Amjad Youssef's arrest and out-of-touch Syrian elites

Instead of rejoicing over some form of justice being served, some have instead used the arrest as an opportunity to criticise the Sharaa government, hurling lofty insults from their ivory towers

Amjad Youssef's arrest and out-of-touch Syrian elites

The arrest of Amjad Youssef was a moment in which many Syrians rejoiced. The officer in Assad’s intelligence services was said to be responsible for the brutal murder of Syrians and Palestinians during the country's civil war. We know this to be true from his own videos, in which he threw them into a pit and laughed as he burned them in April 2013.

For his part, Syrian researcher Ansar Shahhoud and Professor Uğur Ümit Üngör of the University of Amsterdam, together with an investigation by the British newspaper The Guardian, published excerpts from the massacre video in 2022, nine years after the atrocity.

Amjad is far from the only butcher who killed and tortured Syrians on behalf of the Assad regime. There are hundreds like him. Yet because he filmed himself, justice may come to him more swiftly than to other criminals.

But not all Syrians welcomed the news of Youssef's arrest. Instead of validating the feelings of happy Syrians, they chose to embrace conspiracy theories and shrug off the importance of his apprehension. They used it as an opportunity to criticise the new Syrian government led by Ahmed al-Sharaa. And while one is justified in viewing his rise to power with suspicion, given his jihadist background, it is another matter altogether to trivialise the feelings of Syrians who rightly celebrated some semblance of justice served.

Some Syrian elites opted to trivialise the feelings of those who rightly celebrated Youssef's arrest as some semblance of justice served.

Many Syrian elites, particularly the secular ones, are seemingly detached from realities on the ground. They preach from their ivory towers and lecture other Syrians in a language they do not understand. This reminded me of something a Lebanese friend and politician, Elias Attallah, told me in 2012: "An intellectual who doesn't know how to 'wash the dishes' is not a real intellectual. 

These people aren't capable of resonating with ordinary people. They expect simple Syrians to read The Code of Hammurabi before they are allowed to celebrate Youssef's arrest. They want the mother who nuzzled the noose in Saydnaya Prison because it carried the scent of her son's neck to discuss Aristotle and the trial of Socrates before she is allowed to properly grieve her son.

The world didn't conspire against the Syrian "civil" opposition, but many believe this to be the case. And their insistence on promoting this viewpoint only serves the agendas of those who want to destroy any chance of rebuilding Syria.

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