Freitag, 23.11.2018 / 15:56 Uhr

Raed Fares ermordet: Gleichermaßen gegen Assad und Islamisten

Von
Thomas von der Osten-Sacken

Heute morgen wurde der syrische Aktivist Read Fares von maskierten Männern erschossen. Er gehörte zu den bekanntesten Persönlichkeiten aus der syrischen Opposition, war MItbegründer des Medienkomitees in Kafranbel und kämpfte geichermaßen gegen das Assad Regime und Islamisten.

Ein Nachruf:

Mr Fares grabbed the attention of the world’s media for his gipping, sometimes sarcastic protests and pro-democracy banners in the town of Kafranbel. They included English language banners which called for peaceful revolution in Syria, and often promptly responded to events taking place outside of Syria. One from 2013 expressed sympathies with those killed in the Boston bombings. “Boston Bombings represent a sorrowful scene of what happens every day in Syria. Do accept our condolence.”

“He was against Assad, Nusra, ISIS, he was against all terrorists, and for that they killed him.”

Fares also set up Radio Fresh, an opposition radio station critical of both the regime, and Islamist extremists.

In June, he wrote for The Washington post about how the radio station was training a new generation of Syrian journalists. “Radio Fresh is more than a radio station: We provide media training for more than 2,500 young men and women. We are helping them become the citizen-journalists that are so badly needed in Syria,” he wrote.

“We employ more than 600 people, giving them the opportunity to think critically and join the nonviolent movement. That means we are directing people to be citizens that have the skills to contribute to a democratic society.”

A war monitor and Syrian activists are reporting that masked gunmen in the country's rebel-held northwestern province have killed a prominent figure in Syria's anti-government movement who was also a sharp critic of Islamist militants. (Kafranbl News via AP)

An activist who organised pro-democracy protests in opposition-held Syria has been assassinated by an Islamist faction.

Raed Fares was shot by masked men in a car in Idlib alongside fellow activist Hammud Junayd late on Thursday.

Mr Fares grabbed the attention of the world’s media for his gipping, sometimes sarcastic protests and pro-democracy banners in the town of Kafranbel. They included English language banners which called for peaceful revolution in Syria, and often promptly responded to events taking place outside of Syria. One from 2013 expressed sympathies with those killed in the Boston bombings. “Boston Bombings represent a sorrowful scene of what happens every day in Syria. Do accept our condolence.”

Fares also set up Radio Fresh, an opposition radio station critical of both the regime, and Islamist extremists.

In June, he wrote for The Washington post about how the radio station was training a new generation of Syrian journalists. “Radio Fresh is more than a radio station: We provide media training for more than 2,500 young men and women. We are helping them become the citizen-journalists that are so badly needed in Syria,” he wrote.

“We employ more than 600 people, giving them the opportunity to think critically and join the nonviolent movement. That means we are directing people to be citizens that have the skills to contribute to a democratic society.”

Opposition activists blamed the formerly Al Qaeda linked group Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) for the attack, though they have yet to claim responsibility.

It was not the first attempt on Fares’ life, in 2014 he survived being shot in the chest by masked militants. He survived numerous other attempts on his life throughout the Syrian Civil War.

Picture of Fares’ body was circulating on social media early Friday, and the news of his assassination prompted an outpouring of grief online.

Fellow Syrian activist Asaad Hanna tweeted “Raed Fares, was a revolution by his own.

“He was against Assad, Nusra, ISIS, he was against all terrorists, and for that they killed him.”