الناشطة السياسية السورية #سوسن_زكزك من اعتصام #قانون_وكرامة ترفض تقييد التظاهر
⏹️الأصل في الأشياء الإباحة وليس المنع
⏹️لا يحق لسلطة غير منتخبة أن تكتب قانوناُ
⏹️لا نعرف أين يذهب المال العام
⏹️لا نعرف كيف تتم التعيينات في السلطة وعلى أية أسس
⏹️لا نعرف كيف يتم تلزيم الصفقات
The demands raised in the Damascus sit-in draw the real battle line with this de facto authority.
Not a religious battle, but a political, social, legal, and cultural one.
No to sectarian and regional sorting.
No to theft of public money.
No to humiliation.
No to the seizure of homes, shops, and properties.
Yes to citizenship, participation, dignity, justice, and equal rights.
This is the real Syrian question today: can people live as equal citizens under a state that protects them, their dignity, and their property?
Dragging this struggle into the religious field is not politics. It is the assassination of politics.
It replaces citizenship with fear, rights with slogans, and accountability with chaos.
And that is the bloody unknown waiting for everyone.
#Syria #Damascus #HumanRights #Citizenship #Accountability
A photo-op on Arwad Island cannot hide the fear still living in Tartus.
The de facto Syrian president visits Arwad Island in Tartus to celebrate the launch of this year’s tourism season, presenting a carefully staged image of normalcy, sea views, and recovery.
But Tartus is not simply rising from the rubble. It is still trying to rise from fear.
Many people in the city, especially members of minority communities, are still unable to live their lives with any real sense of safety or reassurance. They do not feel protected. They do not feel represented. They do not feel that this new authority sees them as equal citizens.
Just one day before this visit, Tartus witnessed a stabbing and murder in nearly the same area. Yet the official narrative wants to sell a story of tourism, celebration, and revival, while avoiding the harder questions: Where is security? Where is accountability? Where is trust?
And then there is what the images do not show.
In most of the photos and appearances surrounding this visit, women are almost entirely absent.
That absence says everything.
Women are among the biggest losers in today’s Syria. They are missing from a theatrical parliament, pushed out of meaningful political life, and nearly erased from public decision-making. A country cannot claim it is entering a new chapter while half of society is kept outside the frame.
You cannot launch a tourism season in a city where people are still afraid.
You cannot build a state through a polished photo opportunity on an island while people on the mainland feel invisible, unsafe, and excluded.
#Terrorism
#Syria
#Tartus
#Arwad
#ArwadIsland
#SyrianWomen