World

Syria grants conditional amnesty for army deserters

Syrian President Bashar Assad has granted a general amnesty for army deserters and draft dodgers, Syria's state-run news agency says.

Many young men have fled the country to avoid conscription

President Bashar al-Assad's decree would eliminate penalty against thousands of people who have violated Syria's mandatory draft. (REUTERS)

Syria's state-run news agency says President Bashar Assad has granted a general amnesty for army deserters and draft dodgers.

But the decree, issued Saturday by Assad, stipulates that deserters must turn themselves within 30 days if they are still within Syria's borders. Soldiers who escaped abroad have 60 days.

There are thousands of army deserters in and outside Syria, many of whom have gone on to fight with rebels seeking to topple Assad. The overstretched Syrian army suffers manpower shortages as young men flee the country to avoid compulsory military conscription.

Assad has issued similar amnesties for criminals, but has not released any of the thousands of political prisoners believed to be in Syria's prisons.

More than 220,000 people have been killed in Syria's conflict, which started in March 2011.


 

With files from Reuters