Report on Human Rights
Practices for 1997Syria
Despite the existence of some institutions of democratic government,
the political system places virtually absolute authority in the
hands of the President, Hafiz Al-Asad. Key decisions regarding
foreign policy, national security, internal politics, and the
economy are made by President Asad with counsel from his ministers,
high ranking members of the ruling Ba'th Party, and a relatively
small circle of security advisers. Although the Parliament is
elected every 4 years, the Ba'th Party is ensured a majority.
The Parliament does not initiate laws, but only passes judgment
on and sometimes modifies those proposed by the executive branch.
The judiciary is constitutionally independent, but this is not
the case in the exceptional (state of emergency) security courts,
which are subject to political influence. The regular courts
display independence, although political connections and bribery
can influence verdicts. In general, all three branches of government
are influenced to varying degrees by leaders of the Ba'th party,
whose primacy in state institutions is mandated by the Constitution.
The powerful role of the security services in government, which
extends beyond strictly security matters, stems in part from the
state of emergency that has been in place almost continuously
since 1963. The Government justifies martial law because of the
state of war with Israel and past threats from terrorist groups.
Syrian Military Intelligence and Air Force Intelligence are military
agencies, while General Security, State Security, and Political
Security come under the purview of the Ministry of Interior.
The branches of the security services operate independently of
each other and outside the legal system. Their members often
ignore the rights of suspects and detainees and commit serious
human rights abuses.
The economy is based on commerce, agriculture, oil production,
and government services. There is a generally inefficient public
sector, a private sector, and a mixed public/private sector.
A complex bureaucracy, overarching security concerns, endemic
corruption, currency restrictions, lack of modern financial services,
and a weak legal system hamper economic growth. The Government
has sought to promote the private sector through investment incentives,
exchange rate consolidation, and deregulation, especially with
regard to financial transactions governing imports and exports.
Due to a slowdown in agricultural output and reduced revenues
from oil exports, real gross domestic product (GDP) growth is
about 4.6 percent, down from 6 percent in 1996. The high population
growth rate of 3.1 percent means that real per capita growth is
only 1.5 percent. Annual per capita GDP is about $1200, with
annual inflation hovering between 16 and 18 percent. Wage increases
in the public sector have not kept pace with cost of living increases,
and the gap between rich and poor continues to widen, with many
public sector workers relying on second jobs to make ends meet.
The human rights situation remained poor, and the Government continues
to restrict or deny fundamental rights. Because the Ba'th party's
domination of the political system is provided for by the Constitution,
citizens do not have the right to change the Government. The
Government uses its vast powers so effectively that there is no
organized political opposition and there have been very few antiregime
manifestations. Serious abuses include the widespread use of
torture in detention; poor prison conditions; arbitrary arrest
and prolonged detention without trial; fundamentally unfair trials
in the security courts; an inefficient judiciary that suffers
from corruption and, at times, political influence; infringement
on citizens' privacy rights; denial of freedom of assembly and
association; limits on the freedom of movement; and, despite a
slight loosening of censorship restrictions, the denial of the
freedoms of speech and of the press. Societal discrimination
and violence against women are problems. The Government discriminates
against the stateless Kurdish minority and suppresses worker rights.
There were several credible reports of arrests of political activists,
while more than a dozen political prisoners reportedly were released
from prison.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including
Freedom From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
There were no reports of political killings and no confirmed reports
of deaths in detention, although such deaths have occurred in
the past. Previous deaths in detention have not been investigated
by the Government, and the number and identities of prisoners
who died in prisons since the 1980's remains unknown.
On December 31, 1996, a bomb exploded on a private transport bus
in central Damascus, killing at least 20 persons and wounding
dozens of others. The perpetrators and motives for this bomb
attack remain unclear.
b. Disappearance
There were no confirmed reports of politically motivated disappearances.
Despite inquiries by international human rights organizations
and foreign governments, the Government offered little new information
on the welfare and whereabouts of persons who have been held incommunicado
for years or about whom no more is known other than the approximate
date of their detention (see Section 1.d.).
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment
Despite the existence of constitutional provisions and several
Penal Code penalties for abusers, there was credible evidence
that security forces continue to use torture. Former prisoners
and detainees have reported that torture methods included electrical
shocks; pulling out fingernails; the forced insertion of objects
into the rectum; beatings, sometimes, while the victim is suspended
from the ceiling; hyperextension of the spine; and the use of
a chair that bends backwards to asphyxiate the victim or fracture
the spine. Although torture may occur in prisons, torture is
most likely while detainees are being held at one of the many
detention centers run by the various security services throughout
the country, and particularly while the authorities are trying
to extract a confession or information about an alleged crime
or alleged accomplices.
