Syrian dissident Riad Turk, who has been in comparison with Nelson Mandela for spending years in jail for his opposition to the federal government, died Monday in exile in France, his daughter stated.
“My father died peacefully and happy with what he has achieved, surrounded by his two daughters and his grandchildren,” Khuzama Turk informed AFP. He was 93.
France’s ambassador to Syria, Brigitte Curmi, wrote on X: “The Syrian Mandela, Riad Turk, simply left us after an entire lifetime of wrestle for a free and democratic Syria.
“Could his aspirations for a dignified life for Syrians proceed to encourage our work.”
Turk fled to France in 2018 after being covertly transported out of Syria by militants into neighbouring Turkey.
He had gone into hiding after being free of his final spell in jail in 2002 for declaring “the dictator is useless”, following the demise of former President Hafez al-Assad.
In complete, he had spent 17 years imprisoned, typically with out trial, on claims of assorted offences underneath Hafez al-Assad and later his son, Bashar, when he grew to become Syria’s President.
Turk was the longtime chief of the dissident Syrian Communist Celebration – Political Bureau, which was outlawed by Bashar al-Assad and later renamed the Syrian Democratic Folks’s Celebration.
He supported peaceable anti-government protests which broke out in Syria in 2011 and backed the Syrian Nationwide Council which introduced collectively opponents of Assad because the nation’s civil battle intensified.
“Our revolution is peaceable, in style, and rejects sectarianism, and the Syrian persons are one,” Turk declared in October 2011.
“There will probably be no compromise nor negotiations about our purpose of toppling this despotic regime.”
A number of Syrian opposition figures paid homage to Turk, whom creator Yassin Al-Haj Saleh described as “one essentially the most eminent fighters for democracy in Syria”.
Syria’s battle has left greater than half 1,000,000 useless and displaced tens of millions after spiralling right into a battle involving overseas armies, militias, and jihadists.