of chemical weapons in the bombing of Ghouta in Damascus during the summer of 2013.
Bashar did not target Madaya
Bashar al-Jaafari denied the existence of any humanitarian disaster in the Syrian town of Madaya, which was subjected to a famine that was documented in the media with audio and video as a result of the long siege. He stressed that “the Syrian government has not and will not practice any policy of starvation against its people,” claiming that “terrorist organizations have hijacked the humanitarian aid sent to civilians in the areas it controls, and this is what happened in Madaya.”
Al-Jaafari was also famous for his offensive statements against internal and external parties. On February 5, 2012, he strongly criticized the United Nations, the Arab Gulf states, and the Al Jazeera network, after Russia and China used their veto power to abort a joint European-Arab draft resolution to resolve the Syrian crisis peacefully.
During the years of the Syrian revolution, Al-Jaafari strongly defended the Assad regime, justifying the violations committed by the regime against Syrians in various international forums. On February 23, 2016, he criticized United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and his Special Envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura, accusing the General Secretariat of “siding with armed groups,” and describing the recent Geneva negotiations as “marred by many shortcomings.”
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