The Government continues to deny the use of torture, and claims
that it would prosecute anyone believed guilty of using excessive
force or physical abuse. There were no reports of any prosecutions
of security officials during the year, although past victims of
torture have identified the officials who beat them, up to the
level of brigadier general. If allegations of excessive force
or physical abuse are to be made in court, the plaintiff is required
to initiate his own civil suit against the alleged abuser.
Prison conditions vary and generally are poor and do not meet
minimum international standards for health and sanitation. Facilities
for political or national security prisoners are generally worse
than those that house common criminals. The prison at Tadmur
in Palmyra, where many political and national security prisoners
have been kept, is widely considered to have the worst conditions.
At some prisons, authorities allow visitation rights, but in
other cases security officials demand bribes from family members
who wish to visit incarcerated relatives. Overcrowding and substandard
or insufficient food exist at several prisons. Some former detainees
have reported that the Government prohibits reading materials,
even the Koran, for political prisoners.
The Government does not permit independent monitoring of prison
or detention center conditions.
In instances in which foreign nationals are arrested, the authorities
sometimes do not inform embassies and delay or deny prison visits
by foreign diplomats. The authorities consider citizens who hold
dual nationality to be Syrians only, and thus do not necessarily
recognize or grant requests by foreign diplomats to visit or otherwise
assist such persons.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
Arbitrary arrest and detention are problems. The Emergency Law,
which authorizes the Government to conduct preventive arrests,
overrides Penal Code provisions against arbitrary arrest and detention,
including the need to obtain warrants. Officials contend that
the Emergency Law is applied only in narrowly defined cases.
Nonetheless, in cases involving political or national security
offenses, arrests are generally carried out in secret, and suspects
may be detained incommunicado for prolonged periods without charge
or trial and are denied the right to a judicial determination
for the pretrial detention. Some of these practices are prohibited
by the state of emergency, but the authorities are not held to
these strictures.
The Government apparently continues to detain relatives of detainees
or of fugitives in order to obtain confessions or the fugitive's
surrender (see Section 1.f.).
Defendants in civil and criminal trials have the right to bail
hearings and the possible release from detention on their own
recognizance. There is no bail option for those accused of national
security offenses. Unlike defendants in regular criminal and
civil cases, security detainees do not have access to lawyers
prior to or during questioning.
Detainees have no legal redress for false arrest. Security forces
often do not provide detainees' families with information on their
welfare or location while in detention. Consequently, many people
who have disappeared in past years are believed to be in long-term
detention without charge, or possibly to have died in such detention.
The number of those who disappeared in this way probably has
declined over the past few years, although this may be due to
the Government's success in deterring opposition political activity
rather than a loosening of criteria for detention. Many detainees
brought to trial have been held incommunicado for years, and their
trials often have been unfair (see Section 1.e.).
Pretrial detention may be lengthy even in cases not involving
political or national security offenses. The criminal justice
system is backlogged. Many criminal suspects are held in pretrial
detention for months and may have their trials extended for additional
months. Lengthy pretrial detentions and drawn-out court proceedings
are caused by a shortage of available courts and the absence of
legal provisions for a speedy trial or plea bargaining.
There were two reports of large-scale politically motivated arrests
in 1996 about which there was no new information in 1997: in
March 1996, up to 100 political activists allegedly were arrested
in Dayr Al-Zur, and in April 1996 up to 800 members of the Turkoman
minority reportedly were detained without charge. Most of the
Turkomen supposedly were released by July 1996, but some still
may remain in detention.
The last significant releases of political detainees took place
in late November and December 1995 (see Section 1.e.). While
most of the doctors, lawyers, and engineers arrested in a mass
crackdown in 1980 have been released, some apparently remain in
prolonged detention without charge. Palestinian, Jordanian, and
Lebanese citizens apparently continue to be detained without charge
by Syrian security services in both Lebanon and Syria, without
any public accounting by the Government.
Remaining political detainees probably number in the hundreds
or more. Even approximate figures are difficult to estimate since
the Government does not verify publicly the number of detentions
without charge, the release of detainees, or whether detainees
are subsequently sentenced to prison (see Section 1.e.).
The Government has exiled citizens in the past, although the practice
is prohibited by the Constitution. There were no known instances
of forced exile in 1997.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary, but the
two exceptional courts dealing with alleged security cases are
not independent of executive branch control. The regular court
system displays independence, although political connections and
bribery sometimes influence verdicts.
The judicial system is composed of the civil and criminal courts,
military courts, the security courts, and the religious courts,
which adjudicate matters of personal status such as divorce and
inheritance. The Court of Cassation is the highest court of appeal.
