“Assad has to go, his time is over,” German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said on Tuesday (04.09.2012) at a meeting of the Friends of Syria in Berlin. “We have to be prepared for that day.” Representatives from 60 countries met in Berlin’s Foreign Ministry to discuss how Syria’s economy could get back on its feet again once the regime has fallen. Among the participants were also members of the Syrian opposition and economic experts.
“The Syrian people have resources like oil, but on our own we won’t manage to rebuild our country,” said Abdelbaset Sieda, president of the opposition Syrian National Council. He believes Syria needs a sort of Marshall Pan, i.e., help from abroad for the transitional period after Assad.
“Without a solid economy, we’ll be leaving the door wide open for extremism,” Sieda said.
Syrian businessman Ayman Tabaa has only recently left his home country. Things that he once took for granted are now a privilege – even something like breakfast.
“I don’t have to be afraid anymore that after getting up in the morning in Aleppo, the Syrian air force will bombard me,” Tabaa said.
Thinking long term
Foreign Minister Westerwelle didn’t rule out that Berlin would accept Syrian refugees to Germany, but stressed that the priority was to help within Syria. But the lack of safe areas in the country makes this virtually impossible at the moment. Food, water and medicine will therefore be the most urgent supplies that will need to be shipped to Syria once the fighting is over.
But the Berlin meeting also discussed more long-term plans for the country. Westerwelle said Syria needed “fair economic opportunities after years of corruption.”
“Assad has to go, his time is over,” Westerwelle said. “We have to be prepared for that day.”