Beginning of an extensive
article on the Syrian regime led by Hafez al-Assad, the father of the present
president Bashar, in which its author, British journalist William Shawcross,
continually referred to the “Hama Rules” as a guiding ethos of Syrian government
policy at home and abroad.
I lost my Rolling Stone magazine collection back
in the 1990s while moving homes, but thankfully have got a hold of the December
6th 1984 issue which contained one of my favourite articles of the publication
which I bought religiously from the middle 1980s to the early 1990s.
William
Shawcross’ “Playing by the Hama Rules” covered geo-political machinations
alongside family intrigue with a detailed reference to the brutal suppression
by President Hafez Assad of an insurrection by the Muslim Brotherhood in the
city of Hama in 1982. Assad entrusted his younger brother Rifaat, an army
general, with the task of purging Hama of the insurgents. The story relates
that Rifaat’s ambitions got the better of him and he was later forced into
exile. A Ba’athist by ideology and an Alawite by religious denomination, Hafez
Assad ascended to power by means of a military coup facilitated while he was
the country’s minister of defence.
A riveting
read!
Reference:
Shawcross, William. “Playing by the Hama Rules”, Rolling Stone, December 6 1984, pps 33-36 and 64-69.
© Adeyinka
Makinde (2019)
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England.
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