The Supreme Constitutional Court is empowered to rule only on
the constitutionality of laws and decrees. It does not hear appeals.
Civil and criminal courts are organized under the Ministry of
Justice. Defendants before these courts are entitled to the legal
representation of their choice; the courts appoint lawyers for
indigents. Defendants are presumed innocent; they are allowed
to present evidence, and to confront their accusers. Trials are
public, except for those involving juveniles or sex offenses.
Defendants may appeal their verdicts to a provincial appeals
court and ultimately to the Court of Cassation. Such appeals
are difficult because the courts do not provide verbatim transcripts
of cases--only summaries prepared by the presiding judges. There
are no juries.
Military courts have the authority to try civilian as well as
military personnel. The venue for a civilian defendant is decided
by a military prosecutor. There were continuing reports that
the Government operates military field courts in locations outside
of established courtrooms. Such courts reportedly observe fewer
of the formal procedures of regular military courts.
The two security courts are the Supreme State Security Court (SSSC),
which tries political and national security cases, and the Economic
Security Court (ESC), which tries cases involving financial crimes.
Both courts operate under the state of emergency, not ordinary
law, and do not observe constitutional provisions safeguarding
defendants' rights.
Charges against defendants in the SSSC are often vague. Many
defendants appear to be tried for exercising normal political
rights, such as free speech. For example, the Emergency Law authorizes
the prosecution of anyone "opposing the goals of the revolution"
or "shaking the confidence of the masses in the aims of the
revolution," or trying to "change the economic or social
structure of the State." Nonetheless, the Government contends
that the SSSC tries only persons who have sought to use violence
against the State.
Under SSSC procedures, defendants are not present during the preliminary,
or investigative, phase of the trial, when evidence is presented
by the prosecutor. Trials are usually closed to the public.
Lawyers are not ensured access to their clients before the trial
and are excluded from the court during their client's initial
interrogation by the prosecutor. Lawyers submit written defense
pleas, rather than oral presentations. The State's case is often
based on confessions, but defendants have not been allowed to
argue in court that the confessions were coerced. There is no
known instance in which the court ordered a medical examination
for a defendant who claimed that he was tortured. The SSSC reportedly
has acquitted some defendants, but the Government does not provide
any statistics on the conviction rate. Defendants do not have
the right to appeal verdicts, but sentences are reviewed by the
Minister of Interior, who may ratify, nullify, or alter sentences.
The President may also intervene in the review process.
Accurate information on the number of cases heard by the SSSC
is difficult to obtain, although in recent years hundreds of cases
are believed to have passed through the court annually. Many
reportedly involved charges relating to membership in various
banned political groups, including the Party for Communist Action
and the pro-Iraqi wing of the Ba'th party. Sentences as long
as 15 years have been imposed. The Government permitted delegates
from Amnesty International (AI) to attend a session of the SSSC
in March (see Section 4).
The Economic Security Court (ESC) tries persons for alleged violations
of foreign-exchange laws and other economic crimes. Prosecution
of economic crimes is not applied uniformly, as some government
officials or business people with close connections to the Government
likely have violated Syria's strict economic laws without prosecution.
Like the SSSC, the ESC does not ensure defendants due process.
Defendants may not have adequate access to lawyers to prepare
their defenses, and the State's case is usually based on confessions.
Verdicts likely are influenced by high-ranking government officials.
Those convicted of the most serious economic crimes do not have
the right of appeal, but those convicted of lesser crimes may
appeal to the Court of Cassation.
The last major releases of political prisoners and detainees took
place in late November and December 1995. Originally the Government
claimed to have released some 1,650 political prisoners in November
1995, but local estimates now place the number released between
2,200 and 3,000. Many of those released apparently were members
of the Muslim Brotherhood who had not been involved in acts of
violence. The release also may have included some persons from
banned Communist parties, pro-Iraqi Ba'athists, and Nasserites.
Some former prisoners reported having to sign loyalty oaths or
admissions of guilt as a condition of their release. Other prisoners
released in November 1995 apparently were in poor health as a
result of their incarceration; they had been incarcerated without
charge or had been detained in prison beyond the expiration of
their original prison sentences, in some cases for years.
The Government has released virtually all of those arrested at
the time President Asad took power in 1970. At least three persons
arrested during that period remain in prison, even though the
sentences of two of them expired in 1985. The third apparently
never was tried.
The Government denies that it holds political prisoners, arguing
that, although the aims of some prisoners may be political, their
activities, including subversion, were criminal. However, the
Emergency Law and the Penal Code are so vague, and the Government's
power so broad, that many persons were convicted and are in prison
for the mere expression of political opposition to the Government.
