Social Media Monitor: An American Citizen Elected Interim Prime Minister
After several delays, members of the opposition National Coalition managed to elect an interim prime minister on Tuesday, March 19. The elected official Ghassan Hitto is a Kurdish Syrian who holds the American citizenship.
Many opposition supporters made sarcastic comments about Hitto, like this man from Homs, who expressed his “joy” that the opposition has a new leader:
The Norway-based journalist and activist Massoud Akko commented on the fact that Hitto is an American citizen:
Pro-opposition writer Yassin al-Haj Saleh, who lives in Damascus, said he is willing to give the elected prime minister a chance:
A fundamental question: did the revolution start on March 15 or 18?
On the revolution’s second anniversary, opposition supporters were preoccupied with a debate about when did the revolution start: some considered that it started on March 15, when a number of protesters gathered in Damascus, while others said that the real start of the revolution was on March 18, when protests erupted in Deraa after children were arrested and tortured.
Activist Ali Atassi wrote a comment on Facebook, in which he insisted that the real start of the revolution was in Damascus:
On the other hand, activist Catherine al-Talli who is based in the countryside outside wrote a comment on Facebook, saying:
The anniversary of the Kurdish Uprising
Kurds in Al-Hassaka commemorate the ninth anniversary of the Kurdish uprising – YouTube
Syrian Kurds commemorated the ninth anniversary of the uprising against the regime, which started in the city of Qamishli and then spread out to other cities with a Kurdish majority, during which many protesters were killed.
The Facebook page the Syrian Revolution against Bashar al-Assad published a comment, saying: “It seems that the Kurdish uprising was premature and did not have what it needs to become a general Syrian revolution, for many reasons, the most important of which is its [racial] character.”
Kurdish legal activist Mustafa Ismail wrote a comment on Facebook in which he compared the unified Kurdish position in 2004 to what he saw as current divisions among Kurds:
France and Britain will arm the opposition
Many opposition supporters expressed their joy about the statement made by French and British officials, saying their countries will arm the opposition. Some, however, were wary about what this decision will entail.
Samir Mteini, a Syrian program presenter at Souriya Al-Ghad TV, which broadcasts from Cairo, wrote a comment on Facebook, saying:
Al-Jazeera’s news presenter Jalal Chahda tweeted the following: