Damascus governorate has banned the serving of alcohol across the city and restricted takeaway sales to licensed shops in just three Christian-majority neighbourhoods. Officials have presented the decision as a matter of “public decency.”
That justification is misleading and points to a more troubling trend. Any genuine concern about misconduct could be addressed through ordinary law enforcement, not a sweeping citywide restriction. More broadly, the move fits a growing pattern in which officials invoke public decency to prohibit behaviour they simply disapprove of, using administrative power to enforce moral preferences.
Since the transition began, officials have sought to reassure Syrians and outside observers that they aim for a pluralist order—not one designed solely to impose their ideological views. Yet decisions like this cut against that narrative. The character of any new political order is revealed less by official rhetoric than by the small decisions through which power is exercised and daily life is shaped.
This is what gives the alcohol ban significance beyond the issue itself. It suggests that Syria’s new rulers may see governance not as a way to manage diversity, but as a means of disciplining it.
The decision, issued on 16 March, was presented as a response to local complaints and an effort to curb practices said to violate public decency, but that explanation does not hold up. Alcohol consumption has long been an accepted part of life in Damascus, yet the official statement treats it as if it were a newly emerging threat to public order.
If the real concern were disorderly conduct, authorities could address it through ordinary law enforcement. A citywide ban on alcohol service in restaurants is not a proportionate response to misconduct; it is a moral restriction masquerading as administrative policy.