The current number of political prisoners is estimated to be
several hundred or more.
The Government released a number of political prisoners in 1997.
In March five men affiliated with the Committee for the Defense
of Democratic Freedoms and Human Rights were reportedly released
after serving 5-year terms. In April the Government reportedly
freed a leader of the Lebanese branch of the Iraqi Ba'th party
who had been held in Syria for 2 1/2 years. Six or more members
of banned Communist and left-wing parties also supposedly were
released after serving long sentences.
f. Arbitrary Interference With Privacy, Family, Home,
or Correspondence
Although laws provide for freedom from arbitrary interference,
the Emergency Law authorizes the security services to enter homes
and conduct searches with warrants if security matters, very broadly
defined, are involved. The security services selectively monitor
telephone conversations and facsimile transmissions. The Government
opens mail destined for both citizens and foreign residents.
It also prevents the delivery of human rights materials.
The Government apparently has continued its practice of threatening
or detaining the relatives of detainees or of fugitives in order
to obtain confessions or the fugitive's surrender. One such case
involved a Syrian Kurd who was reportedly detained for over a
month, beaten, and tortured to extract information regarding the
whereabouts of his brother.
The incidence of security checkpoints has diminished. There are
fewer police checkpoints on roads and in populated areas. Generally,
the security services set up checkpoints to search for smuggled
goods, weapons, narcotics, and subversive literature. The searches
take place without warrants. The Government and the Ba'th party
have monitored and tried to restrict some citizens' visits to
foreign embassies and cultural centers.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides citizens with the right to express opinions
freely in speech and in writing, but the Government restricts
these rights significantly in practice. The Government strictly
controls dissemination of information and permits no written criticism
of the President, the President's family, the Ba'th party, the
military, or the legitimacy of the regime. The Emergency Law
allows the Government broad discretion in determining illegal
expression. It prohibits the publishing of "false information,"
which opposes "the goals of the revolution" (see Section
1.e.). In the past, the Government has imprisoned journalists
for failing to observe press restrictions. Two journalists from
a government newspaper were allegedly dismissed after publishing
an article in July that was viewed as insulting to the Prophet
Muhammad. In the past, state security services have threatened
local journalists for articles printed outside Syria.
The Ministry of Information and the Ministry of Culture and National
Guidance censor the domestic and foreign press. They usually
prevent publication or distribution of any material deemed threatening
or embarrassing to the security services or high levels of the
Government. Censorship is usually stricter for materials in Arabic.
Commonly censored subjects include: the Government's human rights
record; Islamic fundamentalism; allegations of official involvement
in drug trafficking; aspects of the Government's role in Lebanon;
graphic descriptions of sex; material unfavorable to the Arab
cause in the Middle East conflict; and material that is offensive
to any of the country's religious groups. In addition, most journalists
and writers practice self-censorship, in order to avoid provoking
a negative government reaction.
Recent trends toward modest relaxation of censorship continued
during the year. The media demonstrated somewhat wider latitude
in reporting on regional developments, including the Middle East
peace process. The media covered some peace process events factually,
but other events were reported selectively to buttress official
views. The Government-controlled press increased for a limited
period the number of articles critical of issues such as official
corruption and governmental inefficiency. In April a Government
newspaper printed a story describing the torture and wrongful
imprisonment of a man who served 4 years for allegedly killing
a nurse.
The Government or the Ba'th Party owns and operates the radio
and television companies and the newspaper publishing houses.
There are no privately owned newspapers, although foreign-owned,
foreign-published newspapers circulate relatively freely. The
Ministry of Information scripts the radio and television news
programs to ensure adherence to the government line. The Government
does not interfere with broadcasts from abroad. In late 1994,
the Government announced that it would confiscate satellite receiving
dishes and replace them with a government-controlled cable television
distribution system. The confiscation program did not take place.
Since then, satellite dishes have proliferated throughout all
regions and among neighborhoods of all social and economic categories.
The Ministry of Culture and National Guidance censors fiction
and nonfiction works, including films. It also determines which
films may not be shown at the cultural centers operated by foreign
embassies.
The Government restricts academic freedom. Public school teachers
are not permitted to express ideas contrary to government policy,
although authorities allow somewhat greater freedom of expression
at the university level.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
Freedom of assembly does not exist. Citizens may not hold meetings
unless they obtain permission from the Ministry of Interior.
Most public demonstrations are organized by the Government or
Ba'th Party. The Government applies the restrictions on public
assembly in Palestinian refugee camps, where controlled demonstrations
have been allowed.
