The travel ban is not total, that is, I can still travel if I want, provided that I get a security clearance before I leave and report back upon my return. Continue reading “Another day in Damascus!”
The travel ban is not total, that is, I can still travel if I want, provided that I get a security clearance before I leave and report back upon my return. Continue reading “Another day in Damascus!”
Special to The Daily Star
The Syrian media have not shown any serious signs of change since the Baath Party assumed power in a 1963 coup. Indeed, Syria’s media sector is one of the most tightly controlled in the Arab world. Most publications are state-owned, and rarely express nonconformist opinions. The coming to power of young President Bashar Assad in 2000 raised hopes that the regime would loosen the reigns significantly. But after a brief period of decompression in 2001 known as the “Damascus spring,” Assad enacted a publications law that consolidated government control; he allowed the licensing of just one “independent” political magazine, owned by the son of the minister of defense; and he cracked down hard on dissent. Continue reading “Syrian media reform: a glass half full or half empty?”