President Al-Shra and No More Bath Party: What else Syria has announced? , Syria’s war news

Syrian state media reported that two months after Bashar al-Assad in Syria, former opposition commander and real Syrian leader Ahmed Al-Sara has been named President for a transitional period.
“This is a monumental day,” alle Jazeera correspondent Osama bin Javaid said, reporting from Damascus. “It gives more clarity for this country for the forward way because what was going to look like this new administration, there was ambiguity on it.”
What was announced today?
Syrian state news agency Sana on Wednesday cited Commander Hasan Abdel Ghani, stating that Al-Shara has been nominated as the President till the election.
Al-Shara was also authorized to create a temporary Legislative Council for the transitional phase, which would complete its task until a new constitution is adopted.
All military groups were dissolved in Syria including Syrian army and security forces as well as al-shara’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), as the constitution of the country, and the Bath party of Al-Ashad -The country who ruled the country for more than 60 years before the uproot of Al-Assad.
Announcements were revealed during a meeting in Damascus, which was attended by commanders from armed groups, who fought Al-Asad out of power on 8 December with Al-Shara’s HTS.
“(Al-Shara) is trying to assure them that they are not only representing, but will also be part of a new Syria,” said bin Javad.
When will Syria choose?
We do not know how long the transitional period will be, as there is no timetable for Syria to hold elections at present.
Al-Shara has earlier said that one election can be held for four years in a war-hit country.
Speaking with Saudi Arabia broadcaster Al Arabia in December, Al-Sara said it could take three years to draft a new constitution.
He said that elections will be held after four years as a new census is required to specify the number of eligible voters in the country.
“Any meaningful elections will need to be a comprehensive population census,” he said.
Who is Ahmed Al-Shra?
Al-Shara, earlier known as Abu Mohammad al-Julani, was the leader of HTS, a group that became the most powerful anti-armed force in Syria and last December of the outsomous completion of the outdoor closing in the outside time of Al-Assad last December Leaded.
HTS was an al-Qaeda affiliation in the east, but has demanded to be moderated itself in recent years. Instead, Al-Shara has deployed himself and his group as reliable Syrian-freed Syrian actors who brutally suppressed a popular rebellion during the Arabian spring in 2011.
Since the expulsion of Al-Assad, HTS has become a real ruling party and has established an interim government, formed from local government officials, who had previously moved to the rebel-accepted Idlib province.
In recent weeks, Al-Shara has met with foreign leaders and diplomats, United Nations officials and international criminal court prosecutor Karim Khan.
Is Syria still under foreign sanctions?
This week, European Union Union Ministers discussed the matter in a meeting at Brussels.
The French Foreign Minister said some European Union sanctions on Syria would be removed as part of a wider European Union step to help stabilize Damascus.
The United States and the European Union introduced a series of crippled sanctions on Syria in 2011, refusing to access the capital market and trade revenue. Western sanctions in influence cut Syrian’s formal economy from the rest of the world.
Al-Shara and his government have made it clear to foreign leaders that it is important for the future of Syria to lift the sanctions.
“These sanctions are affecting all aspects of Syria on all aspects of Syria,” Bin Javad said. “It will make or break how the economy works, how Syria is going to be able to move forward.”
What was Arab Socialist Bath Party?
All the remains of the Al-Assad regime will be dissolved, including the old constitution of Parliament, the Syrian constitution and the Arab Samajwadi Bath Party of Al-Assad.
The bath party, which aims to unite Arab states in a nation, was established by two Syrian Arab nationalists, Mitchell Aflak and Salah al-Din al-Bitter, and adopted their first constitution in 1947. At one point the party ruled two. Arab countries, Iraq and Syria.
In Syria, the bath party was unwavering to the Al-Assad family, which took power in 1970. For decades, the family used the party and its Pan-Arab ideology to control the country. Many senior military jobs were organized by members of the family minority Alvite sect, and party membership was used as a cover to give it a nationalist rather than a communal nature.
After Al-Assad’s expulsion, many members of the party leadership hid or fled to the country. In a symbolic step, new Syrian rulers have converted the former party headquarters to a center in Damascus, where former members of the army and security forces line up their names and hand over their weapons.