In June a group of as many as 160 students reportedly assembled
in Damascus to protest a new educational policy. They were dispersed
peacefully by security officers, but some allegedly attempted
to reassemble later in the day. There were unconfirmed reports
that some of the students were detained for several days and beaten
prior to their release.
The Government restricts freedom of association. Private associations
must be registered with the Government in order to be considered
legal. Some groups have not been able to register, presumably
because the Government views them as political, even though the
groups presented themselves as cultural or professional associations.
Unregistered groups may not hold meetings, and the authorities
do not allow the establishment of independent political parties.
The Government usually grants registration to groups not engaged
in political or other activities deemed sensitive.
In 1980 the Government dissolved, and then reconstituted under
its control, the executive boards of professional associations
after some members staged a national strike and advocated an end
to the state of emergency. The associations have not been independent
since that time and are generally led by members of the Ba'th
party, although non-party members may serve on their executive
boards.
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the Government
generally respects this right in practice. The only advantage
given to a particular religion by the Constitution is that which
requires the President to be a Muslim. All religions and sects
must register with the Government, which monitors fundraising
and requires permits for all meetings by religious groups, except
for worship. Although no law prohibits non-Muslims from proselytizing,
the Government discourages such activity. The few remaining Jews
are generally barred from government employment and do not have
military service obligations. Jews are the only minority group
whose passports and identity cards note their religion. There
is mandatory religious instruction in schools, with government-approved
teachers and curricula. Religion courses are divided into separate
classes for Muslim and Christian students. Jews have a separate
primary school for Jews only, which includes religious instruction
(see Section 5).
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel,
Emigration, and Repatriation
The Government restricts travel near the Golan Heights and Iraq.
Travel to Israel is illegal. Citizens must have government permission
to travel abroad. Some have been denied such permission on political
grounds, although government officials deny that this practice
occurs. The authorities may prosecute any person found attempting
to emigrate or travel abroad without official permission, or who
is suspected of having visited Israel. There is no evidence that
the Government persecuted upon their return those who applied
for, but were denied, asylum abroad. Women over the age of 18
have the legal right to travel without the permission of male
relatives. In practice, however, a husband may file a request
with the Ministry of Interior to prohibit his wife's departure
from Syria, and a father or brother may request that the Ministry
prohibit travel abroad by unmarried daughters or sisters, even
if they are over 18 years of age.
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) reported that
as of August there were 358,374 registered Palestinian refugees
in Syria. Palestinian refugees sometimes encounter difficulties
in obtaining travel documents and reentering Syria after travel
abroad. The Government restricts entry by Palestinians who are
not resident in Syria. The Government does not allow the Palestinian
residents of Gaza to visit Syria.
The Government cooperates on a case-by-case basis with the office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and
other humanitarian organizations in assisting refugees. The Government
provides first asylum but is selective about extending protection
to refugees; approximately 1,200 persons sought asylum through
the UNHCR during the first 8 months of 1997. Although the Government
denied any forced repatriation of those who may have had a valid
claim to refugee status, it apparently forcibly repatriated a
few Iraqi and Somali refugees. As of August 31, there were an
estimated 37,000 non-Palestinian refugees in Syria, of whom about
2,424 were receiving assistance from the UNHCR, including 1,500
refugees of Iraqi origin at the El Hol camp and other locations.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens
to Change Their Government
Although citizens ostensibly vote for the President and Members
of Parliament, they do not have the right to change their government.
The President has run for election unopposed since taking power
in 1970. Political opposition to his rule is not tolerated.
The President and his senior aides, particularly those in the
military and security services, ultimately make all basic decisions
on political and economic life, with no element of public accountability.
Moreover, the Constitution mandates that the Ba'th Party is the
ruling party and is ensured a majority in all government and popular
associations, such as workers' and women's groups. Six smaller
political parties are also permitted and, along with the Ba'th
Party, make up the National Progressive Front (NPF), a grouping
of parties that represents the sole framework of legal political
participation for citizens. While created ostensibly to give
the appearance of a multiparty system, the NPF is dominated by
the Ba'th Party and does not change the essentially one-party
character of the political system. Non-Ba'th Party members of
the NPF exist as political parties largely in name only and hew
closely to Ba'th Party and government policies.
The Ba'th Party dominates the Parliament, which is known as the
People's Council. Although parliamentarians may criticize policies
and modify draft laws, the executive branch retains ultimate control
over the legislative process. Since 1990 the Government has allowed
independent non-NPF candidates to run for a limited number of
seats in the 250-member People's Council. The current number
of independent deputies is 80, ensuring a permanent absolute majority
for the Ba'th Party-dominated NPF.
