
[Bashar al-Assad (L) speaking with Syrian Grand Mufti Ahmed Hassun in a filr photo.]
Damascus: Syria’s President Bashar Al-Assad said US President Donald Trump’s ban on Syrians entering the United States targeted terrorists, not the Syrian people, appearing to defend the logic of the measure in an interview broadcast Thursday.
Trump last month issued an executive order, since suspended by a US district judge, that temporarily barred travellers from seven mostly Muslim countries including Syria, as well as imposing an indefinite ban on all Syrian refugees.
“It’s against the terrorists that would infiltrate some of the immigrants to the West. And that happened. It happened in Europe, mainly in Germany,” Al-Assad said in the interview with Europe 1 radio and TF1 television which was recorded on Tuesday in English.
“I think the aim of Trump is to prevent those people from coming.” It was “not against the Syrian people”, he added.
The Syrian dictator, who has been in power since he inherited power from his father Hafez Al-Assad in 2000, has overseen a period in Syrian history that has witnessed the deaths of half a million Syrians, the imprisonment and torture of millions more, and a mass refugee crisis that has blighted the Middle East and Europe.
People fleeing Syria and the Assad regime often cite the ongoing civil war as a reason, but also the fact that the Assad regime habitually imprisons, tortures and commits widespread and systematic extermination campaigns and the systematised rape of Syrian women.
There has yet to be a proven link between refugees fleeing such horrific cruelty and terrorism.
Trump said his order, which triggered protests at home and abroad and confusion at US and international airports, was intended to prevent militants from entering the United States. His administration is challenging the suspension ruling, which was upheld last week by appeal court judges.