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Samir Nashar
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Samir Nashar is a Syrian politician.[1][2] Nashar co-founded small opposition groups in 2005[3][4] and was a member of the Syrian National Council in the early 2010s.[2][5] He was detained for two days in 2006.[1][4]
Youth and education
Nashar was born in 1945 or 1946 (age 79–80).[4] He graduated in commerce at the University of Aleppo in 1969.[6]
Political activities
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During his university studies in the late 1960s, Nashar joined the Arab Socialist Movement. He left the party after one of its splits into pro and anti Hafez al-Assad factions.[6]
After a speech by Bashar al-Assad in 2000 in favour of democracy, Nashar started coordinating political discussions. He signed the Damascus Declaration in 2005.[6] In 20005, Nashar was a co-founder of a small group called the Alliance of Free Nationalists.[3] He was the spokesman for the Syrian Free National Party, another small opposition group created in 2005.[4] He was also a member of the Committee for Reviving the Civil Society.[citation needed][when?] He was described by Newsweek in 2005 as "a dream democrat ... liberal, secular, rich–and brazenly outspoken".[3] In 2007, Nashar tried to form a movement of elites in Aleppo, called the Free Patriotic Movement. The group became inactive as a result of pressure from the security forces.[6]
Nashar was a member of the Syrian National Council during the early 2010s.[2][5]
In November 2025, during the Syrian transitional government that followed the fall of the Assad regime, Nashar argued that federalization was the most realistic model for reorganising Syrian governing structures.[7]
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Arrests
In 2003, during the Presidency of Bashar al-Assad, Nashar was arrested along with other political activists. He was later released.[6] On 25 March 2006, Nashar was arrested by Syrian authorities in Aleppo by agents of the military secret service after he returned from a meeting of exiled opposition figures in Washington, D.C.[1] On 26 March the Syrian Human Rights Organisation called for his immediate release.[4] He was released from custody on 27 March.[1]
References
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