Persons who have been convicted by the State Security Court may
be deprived of their political rights after they are released
from prison. Such restrictions include a prohibition against
engaging in political activity, the denial of a passport, and
a bar on accepting a government job and some other forms of employment.
The duration of such restrictions may last from 10 years to the
remainder of the former prisoner's life. The Government contends
that this practice is mandated by the Penal Code and has been
in effect since 1949.
Women and minorities, with the exception of the Jewish population
and stateless Kurds (see Section 5), participate in the political
system without restriction. Nonetheless, women are underrepresented
in government. There are two female cabinet ministers and 24
female Members of Parliament.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International
and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human
Rights
The Government does not allow the existence of local human rights
groups. One or two human rights groups once operated legally
but were subsequently banned by the Government.
Amnesty international (AI) visited Syria for 2 weeks in March,
the second major visit by an international human rights organization
(after Human Rights Watch in 1995). AI delegates met with the
Ministers of Foreign Affairs, Interior, Justice, Information,
and Culture; judges from the SSSC as well as the Court's prosecutor
and several lawyers; and the secretaries general of the Arab Writers
Union and Arab Inter-Parliamentary Union. These were the first
such meetings with an international human rights organization.
AI credited Syria with an overall improvement in human rights
over the last few years but called on the Government to review
the cases of more than 500 political prisoners and to release
those detained solely on the basis of their political beliefs.
As a matter of policy, the Government in its exchanges with international
groups denies that it commits human rights abuses. It has not
permitted representatives of international organizations to visit
prisons. The Government says that it now responds in writing
to all inquiries from nongovernmental organizations (NGO's) regarding
human rights issues, including the cases of individual detainees
and prisoners, through an interagency governmental committee established
expressly for that purpose. Human Rights Watch reported in 1997
that the Government had not responded to its request to account
publicly for the possibly thousands of citizens who were executed
at Tadmur prison in the 1980's. The Government usually responds
to queries from human rights organizations and foreign embassies
on specific cases by saying that the prisoner in question has
violated national security laws.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion,
Disability, Language, or Social Status
The Constitution provides for equal rights and equal opportunity
for all citizens. In practice, membership in the Ba'th Party
or close familial relations with a prominent party member or government
official can be important for economic, social, or educational
advancement. Party or government connections can pave the way
for entrance into better elementary and secondary schools, access
to lucrative employment, and greater power within the Government,
the military, and the security services. Certain prominent positions,
such as that of provincial governor, are reserved solely for Ba'th
Party members. Apart from some discrimination against Kurds,
there are no apparent patterns of systematic government discrimination
based on race, sex, religion, disability, language, or social
status. However, there are varying degrees of societal discrimination
in each of these areas.
Women
Violence against women occurs, but there are no reliable statistics
for domestic violence or sexual assault. This is because the
vast majority of cases go unreported, and victims generally are
reluctant to seek assistance from non-family members. There are
no laws against spousal rape. One preliminary academic study
suggested that domestic violence is the largest single reason
for divorces, and that such abuse is more prevalent among the
less-educated. It appears to occur more in rural than in urban
areas. Battered women have the legal right to seek redress in
court, but few do so because of the social stigma attached to
such action. The Syrian Women's Federation offers services to
battered wives to remedy individual family problems. The Syrian
Family Planning Association also seeks to deal with this problem.
Some private groups, including the Family Planning Association,
have organized seminars on violence against women, which were
reported by the government press. There are no specifically designated
shelters or safehavens for battered women seeking to flee their
husbands. The Syrian Women's Union, in conjunction with the Family
Planning Association and Syrian Lawyer's Association, organized
a conference in March that brought together female writers, professors,
lawyers, and former diplomats to discuss strategies for advancing
women's rights in Syria.
The Constitution provides for equality between men and women and
equal pay for equal work. Moreover, the Government has sought
to overcome traditional discriminatory attitudes toward women,
and encourages women's education. However, the Parliament has
not yet changed personal status retirement and social security
laws that discriminate against women. In addition, some secular
laws discriminate against women. For example, under criminal
law punishment for adultery and dignity crimes is twice that for
the same crime committed by a man.
Personal status law on divorce is based on Shari'a or Islamic
law, and discriminates against women. For example, husbands may
claim adultery as grounds for divorce, but wives face more difficulty
in presenting the same argument. In addition, if a woman requests
a divorce from her husband, she may not be entitled to child support
in some instances, even if she keeps the children, or even obtaining
a divorce. In addition, under the law, a woman loses the right
to custody of boys at the age of 9 years and girls at the age
of 12 years.
Inheritance for Muslims and Christians is based on Shari'a. Accordingly,
women are usually granted half the inheritance share of male heirs.
