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  • Documents on Democracy

Syria

On October 16, five opposition parties and nine national figures in Syria signed the Damascus Declaration for Democratic National Change, calling for the widening of political and social freedoms. Excerpts from the Declaration follow:

Syria today is being subjected to pressure it had not experienced before, as a result of the policies pursued by the regime. . . . In view of the signatories' feeling that the present moment calls for a courageous and responsible national stand. . . . they have reached an accord on the following bases:

Establishment of a democratic national regime is the basic approach to the plan for change and political reform. It must be peaceful, gradual, founded on accord, and based on dialogue and recognition of the other. . . .

Adoption of democracy as a modern system that has universal values and bases, based on the principles of liberty, sovereignty of the people, a State of institutions, and the transfer of power through free and periodic elections that enable the people to hold those in power accountable and change them.

Build a modern State, whose political system is based on a new social contract, which leads to a modern democratic Constitution that makes citizenship the criterion of affiliation, and adopts pluralism, the peaceful transfer of power, and the rule of law in a State all of whose citizens enjoy the same rights and have the same duties, regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, sect, or clan, and prevents the return of tyranny in new forms. . . .

Guarantee the freedom of individuals, groups, and national minorities to express themselves, and safeguard their role and cultural and linguistic rights, with the State respecting and caring for those rights, within the framework of the Constitution and under the law. . . .

The signatories to this declaration believe the process of change has begun, in view of its being a necessity that brooks no postponement [End Page 181] because the country needs it. It is not directed against anyone, but requires everyone's efforts. Here we call on the Ba'athist citizens of our homeland and citizens from various political, cultural, religious, and confessional groups to participate with us and not to hesitate or be apprehensive, because the desired change is in everyone's interest and is feared only by those involved in crimes and corruption. The process of change can be organized as follows: . . .

5. Pave the way for convening a national conference in which all the forces that aspire to change may participate, including those. . . among the regime, to establish a democratic national regime based on the accords mentioned in this declaration, and on the basis of a broad and democratic national coalition.

6. Call for the election of a Constituent Assembly that draws up a new Constitution for the country that foils adventurers and extremists, and that guarantees the separation of powers, safeguards the independence of the judiciary, and achieves national integration by consolidating the principle of citizenship.

7. Hold free and honest parliamentary elections that produce a fully legitimate national regime that governs the country in accordance with the Constitution and the laws that are in force, and on the basis of the view of the political majority and its program.

International

On 27 October 2005 at the United Nations, 21 international organizations and NGOs concerned with election observation endorsed the Declaration of Principles for International Election Observation and the Code of Conduct for International Election Observers. The project began in 2001 at the initiative of the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and the United Nations Electoral Assistance Division. The preamble to the Declaration appears below:

Genuine democratic elections are an expression of sovereignty, which belongs to the people of a country, the free expression of whose will provides the basis for the authority and legitimacy of government. The rights of citizens to vote and to be elected at periodic, genuine democratic elections are internationally recognized human rights. Genuine democratic elections serve to resolve peacefully the competition for political power within a country and thus are central to the maintenance of peace and stability. Where governments are legitimized through genuine democratic elections, the scope for non-democratic challenges to power is reduced.

Genuine democratic elections are a requisite condition for democratic...

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