The first signs of a power struggle in
Syria emerged yesterday when the late president's disgraced
brother challenged the succession to power of his 34-year-old
nephew, Bashar al-Assad.
Rifaat al-Assad, who in 1983 attempted a coup d'etat ,
threatened to return from exile in France to Damascus "at the
appropriate time". He claims that his dismissal as
vice-president in 1998 was "an illegal act" and that he
- rather than Bashar - should have succeeded to power.
"What is happening in Syria is a real farce and an
unconstitutional piece of theatre which is a real violation of the
law and the constitution," Rifaat said through his spokesman
in Marbella, Spain.
The spokesman, al-Hareth al-Khair, added: "Rifaat Assad is
a leader of the Syrian people, [he] loves his people as his people
love him. He will go to his people and take up his
responsibilities to fulfil the will of the people.
"He represents legitimacy in Syria," Mr Khair said,
adding that Rifaat is therefore capable of removing the
restrictions against him "through the force of legitimacy,
the people and the army who are with him".
He added: "Dr Rifaat stresses peaceful action and
refraining from spilling blood and does not want Syria to drown in
blood. But he believes that legitimacy will prevail in a rightful
way."
The Syrian military, however, appears to have rallied around
Bashar.
The pan-Arab newspaper, al-Hayat, yesterday quoted a senior
official as saying orders had been issued to arrest Rifaat if he
tried to attend his brother's funeral. The army and the security
services were granted "full powers to carry out anything to
stop him from entering the country", the official said.
Security has been stepped up at Beirut airport and at Lebanese
seaports; security officials there said Syrian agents were on the
lookout for Rifaat in case he tried to sneak home through the
porous Lebanese border.
Commenting on the threat of arrest, Rifaat's spokesman said:
"This is natural to come from a leadership that has no
confidence in itself. We expect more."
After his sacking as vice-president, Rifaat, 63, took refuge in
France, where surveillance has been sharply stepped up, according
to French secret service sources.
Rifaat has been told formally that he will be expelled from the
country if he starts moves to return to Damascus and challenge
Bashar. "If he is told to leave the country, he will probably
seek refuge in London where his son, Soumar, runs the television
station, ANN, which is linked with studios in Paris," an
agent in the surveillance team said.
The decision by the French president, Jacques Chirac, to attend
Hafez's funeral as the only western head of state was seen by
diplomats here as proof that France was committed to Bashar's
succession as part of a long-running attempt to re-establish
French influence in the Middle East. |