On the other hand, Shari'a mandates that male heirs provide financial
support to the female relatives who inherit less. For example,
a brother who inherits an unmarried sister's share from their
parents' estate is obligated to provide for the sister's well-being.
If the brother fails to do so, she has the right to sue, but
such cases are not common.
Shari'a law on marriage and divorce applies to Muslims only.
Christians are subject to church canon law on marriage and divorce,
making divorces difficult to obtain in many cases.
Polygyny is legal but is practiced only by a small minority of
Muslim men. Under Shari'a, a husband has the right to take up
to four wives without asking the consent of his other wife or
wives, but he is supposed to treat them equally and be able to
support all of them. The first wife and later wives have the
right to seek a divorce if the husband takes an additional wife.
A father may request that the Government prohibit travel abroad
by his unmarried daughter, and a husband can request that his
wife's travel abroad be prohibited (see Section 2.d.).
Women participate actively in public life and are represented
in most professions, as well as the military. Women are not impeded
from owning or managing land or other real property. Women constitute
6 percent of judges, 10 percent of lawyers, 57 percent of teachers
below university level, and 20 percent of university professors.
Children
There is no legal discrimination between boys and girls in school
or in health care. Education is compulsory for all children,
male or female, between the ages of 6 and 12. According to the
Syrian Women's Union, about 46 percent of the total number of
students through the secondary level are female.
Nevertheless, societal pressure for early marriage and childbearing
interfere with girls' educational progress, particularly in rural
areas, where dropout rates for female students remain high.
The law stresses the need to protect children, and the Government
has organized seminars on the subject of child welfare. Although
there are cases of child abuse, there is no societal pattern of
abuse against children. The law provides for severe penalties
for those found guilty of the most serious abuses against children.
People With Disabilities
The law prohibits discrimination against the disabled and seeks
to integrate them into the public sector work force. However,
implementation is spotty. Regulations reserving 2 percent of
government and public sector jobs for the disabled are not rigorously
implemented. The disabled do not have recourse to the courts
regarding discrimination. There are no laws mandating access
to public buildings for the disabled.
Religious Minorities
Although there is a significant amount of religious tolerance,
religion or ethnic affiliation can be a contributing factor in
determining career opportunities. For example, members of the
President's Alawi sect hold a predominant position in the security
services and military, well out of proportion to their percentage
of the population. Nevertheless, government policy officially
disavows sectarianism.
There is little evidence of societal discrimination or violence
against religious minorities, including Jews. Government-run
schools offer separate religious instruction for Christians and
Muslims. Jews have a separate primary school which offers religious
instruction on Judaism, in addition to traditional subjects.
Although Arabic is the official language in public schools, the
Government allows the teaching of Armenian, Hebrew, and Chaldean
in some schools on the basis that these are "liturgical languages."
Technically, all schools are government-run and nonsectarian,
although some schools are run in practice by Christian and Jewish
minorities.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The Government generally permits national and ethnic minorities
to conduct traditional, religious, and cultural activities. However,
the Government's attitude toward the Kurdish minority is a significant
exception to this policy. Although the Government contends that
there is no discrimination against the Kurdish population, it
has placed limits on the use and teaching of the Kurdish language,
Kurdish cultural expression, and, at times, the celebration of
Kurdish festivals. Some members of the Kurdish community have
been tried by the Supreme State Security Court for expressing
support for greater Kurdish autonomy or independence. Although
the Asad Government stopped the practice of stripping Kurds in
Syria of their Syrian nationality (some 120,000 lost Syrian nationality
under this program in the 1960's), it never restored this nationality.
As a result, those who had their nationality taken away, and
their children, have been unable to obtain Syrian nationality
and passports, or even identification cards and birth certificates.
Without Syrian nationality, these stateless Kurds, who according
to UNHCR estimates number about 200,000 people, are unable to
own land, cannot be employed by the Government, and have no right
to vote. They encounter difficulties in enrolling their children
in school. Stateless Kurdish men may not legally marry Syrian
citizens.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
Although the Constitution provides for this right, workers are
not free to establish unions independent of the Government. All
unions must belong to the General Federation of Trade Unions (GFTU),
which is dominated by the Ba'th Party and is actually a part of
the State's bureaucratic structure. The GFTU is an information
channel between political decisionmakers and workers. The GFTU
transmits instructions downward to the unions and workers but
also conveys information to decisionmakers about worker conditions
and needs. The GFTU provides the Government with opinions on
legislation, organizes workers, and formulates rules for various
member unions. The GFTU president is a senior member of the Ba'th
party. He and his deputy may attend cabinet meetings on economic
affairs. The GFTU controls nearly all aspects of union activity.
