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Hope for Syria?

Interview: Najima El Moussaoui / sacOctober 25, 2013

The president of the Syrian National Council George Sabra tells DW why peace talks with Bashar al-Assad in his opinion will only waste time, but that he still believes in a diplomatic solution.

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(130822) -- ISTANBUL, Aug. 22, 2013 () -- President of the Syrian National Council (SNC) George Sabra speaks during the news conference in Istanbul, Turkey, Aug. 21, 2013. Syria's main opposition group accused the government of "massacring" more than 1,300 people in chemical weapons attacks near Damascus Wednesday, as the UN Security Council called for "clarity" and expressed "strong concern" over the allegations. (/Lu Zhe)(zhf)
Image: Getty Images/Afp

DW: The Syrian National Coalition says it will only take part in the peace talks in Geneva (Nov. 23 - the ed.) if President Bashar al-Assad steps down. Do you agree?

George Sabra: Yes that is right. As long as Bashar al-Assad is still in power, nobody can believe that any sort of new era can open in Syria. The Secretary-General of the United Nations told the world that Assad committed crimes against humanity. So how can anybody imagine that he can be a president anymore?

Do you think Assad is honestly willing to accept peace or is he just under pressure to act?

Nobody can believe that he wants peace. Imagine the situation inside Syria right now. People in Damascus province, in Daraa they're dying of hunger. Assad's regime is using chemical weapons in front of the world and killing thousands of people. Do you think this situation implies that Assad is really serious in finding a peaceful solution?

This week the Syrian National Council will decide if it will participate in the Geneva peace conference. What is your position?

I am the president of the Syrian National Council and we had decided not to go to Geneva in this environment. We want to see something new. But we are also part of the Syrian National Coalition (the main Western-backed opposition umbrella group - ed.), which will have a meeting with the UN General Assembly November 1-2 and then the coalition will make the final decision on whether we attend Geneva or not.

You say that the environment has to change, but what exactly do you mean?

First of all, the killing of people inside Syria has to stop. Imagine - for two years now, people are being killed not just everyday, only but every hour and second. The Hezbollah militia should withdraw from Syria. We have to have a guarantee and a resolution by the Security Council that Assad can no longer be a part of Syria's future, especially during that transitional period.

Do you still believe in a diplomatic solution?

We always have to hope for a political solution, and in the end we will reach a political solution. But we are asking our friends and the world to help Syria to defend itself. We have to convince Assad that a war is not the solution of the problem in Syria. The only way is to support the Free Syrian Army and the Syrian people to defend themselves.

But this is not a diplomatic way; this would be a military way.

Yes I know. But unfortunately we have to use force sometimes to reach a political solution.

In an interview earlier this week with Lebanon's Al-Mayadeen TV, Assad said that the opposition will not be able to lead the Syrian people because most of them live in exile. What do you think about this stance?

It's a bit wrong. Imagine a man like me. I have spent 40 years of my life in opposition to Bashar al-Assad and his father. Since 1970, I went to prison several times. I only left my country in 2012. So how can anybody talk to me about exiled opposition?

Do you think there is a chance that the Syrian National Coalition will sit together with Assad at the round table and try to find a diplomatic solution? Do you believe this is even possible or is it only a vision of the West?

I think we risk losing time and giving Assad another chance to kill more and to believe he can win the game against the Syrian people by force. As long as Bashar al-Assad is still in power this will cause problems not only for Syrians inside Syria but all across the Middle East. As he gradually tries to transfer the problems to other countries like Lebanon, Turkey or Iraq, Assad and his regime become dangerous for peace in the Middle East.

George Sabra was elected president of the Syrian National Council in November 2012. It is the main opposition group in the country. The 66-year-old has been politically active in the Syrian opposition movement since the 1970s.