Assad says Syria facing major extremist offensive

AFP , Monday 23 Dec 2013

Assad
Syrian President Bashar Assad, center left, meets with Australian professor Tim Anderson, center right, and a delegation including academics, researchers, and activists in Damascus, Syria, Monday, Dec. 23, 2013 (Photo: AP)

President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, which has been ravaged by conflict for almost three years, said Monday his country is being confronted by a major offensive by Islamist extremists.

"The country is facing a takfiri ideology," Assad said, using a term for Sunni Muslim extremists.

"This is terrorism without limits, an international scourge that could strike anywhere and anytime," he said, quoted by the official SANA news agency.

Assad made the remarks while receiving what SANA said was a delegation of "academics, researchers and activists" from Australia who had came to express "solidarity" with his regime.

Leading the delegates was Tim Anderson, a Sydney academic opposed to foreign intervention in Syria, according to SANA.

The president also criticised Western leaders, who "behave with duplicity and act according to their selfish interests, without understanding the reality or nature" of the Syrian conflict.

His government accuses Gulf Arab states, chiefly fierce regime opponent Saudi Arabia, of backing jihadists in a plot to destroy Syria.

The United States, Britain and France are among several Western countries that have thrown their support behind moderate opposition factions seeking to oust the Assad regime.

Syria's armed uprising began as a series of peaceful democracy protests 33 months ago but escalated into a full-blown civil war after Assad's regime launched a brutal crackdown on dissent.

The conflict is estimated to have killed around 126,000 people and displaced millions more.

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