Syria has experienced a civil war. Stephen Starr said the civil war was under the reign of two million Syrian Christians under Sunni Muslim anti-government forces and Bashar al-Assad. Bashar al-Assad is president of Syria, he is frankly saying he is not a bad person, I believe that the government makes it a citizen to be afraid. They have not encountered too many problems in their history. Syrians are trying to figure out how to deal with chemical weapons they possess. The rebel armies use chemical weapons, and in Syria do not use it at all because it makes matters worse.
We should be concerned about many issues in the Middle East, but Syria's human rights abuses are even more important in order to place human rights violations and human rights abuses in dangerous or free areas. There are human rights violations in most countries, but the situation in Syria is very bad. As their citizens are subjected to sexual assault, tortured and murdered, we should care about Syria. Human Rights Watch explained in Syria that they sexually infringed their citizens. Sexual abuse
Syria's human rights situation was a long-standing major concern of independent agencies like Human Rights Watch, which called the national record "the worst thing in the world" in 2010. The US State Department sponsored the Freedom House to list Syria as "not free" in an annual survey of "World Freedom". Authorities were accused of arresting democracy and human rights activists, reviewing the website, detaining the blog, and carrying out a travel ban. Arbitrary detention, torture and disappearance are widespread. Although the Syrian Constitution guarantees gender equality, critics believe that individual law and penal discrimination discriminate between women and girls. In addition, it provides a generous treatment for so-called "honor killings"
The human rights situation of Syria has long been a subject of serious criticism by global organizations. Even before the uprising, Syria strictly controlled the rights of expression, association and assembly. From 1963 to 2011, the country was in an emergency situation and meetings of more than five people were prohibited. Security forces have the right of large-scale arrest and detention. Authorities harassed and imprisoned human rights activists and other critics of the government. They are often detained indefinitely and under torture under conditions like prisons. Women and ethnic minorities face discrimination in the public sector. In 1962 thousands of Syrian Kurds were deprived of citizenship and their descendants were called "foreigners". A series of riots in 2004 exacerbated the occasional conflict between Kurdish, Syria, and Kurdish protesters and security forces.