The law does not prohibit strikes, except in the agricultural
sector. Nevertheless, workers are inhibited from striking because
of previous government crackdowns on strikers. In 1980 the security
forces arrested many union and professional association officials
who planned a national strike. Some of those remain in detention
or have been tried by the State Security Court (see Section 2.b.).
The GFTU is affiliated with the International Confederation of
Arab Trade Unions.
In 1992 Syria's eligibility for tariff preferences under the U.S.
Generalized System of Preferences was suspended because the Government
failed to take steps to afford internationally recognized worker
rights to Syrian workers.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
This right does not exist in any meaningful sense. Government
representatives are part of the bargaining process in the public
sector. In state-owned companies, union representatives negotiate
hours, wages, and conditions of employment with representatives
of the employers and the supervising ministry. Workers serve
on the boards of directors of public enterprises.
The law provides for collective bargaining in the private sector,
but any such agreement between labor and management must be ratified
by the Minister of Labor and Social Affairs, who has effective
veto power. The Committee of Experts of the International Labor
Organization (ILO) has long noted the Government's refusal to
abolish the Minister's power over collective contracts.
Unions have the right to litigate disputes over work contracts
and other workers' interests with employers and may ask for binding
arbitration. In practice, labor and management representatives
settle most disputes without resort to legal remedies or arbitration.
Management has the right to request arbitration, but this is
seldom exercised. Arbitration usually occurs when a worker initiates
a dispute over wages or severance pay.
Since the unions are part of the Government's bureaucratic structure,
they are protected by law from antiunion discrimination. There
were no reports of antiunion discrimination.
There are no unions in Syria's seven free trade zones. Firms
in the zones are exempt from the laws and regulations governing
hiring and firing, although they must observe some provisions
on health, safety, hours, and sick and annual leave.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
There is no law prohibiting forced or compulsory labor. There
were no reports of forced or compulsory labor involving children
or foreign or domestic workers. Forced labor has been imposed
as a punishment for some convicts.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for
Employment
The Government does not prohibit forced and bonded labor by children,
but there were no reports of such practices (see Section 6.c.).
The minimum age for employment is 15 in the public sector and
12 in the private sector. In all cases, parental permission is
required for children under the age of 16. The law prohibits
children from working at night. However, all these laws apply
only to children working for a salary. Those working in family
businesses who are not technically paid a salary--a common phenomenon--do
not fall under the law. The Government claims that the expansion
of the private sector has led to more young children working.
The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs is responsible for enforcing
child labor laws but does not have enough inspectors to ensure
compliance with the laws.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The Minister of Labor and Social Affairs is responsible for enforcing
minimum wage levels in the public and private sectors. The minimum
wage is $45 (2,014 Syrian pounds) per month in the public sector
and $43 (1,940 Syrian pounds) per month in the private sector.
A committee of labor, management, and government representatives
submits recommended changes in the minimum wage to the Minister.
The minimum wage does not provide a decent standard of living
for a worker and family. As a result, many workers take additional
jobs or are supported by their extended families.
The statutory workweek is 6 days of 6 hours each, but in some
cases a 9-hour workday is permitted. The laws mandate one 24-hour
rest day per week. Rules and regulations severely limit the ability
of an employer to dismiss employees without cause. Even if a
person is absent from work without notice for a long period, the
employer must follow a lengthy procedure of trying to find the
person and notify him, including through newspaper notices, before
he is able to take any action against the employee. Dismissed
employees have the right to appeal before a committee of representatives
from the union, management, the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs,
and the appropriate municipality. Such committees usually find
in favor of the employee. The law does not protect temporary
workers who are not subject to regulations on minimum wages.
Small private firms and businesses employ such workers to avoid
the costs associated with hiring permanent employees.
The law mandates safety in all sectors, and managers are expected
to implement them fully. In practice, there is little enforcement
without worker complaints, which occur infrequently despite government
efforts to post notices on safety rights and regulations. Large
companies, such as oil field contractors, also employ safety engineers.
The ILO has noted that a provision in the Labor Code allowing
employers to keep workers at the workplace for as many as 11 hours
a day might lead to abuse. However, there have been no reports
of such abuses. Officials from the Ministries of Health and Labor
inspect work sites for compliance with health and safety standards.
Such inspections appear to be haphazard, apart from those conducted
in hotels and other facilities that cater to foreigners. Rural
enforcement of labor laws is also more lax than that in urban
areas, where inspectors are concentrated. Workers may lodge complaints
about health and safety conditions with special committees established
to adjudicate such cases. Workers have the right to remove themselves
from hazardous conditions without risking loss of employment.
Source: U.S. State Department Report on Human Rights Practices
for 1997.
|