by MEMRI
[Editor: Who on earth would want to live in Syria now? It's not exactly paradise! Are these people being paid by Iran to live there?]Anti-Syrian Regime Websites: Regime Granting Citizenship To Millions Of Iranians, Hizbullah Operatives To Change Country's Demography From Sunni To Shi'ite Majority, Conceal The Fighters' Presence In Syria
Throughout
the Syria war, websites opposed to the Assad regime have repeatedly
claimed that this regime and its ally Iran were using the war to change
Syria's demography by expelling Sunni populations, deemed a potential
threat to the regime, and bringing in Shi'ites, who are more likely to
support it. According to these reports, the Assad regime and Iran use a
variety of methods – including threats, siege and starving – to compel
Sunnis to emigrate and then seize their property and replace them with
elements loyal to the regime, including non-Syrians.[1]
President Assad outlined this policy in a July 2015 speech, saying,
"The homeland does not belong to those who live there, nor to those who
hold a passport or are citizens. The homeland belongs to those who
protect and guard it."[2]
In
the recent months, several websites reported that the regime was
naturalizing thousands and even millions of Shi'ites, members of Iranian
and Iran-backed militias that are fighting alongside the Syrian army.
On November 17, 2018, for example, the Saudi website elaph.com and the
Syrian opposition website nedaa-sy.com posted what they claimed was a
letter from the head of Syria's General Intelligence to Syria's interior
minister. The letter contained a list, provided by the "special office"
in the Syrian President's Office, of Iranians to be granted Syrian
citizenship. According to Elaph, this is only one of thousands of
documents in its possession indicating "systematic action by the regime
to settle Iranians throughout Syria."
This
report joins many others published in the past claiming that the Syrian
regime has granted citizenship to some two million Iranians, including
operatives of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).Other
reports state that the regime is also granting citizenship to Hizbullah
operatives deployed in southern Syria, along the border with Israel.
This may be an attempt to conceal the presence of Hizbullah in the
region, which contravenes the understandings reached between Israel and
Russia.
This document reviews the recent reports about the granting of Syrian citizenship to Iranians and Shi'ite militia members.
President's Office Presents Interior Minister With List Of Iranians To Be Naturalized
As stated, on November 17 the elaph.com
website posted a document signed by the head of Syria's General
Intelligence and addressed to the Syrian interior minister. Attached to
the document was a letter from the Syrian President's Office listing
several Iranian nationals and instructing the minister to add them to
Syria's civil registers in four governorates – Damascus, Rif Dimashq,
Aleppo or Deir Al-Zor – and inform the General Intelligence of the
identity numbers issued to them, listed by governorate. The document,
numbered 59954/s.r.sh, reads: "Attached please find a letter, no. 5170,
from the Presidency of the Republic – Special Office, instructing to add
the names below to the civil register and inform us of their identity
numbers and details, listed by governorate – Damascus, Rif Dimashq,
Aleppo and Deir Al-Zor."
