Syria's president says he won't leave power
"We will declare victory soon," he said in the speech at Damascus University.
"When
I leave this post it will be also based upon the people's wishes," he
said in his first speech since he agreed last month to an Arab League
plan to halt the government crackdown on dissent.
Assad repeated his claim that a foreign conspiracy is behind the unrest, and he said it was failing.
The
president has made few public appearances since the anti-government
uprising began in March, inspired by the revolutions sweeping the Arab
world.
The regime's crackdown on dissent has killed thousands and led to international isolation and sanctions.
Assad
also accused hundreds of media outlets of working against Syria to
"push us toward ... collapse." "They failed, but they have not given
up," he said, standing at a podium between two Syrian flags.
Since
the start of the uprising, Assad has blamed a foreign conspiracy and
media fabrications for the unrest, allegations that the opposition and
most observers dismiss.
The regime has banned most foreign news outlets and prevented independent reporting.
In
recent months, Syria's conflict has turned increasingly violent as army
defectors turn their weapons on the regime and some protesters take up
arms to protect themselves.
Syria
agreed in December to an Arab League-brokered plan that calls for an
end to the military crackdown on protesters, but killings have
continued.
About
165 Arab League monitors are in Syria to determine whether the regime
is abiding by the plan to stop violence and pull heavy weapons out of
the cities.
The
UN estimated several weeks ago that more than 5,000 people have been
killed since March. Since that report, opposition activists say hundreds
more have died.
Adnan
al-Khudeir, head of the Cairo operations room that the monitors report
to, said more observers will head to Syria in the coming days and the
delegation should reach 200.
He
said the mission then will expand its work in Syria to reach the
eastern province of Deir el-Zour and predominantly Kurdish areas to the
northeast.
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