''In a Revolution You Don't Have Much Time''

Walid al-Bunni is a prominent Syrian human rights activist and opponent of the Assad regime. In the light of the civil war going on in his homeland he calls for foreign intervention – and says the Syrian opposition must now reposition itself. Karim El-Gawhary met him in Cairo

By Karim El-Gawhary

He appears to be rather stressed. He returned from consultations in Moscow yesterday. The Spanish ambassador is expecting him in an hour's time, and he's flying to Istanbul tomorrow.

When Al-Bunni discusses the Syrian opposition, then he knows exactly what he is talking about. Few Syrians have such an in-depth knowledge of the opposition movement's work. He has spent a total of eight years behind bars in Syria. The first time was during the Damascene Spring, when Syrian intellectuals joined forces in an atmosphere of hope when the young Bashar Al-Assad came to power in 2000, and there was talk of a new beginning in the political salons. But that spring was short-lived, and Al-Bunni was imprisoned for eight years.

Courageous commitment to democratic reforms

"Syria has been a political desert for 50 years. As a result, there are no real politicians there. Politics was something that was forbidden. And today, we as the opposition can't work wonders at the drop of a hat," says the liberal Syrian dissident Walid Al-Bunni, who now lives in Cairo

​​The ear, nose and throat specialist also bravely signed the "Damascene Declaration", in which intellectuals criticised the political reforms ushered in by Bashar Al-Assad, and as soon as he was freed he was again locked up for more than two years.

He left the country a few months ago following his last three-month period of incarceration. The Syrian National Council – an opposition alliance of various groups – was formed while he was in jail, to coordinate the rebellion against Assad. Al-Bunni was initially involved in the council, but recently left it along with other prominent opponents of the regime such as Kamal Al-Labwani and Catherine Altalli.

"The council is clearly dominated by Islamists and members of the Muslim Brotherhood. This does not reflect true power relations in Syria. This is simply because of how the council was established. That must change," says Al-Bunni, explaining his decision. All committees dealing with the issue of money are led by Syrian Muslim Brothers, he says.

He also claims that the National Council is far too bureaucratic in its decision-making. "Everything has to be decided as a consensus, and that's problematic. It just takes too long for everyone to agree on a decision. The process loses valuable time that you simply don't have in a revolution," says Al-Bunni. This is one of the reasons why the Free Syrian Army is operating outside of all political control.

The Syrian opposition must realign itself

UN mandated military intervention inevitable? Following the failure of international envoy Kofi Annan's peace plan, many nations are now calling for military intervention in Syria

​​His proposal, therefore, is to take all Syrian opposition groups on board at the National Council and democratise it. "The National Council must completely realign itself. It must become an umbrella organisation for the entire Syrian opposition," is his first demand. "Then it must elect a leadership. This can then take decisions more quickly and would genuinely represent all members of the opposition," he continues. An alternative to this would be to leave the National Council as it is and establish another democratic umbrella organisation, he believes.

Al-Bunni occupies a clear position with regard to a foreign intervention. He makes a comparison. When you child is ill, he says, the first thing you do is go to the chemist and you buy a cheap remedy. Then you go to the doctor and the bill increases. If you child isn't cured by the doctors and slowly begins to die, then you sell your house and take your child to the most expensive hospital. Exactly the same applies to Syria.

The price of an intervention will be high, but in his view such a move is now barely avoidable. "I think Bashar Al-Assad is leaving neither us Syrians, nor the international community any other option. All that remains is Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, and that means a foreign military intervention," he explains and adds: "This is not something we would wish for, if there was another solution."

The threat of the "Somalisation" of Syria

Images of total destruction: Assad's troops continue to bombard rebel positions in the opposition stronghold of Homs. The UN says at least 10,000 people have been killed by Assad's security forces since the start of the 15-month conflict

​​Without outside intervention, says Al-Bunni, the regime will drag the entire nation down with it into full-scale civil war. "If things carry on as they are in Syria, then the country is not under threat from an Iraqi-style scenario, but a Somali-style one," he predicts, due to a complete absence of any regulating force, not even US occupying troops as in the case of Iraq. But he does not believe that the international community and regional powers will allow such a strategically significant nation to sink to such a level.

The situation in Syria, a neighbour of Israel with links to Iran, "is simply much too complicated to allow the West to launch a military intervention within a few weeks, as in the case of Libya," says the human rights activist, and continues: "But the nation is also far too important to be left to its own devices in the final stages of the conflict."

Karim El-Gawhary

© Qantara.de 2012

Translated from the German by Nina Coon

Editors: Arian Fariborz, Lewis Gropp / Qantara.de