Name
|
Surname
|
Name of father
|
Name and surname of mother
|
Place and date of birth
|
Religion and sect
|
Gender
|
Marital status
|
Date of registration
|
Comments
|
Rahman
|
Rasoul
|
Maytham
|
Jumana
|
Tehran
January 21, 1960
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
||
Reza
|
Shikhan
|
Moussa
|
Azita
|
Persepolis February 27, 1980
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
||
Ali
|
Sharir
|
Javad
|
Zahra
|
Qom
January 30, 1987
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
||
Kabir
|
Zada
|
Ali
|
Salam
|
Isfahan
December 9, 1979
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
||
Mahmoud
|
Rajavi
|
Javad
|
Raqia
|
Kish
April 3, 1988
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Unmarried
|
||
Karrar
|
Najadi
|
Ahmadi
|
Afsoun
|
Tabriz
January 25, 1990
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Unmarried
|
||
Sheikho
|
Sabbar
|
Ali
|
Suzan
|
Baveh
September 1, 1990
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Unmarried
|
||
Rafiq
|
Dara
|
Hossein
|
Batoul
|
Tabriz
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
||
Jaafar
|
Sheikhan
|
Haider
|
Sakina
|
Tehran
February 6, 1980
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
||
Mojtaba
|
Sarour
|
Sadeq
|
Khadija
|
Mashhad
January 7, 1990
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
||
Ali
|
Sader
|
Zada
|
Maryam
|
Shiraz
February 9, 1991
|
Islam
|
Male
|
Married
|
The document as it appeared on the site
The website noted: "These official documents indicate that the Syrian regime is systematically settling Iranians in different parts of Syria in order to change the demography [of these areas] by granting citizenship to Shi'ite Iranians and settling them in Sunni areas whose original inhabitants have been expelled... The document presented [here] is not the only one; hundreds of thousands [of Shi'ite] have been granted [Syrian] citizenship and settled in various areas, most of them members and operatives in the Iranian IRGC... These Iranians have begun to receive Syrian citizenship, as preparation for bringing in their families and settling in the areas to which they have been assigned."[3]
The document was also posted the same day
on the Syrian opposition website nedaa-sy.com, which stated that the
Iranians listed in the document were IRGC commanders stationed in Syria.[4]
As stated, this report joins others from
the recent months claiming that the Syrian regime is granting citizen
status to Iranians and other members of the Iran-backed Shi'ite militias
that are fighting alongside the Syrian forces. On April 2, 2018, the
Syrian opposition website zamanalwsl.net reported that "the Passports
and Immigration Department in Damascus recently issued 200,000 passports
to Iranians" on orders of the Syrian security apparatuses, officers at
the presidential palace and associates of the president's brother, Maher
Al-Assad. The report stated further that this was part of naturalizing
Iranians as well as Afghan and Pakistani Shi'ite militiamen fighting in
Syria, and that the move was aimed at granting the foreign militias
legal status that would enable to maximize their efficacy in the future.[5]
On May 30, 2018, the Lebanese daily Al-Nahar
published an article by journalist Ahmad 'Ayyash which stated, citing
diplomatic sources, that the Syrian president "has issued [Syrian]
identity cards to some two million Iranians and operatives of militias
belonging to the Iranian IRGC Qods Force, and to their families, as well
to Hizbullah [operatives]. The [regime] does not just issue them
Syrian identity cards, but helps them to settle in parts of Damascus's
Ghouta and in the rural areas of Damascus, Hama, Homs and Aleppo that
have been emptied of their original inhabitants." According to the
article, this is part of the regime's compliance with the interests of
Iran and the militias subordinate to it. It added that "many members of
the Iranian regime have obtained Syrian identity cards in order to evade
the American sanctions."[6]
Another
report about the naturalization of Hizbullah members appeared October
14, 2018 in the Syrian opposition website smartnews-agency.com. This
report claimed that Hizbullah operatives in Dara Governorate, in
southern Syria near the Israeli border, were being issued Syrian
identity cards. According to the website, these operatives arrive at the
civil registry offices in Dara and demand to be issued identity cards,
and if the local registrar refuses, a regime officer arrives and orders
him to comply.[7]
In
this context it should be noted that the presence of Hizbullah in this
area contravenes the understandings reached between Israel and Russia
this year, according to which the Iranian and Shi'ite forces must
withdraw from southern Syria. The issuance of identity cards to these
fighters may be aimed at enabling them to stay there, ostensibly without
violating the understandings.
[1] On the regime's and Iran's efforts to change Syria's demography, see MEMRI Inquiry & Analysis No. 1280, Together
With Its Allies, The Syrian Regime Is Forcing Demographic Change In
Areas Of The Country - For Self-Protection And Self-Preservation, November 15, 2016; Special Dispatch No. 7454, Lebanese Journalist: Hizbullah Settling In Syria As Part Of Iranian Plan To Change Its Demography, May 3, 2018.
[2] Al-Watan (Syria), July 26, 2015.
[3] Elaph.com, November 17, 2018.
[4] Nedaa-sy.com, November 17, 2018.
[5] Zamanalwsl.net, April 2, 2018.
[6] Al-Nahar (Lebanon), May 30, 2018.
[7] Smartnews-agency.com, October 14, 2018.
MEMRI
Source: https://www.memri.org/reports/syrian-regime-granting-citizenship-to-iranians-hizbullah-operatives
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