Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration

Dozens of residents from the cities of Hasaka and Amuda, located in Jazira Canton, took part in protest activities rejecting the "constitutional declaration" issued by the Damascus government. Demonstrators called for a complete redrafting of the constitution to ensure that no component of Syrian society is marginalized.

Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
Protesters in Hasaka, Amuda rally against Constitutional Declaration
15 March, 2025   16:21
NEWS DESK

 As part of a series of demonstrations opposing the "constitutional declaration" issued by the Damascus authorities, activists in the city of Hasaka organized a protest today in the April 4 Park.

 Participants carried banners reading:

 "Assad has fallen, but Baathist ideology still rules Syria."

 "Democracy means participation for all—no to exclusion."

 "A democratic, pluralistic, decentralized Syria."

 "A constitution built on marginalization and exclusion will not bring Syria to safety."

 "We do not recognize a constitution that does not recognize us."

 Protesters chanted slogans condemning the declaration and demanded its revision on principles ensuring justice and equality among all Syrian communities, rejecting any form of exclusion or marginalization.

 In a related development, residents of Amuda also took to the streets in protest against the declaration. They called for a constitution that represents all ethnic and religious groups in Syria and denounced the atrocities committed in the coastal regions.

 The demonstration began in the city center and moved toward Free Woman Square, with protesters carrying signs that read:

 "A blueprint for dictatorship."

 "No compromise on our rights—federalism is the best solution."

 "The Syrian constitution does not represent the Kurdish people."

 "Despite ‘constitution’ being a Kurdish word, it crushes Kurdish rights."

 "A federal Syria, a decentralized Syria."

 "Long live Kurdish unity."

 "A democratic Syria."

 a.k

ANHA